My (changing) Writing Efforts in January.
January
was a very moody month for me. I had a great break in Melbourne for a few days.
I stayed in St Kilda and played tourist. I went to the cricket too, a one day
match. I thought Australia was going to lose, but Glen Maxwell hit 94 runs and
Australia beat the Indians. I had my birthday, and got a couple of books I
wanted. But on that same day, a letter was being signed, informing me that the
writer’s program at Divine was being scrapped. I rang the editor, she confirmed
that the website is changing to more of an information site, so few, if any,
articles will be published on it. I was nearly in tears.
After
52 articles over five and a half years I am no longer paid to write for Divine.
Although I had a few ups and downs while writing for the site, overall it was a
great site to write for. I got to write on many different subjects and in many
different styles. I interviewed writers and actors with disabilities, and a
professor who had programmed robots to aide people with disabilities. I
reviewed films about people with disabilities. I wrote about personal
experiences like what it is like looking for work with a disability. Through my
research for articles, I discovered Australia has one of the worst attitudes in
the world to people with disabilities. We refuse to employ them or show them on
our television screens, and seem to be satisfied with condemning many of them to
live in poverty.
I
was so involved in writing for Divine. I was always reading about disabilities in
the media. But now it is gone. I can only hope I get another opportunity to
write such wide-ranging articles for an organisation that cares about more than
click bait.
So
I was on a real downer after I read that letter. But even on that day I started
planning for my next stage of life. I had been thinking about doing a website design
course for a few years and using my writing skills to create awesome websites. I
did some research and found there is a high demand for website designers in
Australia – I had thought the opposite. I then found an online course full of
website design subject, through a government approved provider, Open
Universities. I found out I could get not only fee-help but a commonwealth
supported spot in that course (if I had enrolled in time). I rang Open
Universities to ask some questions, and ended up enrolling. If it turns out to
be a captain’s pick, I can still withdraw before the census date at no cost.
Now I am going through the process of claiming Austudy.
With
all that going on, I have done little writing. I am still in chapter ten of the
redrafting of my novel Branded. I added about 2500 words to it in January. I
did not critique anything in January either. Twice I printed out stories from
critters.org and read them once, but I did not get around to reading them a
second time and scribbling all over them. And I read very little fiction in
January too, maybe 50 pages on the train to Melbourne. I am still too tired at
night to read.
If
my Austudy claim is successful and I start the course, I will need to devote
about 30 hours a week to study (the study guide says 20-24hrs). So it is going
to take some determination to ensure I make substantial progress in my
redrafting of Branded. Hopefully I can.
Oh,
and I did get one last article up on Divine in January. It’s a review of AccessibleMelbourne, a free Lonely Planet travel guide for people with
disabilities.
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