Resolutions and such for 2014

Yes, I know this post is a couple of days late.  Yesterday I was busy publishing Star Wanderers: Deliverance (Part VIII), though, and the day before that I was on the train, and today I had to renew my vehicle registration … enough!  On to the resolutions.

1. Publish something every 6 weeks.

One thing I really need to get better about is publishing new work.  So this year, I’m going to do my damnedest to follow a regular publishing schedule.  I don’t know what I’ll be publishing, exactly, but I have a pretty good idea, and surprisingly enough it actually works out to a lot less work than you’d think:

  • WEEK 1: SW-VIII: Deliverance (already done)
  • WEEK 7: SW V-VIII:  Tales of the Far Outworlds (the second STAR WANDERERS omnibus–basically, I just need to write the Author’s Note and get a cover, since the stories have already been written).
  • WEEK 13: Science Fiction from A to Z (a book version of last year’s A to Z blogging challenge, released just in time for this year’s A to Z, for which I’ve already thought of an awesome theme).
  • WEEK 19: Heart of the Nebula (rough draft already written, just need to rewrite/revise).
  • WEEK 25: Sons of the Starfarers Book I: Brothers in Exile (already written).
  • WEEK 31: Sons of the Starfarers Book II: ??? (this one I still have to write).
  • WEEK 37: Sons of the Starfarers Book III: ??? (also need to write, but both of these are novellas so they shouldn’t take too long).
  • WEEK 43: Open slot–maybe I’ll publish Lifewalker in this slot.
  • WEEK 49: Sons of the Starfarers Omnibus I-III (just in time for Christmas).

Of course, this is all just a tentative schedule–I could definitely change it depending on which stories you guys want me most to write.  The point is that it’s doable–surprisingliy doable.  I might even break the schedule once or twice to release a surprise project, depending on how things go.

Then again, I might need the extra writing time in order to finish my second resolution, which is:

2. Write at least 2 short stories per month and submit them to traditional markets.

In other words, Operation Short Blitz.  Since I’ve already outlined my goals and objectives for that one, on to resolution 3:

3. Read a book every week

Or at least 50 books before the end of the year.  This is a recurring one that I’ve never quite been able to do, but I really need to read more, so I figured I’d bring it back.  It’s also a good excuse to get more active on Goodreads, which I’ve been meaning to do for some time.

Now for some non-writing related resolutions:

4. Keep a detailed weekly personal journal

I’ve kept a journal off and on since 2nd grade, but in the past few years I’ve been really lax about it.  My excuse was that the blog counts sort of as a journal, but that’s not really true, because there are things in my life that I would never want to talk about publically on this platform.  At the same time, I’m not a teenager anymore–I don’t need to keep a super secret diary stashed beneath my mattress in order to cathartically vent my hormones and thus maintain my sanity.

So for this year, I’m going to completely redo the way I do journal writing.  Instead of free-writing, I’m going to keep it deliberately structured.  Instead of writing it only for myself, I’m going to write it for the benefit of my future kids and grandkids.  I’ll include some private stuff in there, but nothing I wouldn’t mind being read years later.

Honestly, I still haven’t figured out exactly what I’m going to do for this goal, but I plan to at least write in it every week.  In any case, it makes for a good Sunday project–not just writing in it, but figuring out exactly where I want to go with it.

5. Get to the point where I can run a mile ever day.

Writing is a sedentary activity, and I definitely need to get out and be more active.  My grandpa got fit and lost a lot of weight later in his life, and one of the things he told me that was key was to run a mile a day.  Currently, I can’t quite do that–I tried that about a month ago, and I pulled something on the third day that put me out for about a week.  But it’s definitely something I can work up to.

My brother-in-law is a runner, and he advised me to start by walking.  Walk at least a mile a day for a week, then the next week walk two, then the week after that walk for most of the days but throw in a running day somewhere in there.  Gradually work up until you’re running more than walking, then soon enough you’ll be running every day.

So that’s what I’m going to do.  I’m starting out with the two-mile walks, since the one-milers are way too easy.  Maybe I’ll hike the Y a few times before I start running, just to build up muscle strength.  And when the snow melts, I’ll definitely be climbing some mountains.

What I’d really like to do is get a treadmill desk.  Those things are expensive, though, and there isn’t much room for them where I’m currently living.  In any case, the best resolutions are the ones that don’t require a huge monetary investment or a massive shift from your current lifestyle, since those are the ones that are most likely to get done.

And just for the heck of it, here’s a crazy impossible stretch goal:

6. Finish hiking the 7 peaks.

Those of you who have been following me for a while probably remember that last year, I made only one resolution, and that was to climb four of the seven peaks here in Utah county.  Well, I only got to two of them: Spanish Fork Peak and Santaquin Peak.  And guys–they were amazing!  Real adventures.  Santaquin peak especially was just spectacular–without a doubt, the most perfect hike of my life.  But then things got busy and I never got around to hiking the other two, blah blah blah lame excuses.

So this year, I want to revisit that goal, and since four is a lame number to stop at, I figure I’ll just shoot for all seven of them.  It’s going to be tough–Cascade Mountain is a beast, and from what I’ve heard, Lone Peak has some cliffs that are especially harrowing–but by golly, I’m going to do it!

And if I hike Mount Timpanogos this year, maybe I’ll finally break the curse that is keeping me trapped here in Provo.

In any case, those are my resolutions for 2014.  What are yours?

By Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek is the author of more than twenty science fiction books, including the Star Wanderers and Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus. He claims Utah as his home.

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