People, however, are very flawed.
For instance, I currently have three finished novels, and about a dozen unfinished novels, sitting on my hard drive. Then there are the short stories. Heaps of them. All safely stored in my laptop. Or so I thought. It has been about three years since I backed anything up, and at least six months since I ran a virus scan. Those of you even marginally familiar with computers should be laughing at me right about now. Three years of work is a huge gamble, one I nearly lost last month when my perfectly healthy laptop tried to die on me in a blazing Blue Screen of Death.
(Not familiar with the Blue Screen of Death? Lucky you. For gamers, it's similar to Xbox's Red Ring of Death. Both very sad.)
To put it nicely, I freaked out. I went through the dead-computer stages of mourning. I pounded on the keyboard a few times, erroneously believing that would fix my problem. I snapped the screen down and said a couple of not nice words. I sobbed over the useless machine. Eventually I unplugged it and curled up on the couch to contemplate my storyless future.
Pre-destruction picture of my ruined journal, seen on bottom of pile, with the evil pen inside the top journal. |
I decided to be stubborn, something I'm pretty good at when I want to be. I got out my journals and started writing out everything I could remember. I spent days getting a synopsis on paper for every story I'd lost. It was all going so smoothly, until I decided to write at a restaurant down the street from my house. Somehow between the parking lot and the restaurant, a thunderstorm popped up. My own little storm cloud of doom hung overhead. It dumped rain down in such heavy sheets that my journal was ruined. I cursed my choice of felt-tipped, runny-ink pen. For the second time in a month I had lost everything.
Then I got a reprieve, which I wasn't expecting in the least. My genius husband took my laptop in for repair, and instructed the technician to save everything he could access. If the laptop couldn't be fixed, at least my stories could be salvaged. Thankfully they were able to do both. Which brings me to my new favorite gadget...
Don't trust the hook! |
(For those of you that have a USB like this one, keep in mind that little hook is NOT as secure as it looks. Don't stick it on your key chain. I've lost two that way, and I know several other writers that have done the same.)
So unless you have a printed copy of everything you've ever written (ugh, I have that now, too!) I urge you to get a backup system in place. Email a copy of your work to yourself if you have to, but save it somewhere other than a computer. Laptops, desktops, even the almighty MAC is not meant to last forever. Someday you are going to get a Blue Screen of Death, or you'll spill a sticky drink on the keyboard, or (shutter) you'll drop your laptop down the stairs (I've done all three) and trust me, you'll be a lot less panicked if you can say, "Thank goodness I backed everything up!"