You can, in principle, write any licence you like as long as it does not violate the laws of your country and the countries that it will be used in (e.g. you must not break discrimination laws). However writing your own licence is normally a bad idea. Some organizations do this, but they take extensive legal advice and it's costly.
Therefore most people (rightly) choose from existing and well-tried licences. Most of the common ones are OSI-compliant and this means that there is no restriction on field of endeavour (i.e. they can be used for commercial purposes and they can be used for military purposes, etc.).
AFAIK there are no common non-commercial licences for software and I'd ask you to consider dropping this condition. There's a purely pragmatic argument - "what is commercial". Is teaching commercial? possibly. Is writing a book commercial? certainly. And so on.
I am intimately involved with the Open Knowledge Foundation and we cover a number of types of material - software, data, media, etc. We feel that the only reasonable approach is to avoid the NC condition. The motivation is understandable, but it doesn't actually work.
Be brave and drop it. I don't think you'll regret it. It will certainly be less hassle than wrting your own licence.