• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • ABOUT
  • BLOG
  • SHOP
    • NOODLE TACO
    • REBEL MILLIONAIRE
    • THE CONTENDERS
  • EVENTS
  • CONTACT

Peg Cheng

Author + Teacher

BLOG

February 2, 2016 By Peg Cheng

My Daily Schedule as a Full-Time Writer

BulletinBoardQs This is the bulletin board that hangs above my desk. It features a favorite quote and three questions that I ask myself every day.

“Above all, be the heroine of your life, not the victim.” — Nora Ephron

Have you read for pleasure today?

Have you created today?

Have you walked or exercised today?

What’s been frustrating me for years is that I often don’t answer “yes” to these questions, and yet, they focus on three of the most important things to me: reading, creating, and good health.

But all that changed yesterday.

Yesterday, February 1, 2016, was my first day as a full-time writer.

I now have the flexibility and the motivation to create a daily schedule that reflects my values and my passions. Here’s how it went.

8:30 AM: Wake up, brush teeth, eat breakfast, read the newspaper, meditate, and shower

10:30 AM: Answer emails and tweet

11:40 AM: Go for walk (twice a week, go to Qigong class)

12:45 PM: Lunch and read

2:00 PM: Write, plan, revise, edit

3:30 PM: Break

4:00 PM: More writing, revising, etc.

5:30 PM: Cook

6:30 PM: Dinner with the Hubs

7:30 PM: Administrative tasks and last emails

8:30 PM: Relaxation and Free Time

11 PM: In bed

So, how did it feel to be on this new schedule?

Absolutely heavenly.

It was heavenly because it fits who I am, what I like to do, and when I like to do it.

Unlike so many people who say you should always do the most important thing first (as in, write!), I don’t work on my writing until I’ve read for pleasure, eaten two meals, and exercised. Why? A couple of reasons.

First, I’m not a morning person and it takes me a good while to get going. Second, I’m a very strong J in the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI). In case you don’t know much about MBTI, let me tell you that J-people love closure; they love to check things off their to-do lists. It gives me great pleasure and makes me feel really good when I do this. So, I’d much rather finish certain things from my list (emails, tweets, exercise, read) and then have an uninterrupted period of time when I can delve into my creative endeavors without thinking about all the other things I need to do.

The older I get, and the more experience I have, the more I realize that in order for me to be successful in anything, let alone as a writer, I need to know myself and follow what’s right for me.

Not every day will conform to this ideal schedule. Some days (like today, only my second day!) won’t go smoothly due to appointments that can’t be rescheduled or sudden emergencies or Mercury being in retrograde (I have no idea what that means but it seems like whenever I’m having hard days, I’ll hear that Mercury’s in retrograde). But that’s okay. As long as I know what I want to do every day, I have something good to reach for. Over time, if I stick to a schedule that works for me, I’ll be able to produce my best work. And that’s good enough for me.

September 11, 2017 UPDATE: Over the last 19 months, since I first started writing full time, my writing schedule has changed a lot. A LOT! Sometimes I wrote in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon, sometimes at night. It took me a long time to figure out a schedule that was best for my writing and my personal preferences. I now write mostly in the morning and early afternoon, sometime from 10am-2pm, preferably from 10am to noon. Because writing requires me to make hundreds of decisions, it’s best for me to write when I have the least amount of decision fatigue. That’s why I switched from writing in the afternoon/evening to writing in the morning/early afternoon. For more details, watch my vlog, How to Feel the Fear & Write Every Day.

Peg Cheng is the author of The Contenders, a middle-grade novel centered on the question, can enemies become friends? She is also the founder of Prelaw Guru, a law school application consulting company, and the author of The No B.S. Guides for prelaw students.

Filed Under: Writing Life

January 27, 2016 By Peg Cheng

The Perfect Gift: a Reading Retreat

Reading-Retreat-Books-1.2016I feel like I never have enough time to read. So many great books and so little time. With that in mind, and being in between careers right now, I decided to go on a reading retreat.

Did I go anywhere?

Nope.

I stayed in my cozy townhouse, slept in, ate good food, went for an occasional walk, and read like mad for days.

I’m giving myself two full weeks to transition from being a law school admissions consultant to full-time writer. It’s important to have down time between jobs and especially between careers. I’ve worked hard on my Prelaw Guru business this year and I am burnt out. Since I love to read and never feel like I have enough time for it, it made total sense to treat myself to a reading retreat.

It took some convincing though. The luxuriating side of myself was all for it, but she is often out-voiced by my taskmaster side. But after a day of feeling so exhausted that I barely got up by lunchtime, I finally told my taskmaster to step aside. She’s been in charge for the last six months. It was time for Luxuriating Peg to have the spotlight.

And oh, it’s been so good! I’ve devoured three memoirs so far:

  • Hiroshi Kashiwagi’s Swimming in the American;
  • Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love; and
  • Gabrielle Hamilton’s Blood, Bones & Butter.

I have five more days left and I can’t wait to read

  • Anne Serling’s As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling and
  • Leonard Pitts, Jr.’s Grant Park (my only non-memoir pick).

I can’t tell you how happy all this reading has made me.

All this is a big reminder to listen to myself. No one knows me better than I do. I need to give myself what I need so that I can put the best of myself into my writing. Now that I know how good it makes me feel, I’m going to make reading retreats a regular part of my self-care.

New year. New insights. Onward!

Peg Cheng is the author of The Contenders, a middle-grade novel centered on the question, can enemies become friends? She is also the founder of Prelaw Guru, a law school application consulting company, and the author of The No B.S. Guides for prelaw students.

This page contains affiliate links to my shop on Bookshop.org, an online bookstore with a mission to financially support local, independent bookstores. If you make a purchase using these links, I will earn a small commission and a matching commission will be given to independent bookstores. Thank you for shopping indie.

Filed Under: Reading Recs

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 84
  • Page 85
  • Page 86
  • Page 87
  • Page 88
  • Page 89
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Categories

Archives

Looking for something?

Latest Posts

Three Jobs & One Rebel Millionaire Event

How a Blue Butterfly Helped Me Write Rebel Millionaire

I’m Going to Be in the LA Zine Fest!

Why I Created My NOODLE TACO Zine & Why You Should Create Zines Too

What I Was Able to Do After I Quit Social Media

Visit Me at Olympia Zine Fest on Sept 4!

I’m Back

Living the Intuitive Life Can Be Hard

Cubs Cheng’s Olympics Experience, Day 5

Cubs Cheng’s Olympics Experience, Day 4

Footer

What people are saying…

Lizz Zitron, College Professor

The Contenders is the middle grade novel you’ve been waiting for: diverse characters who are funny and real. Eunice and her friends and family feel so real–they are flawed, kind, complex, a little mean at times, and just wanting to find their place in the world. Highly recommended for every middle school collection.

Jas Hothi, Author + Entrepreneur

I’ve done my fair share of personal finance reading and, well, Rebel Millionaire is probably the single best thing I’ve read. Why? So effortlessly simple and effective. As I’m about to turn 31, this is just the nudge I needed to start saving and investing for my future. Thank you, Peg, and Plaid Frog Press!

Laila Atallah, Career Coach

What I love so much about your writing is how personal it is. It gives me permission to accept and love my own humanity, while also giving really helpful tips and mindset shifts, and next steps too.

Copyright © 2025 · Workstation Pro On Genesis Framework