Eva’s Byte #235: Curtains—or, so I Thought!

Well, another nice mess I’d gotten myself into!

Not one to shy away from writing about my mechanical ineptitude or lack of tech savvy, it’s easy for me to trip wires. The latest mishap occurred while flying through the air with the greatest of ease on my keyboard trapeze.

In the midst of drafting chapter 36 within my Work in Progress, the metaphorical lights went out. The “view” of my document metamorphosed into read mode, the tool bar disappeared, and editing was not enabled.

A doomsday prepper prepared for life’s uncertainties, such as a computer crash, I am mindful of safeguarding my document by emailing myself copies to two accounts at the end of each writing session. So, undaunted, I downloaded one of the reserve copies, and moved it to the file my novel occupies.

Horrors! A cloned copy in read mode under the same restrictions!

Now panicking, thinking it was curtains for me, I placed a call to my computer tech. Lo and behold, I had to leave a message. Darn! A writer who burns the midnight oil, it’s hard for me to believe there are people who set reasonable limits to their work day.

Like Mr. Magoo, the cartoon character, I stumbled upon the solution purely by accident or Divine Intervention. With nothing to lose, I clicked on the tippity top of the screen in my document.

Voila! Thenceforth, I was able to get the toolbar back, and navigate view mode from there.

I’m back in the saddle, resuming my journey along the arduous trails of a writer.
Necessity is the mother of ingenuity!

Authors Den Page:https://tinyurl.com/yycm7d2w
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Published on October 23, 2019 14:40 Tags: blog, eva-pasco, indie-author, ingenuity, mishap, panic, safeguards, writing
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message 1: by Pamela (new)

Pamela Allegretto The sharp pain in a writer's chest when a file suddenly disappears, or appears but is "unworkable," is like the pain you get when you are miles from home and your car starts making foreboding noises. Then, the elation after clicking on just the right spot on your screen and voila, there is your file, apes the joy of discovering the ominous noise was simple a twig in your wheel well. Ecco la vita.


message 2: by Eva (new)

Eva Pasco Pamela wrote: "The sharp pain in a writer's chest when a file suddenly disappears, or appears but is "unworkable," is like the pain you get when you are miles from home and your car starts making foreboding noise..."

So eloquently put. Er uh, so far I haven't run myself off the road along this literary journey.


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