Words on the Page
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOHgyJx508ZYokxwR83dqdbow0bJsOxFkB-VaQT2B6Gh1_LA-B6CiTX4EMu1PWtFn6gssY8cUU1qKDd6I6cwpRJOTl4s6Zadw1hpvXswpB6SZ-r-CQjbp-TOgL03hg4SvkuiyUU8mwzePpKJmnu3MuCI_Vp4AyuEHt_XUsyaDaJC76eJgTzJbj8HcIMn27/w400-h134/Words%20on%20the%20Page.png)
There's nothing like a shiny new project to fire me up, and you're looking at the header design for my new newsletter. Every day I brace myself, ready to trawl through my email inbox – hoping to delete as many as possible, knowing that each one has the potential to leech away my writing time. Is it an introvert thing that I find it so difficult? I want to spend my days escaping into books, poems and manuscripts. Didn't I escape the admin when I fled my last office job? Nope, admin is everywhere. So the last thing I want to do is fill up people's inboxes with: more things to tick off, more things to read, more things to do, more things to manage, more. And yet I have. The first edition went out in summer. I'm entertaining the idea that perhaps not everyone is as overwhelmed with their to-do lists as I am. And another idea I'm willing to consider, is that people have just as much work to do as I do – in all likelihood much, much more – but they're just not let