I dug in to my novel and wrote 4500 words yesterday. That is as many as I wrote in the 18 days I was working on Colemak. Stopping with my use of Colemak for everything was the right decision.
I can still use both layouts. I'm typing this in Colemak. I obviously have still got my Qwerty skills (such as they are) despite not touching the layout more than a handful of times in that time.
There's not any such thing as 20 days free of writing when you are a writer. As for patience, I have that. What I do not have is the willingness to trade all of my productivity away for an indeterminate period of time.
I simply cannot afford it.
My Colemak is as good as it has been, but it had not improved in days when I switched back. Nobody can say definitively how long the switch to Colemak will take for a specific individual.
For comparison I have not done a test in Qwerty in 15 or so years. I am much better when I am typing my own words. That said, I just now (after no Qwerty today, and in the middle of this Colemak post) scored 47 on a two minute hi-games test. I am functionally (when I am working) *much* faster than that. In Colemak I can do 13, and that really is close to my limit. I might manage 18 on a roll. (Just to prove the point my second Qwerty run was a 57.)
There are major obstacles to Colemak adoption. I will point out that when people are eager to tell you how fast you should be, and when you are allowed to stop it does nothing to encourage you to bother.
40WPM is a normal speed for anyone who has tried to learn to type. To break that takes something more than just normal effort and skill.
As I see it I would be lucky to attain 40 in months. That's due in large part to my non-touch background. I am much slower than usual because my hands are unaccustomed to the patterns of touch typing.
Pure math, even if I figure 20/30/40/50/60 (which I have no faith in actually happening) in 5 months I will type so many fewer words I am crippling myself.
If I assume a base of 1200 words in an hour (is not too far off what writing is like the way I do it) at 60, that is 400/600/800/1000/1200. At 3 hours a day we see 648,000 words over 5 months. (A novel is 50,000 words as a base. My genres are longer, but even then, that's at least two huge books.)
Now with Colemak we get 360,000 words.
I think it is clear why I'm done banging my head against a wall trying to learn something that will take a very long time indeed to finally pay off in terms of any speed gains.
Yes, I would benefit in terms of stress on my hands, but that is the only (and at this point supposed) benefit I am sacrificing.
I appreciate the assistance and encouragement people have been giving me. I can do without the criticism that's come with it on a few occasions. I'm not you, you're not me, we are all different, and there's absolutely no shame in my decision to put my job first.
SF&F Writer Harper Jayne
Creating brave new worlds, one word at a time . . .