Looks like when my current job ends (May 31), I’ll have the summer free before my next one starts (Sept). My June is pretty much booked with a big writing project with a looming deadline, but I get to decide how to fill July and August, and I’d appreciate crowdsourced suggestions.
I’m lucky enough to not need to find alternate work to cover living expenses for those two months, so I’m not particularly in the market for short-term work suggestions. I’ll be based out of D.C. during this period. Not super interested in travel. I’m considering some self-study but I’m not planning to become a programmer.
Here are some of the things I currently have in mind (not highly optimized, the things that occur immediately when I think “What do I want to do this summer?”:
ASL class at Gallaudet
Ignatian retreat
Stepping up my freelance writing work
Looking into any shop classes for adults
Sewing, embroidering, soldering a fairly involved Halloween costume
What kinds of things am I not thinking of that might be delightful?
Maybe try doing nothing. For some people that would drive them crazy, but for others a month of rest and peacefulness can be life-changing. Try turning off the computer for a month. Take walks. Read a book under a tree. Smell the flowers. Meditate.
Also, I’m not sure if this counts as travel, but Shenandoah is only about 1:30 from DC. Getting a small cabin or a room in a bed and breakfast for a month is not so expensive. Immersing yourself in a more natural, less hectic environment can itself be extremely restorative. And you can even sew / embroider while you’re doing it.
I am definitely in the “would drive them crazy” camp. One of the worst vacations I’ve taken was to St. John with my family. It’s a long way to go just to read on the beach rather than read in a park or a library.
I don’t know what falls under ‘freelance writing’, but have you considered writing fiction?
It’s a huge time-sink even if you’re deliberately trying to improve your speed, but the skills are also surprisingly applicable—modelling your characters in your head isn’t dramatically different from modelling other real people, even if you ignore the skills that merely fall under “knowing how to write”. I’ve had a great deal of fun with that, lately.
You don’t necessarily need to immediately jump into original fiction, either. Fanfiction is often considered “training wheels”, but that doesn’t just mean it’s easier—well, it is, but it’s also much easier to tell if you’re getting characterisation right when there’s the original work to compare to (and rabid fans to do the comparison), while the usual “benefit” of writing fanfiction (not needing to invent your own setting) can be trivially set aside if you feel like it.
I’ve written fanfiction, but I’ve only enjoyed writing fiction with a writing partner, as I did for those two stories. I get very very bored writing things that aren’t dialogue.
I’m currently at a magazine for a journo internship, and have done some freelance book/theatre reviews for pay.
If you’re planning to link this account to your real world identity, or already have, you might think twice about linking to those writings. Sorry if this was already obvious and considered.
Glad to hear it! I’m traceable to those writings, but not though easy googling. The nice thing about being a writer with daily blog updates is security through obscurity. It’s hard to trawl through to find whatever would be the worst thing ;)
Looks like when my current job ends (May 31), I’ll have the summer free before my next one starts (Sept). My June is pretty much booked with a big writing project with a looming deadline, but I get to decide how to fill July and August, and I’d appreciate crowdsourced suggestions.
I’m lucky enough to not need to find alternate work to cover living expenses for those two months, so I’m not particularly in the market for short-term work suggestions. I’ll be based out of D.C. during this period. Not super interested in travel. I’m considering some self-study but I’m not planning to become a programmer.
Here are some of the things I currently have in mind (not highly optimized, the things that occur immediately when I think “What do I want to do this summer?”:
ASL class at Gallaudet
Ignatian retreat
Stepping up my freelance writing work
Looking into any shop classes for adults
Sewing, embroidering, soldering a fairly involved Halloween costume
What kinds of things am I not thinking of that might be delightful?
(means “American Sign Language” for the curious like me)
Maybe try doing nothing. For some people that would drive them crazy, but for others a month of rest and peacefulness can be life-changing. Try turning off the computer for a month. Take walks. Read a book under a tree. Smell the flowers. Meditate.
Also, I’m not sure if this counts as travel, but Shenandoah is only about 1:30 from DC. Getting a small cabin or a room in a bed and breakfast for a month is not so expensive. Immersing yourself in a more natural, less hectic environment can itself be extremely restorative. And you can even sew / embroider while you’re doing it.
I am definitely in the “would drive them crazy” camp. One of the worst vacations I’ve taken was to St. John with my family. It’s a long way to go just to read on the beach rather than read in a park or a library.
I do have Ignatian retreat on my list, though.
I don’t know what falls under ‘freelance writing’, but have you considered writing fiction?
It’s a huge time-sink even if you’re deliberately trying to improve your speed, but the skills are also surprisingly applicable—modelling your characters in your head isn’t dramatically different from modelling other real people, even if you ignore the skills that merely fall under “knowing how to write”. I’ve had a great deal of fun with that, lately.
You don’t necessarily need to immediately jump into original fiction, either. Fanfiction is often considered “training wheels”, but that doesn’t just mean it’s easier—well, it is, but it’s also much easier to tell if you’re getting characterisation right when there’s the original work to compare to (and rabid fans to do the comparison), while the usual “benefit” of writing fanfiction (not needing to invent your own setting) can be trivially set aside if you feel like it.
I’ve written fanfiction, but I’ve only enjoyed writing fiction with a writing partner, as I did for those two stories. I get very very bored writing things that aren’t dialogue.
I’m currently at a magazine for a journo internship, and have done some freelance book/theatre reviews for pay.
If you’re planning to link this account to your real world identity, or already have, you might think twice about linking to those writings. Sorry if this was already obvious and considered.
edit: that said, I’m really enjoying APoF :-)
Glad to hear it! I’m traceable to those writings, but not though easy googling. The nice thing about being a writer with daily blog updates is security through obscurity. It’s hard to trawl through to find whatever would be the worst thing ;)