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Monday, November 2, 2009

NaNoWriMo Writing Habits

I'm curious, as a returning NaNoer myself, about the writing habits of some of my fellow writers. Here are my questions:

  1. Do you do all your writing strictly at your computer? If not, then how often would I find you with a journal where you write odds and ends when you have no way to get to a computer?
  2. Am I likely to find you in a stone cold silent room, or jamming to some hot tunes? If you're a jammer, are you likely to be sporting sound reducing headphones or cranking it up so loud the neighbors are on the verge of calling the police because your music is loud enough to be considered noise pollution?
  3. Does your flow come better early in the morning, or late at night?
  4. How much do distractions throw you off track for your writing target for the day?
 Answer any of the above, all of the above, or make up your own question about writing habits and answer it. See you tomorrow!

Day Two

Day 2 Word Count: 2,164
NaNoWriMo Total: 4,899

Today was a really rough day on the word count. Between the Day One post and two thirty this morning, I added about 2,000 words to my total, and went to bed with bright visions of well over 6,000 words in just two days. I came back to the computer three hours later to find that the computer had somehow erased everything I wrote in that three hour time period. A minor heart attack ensued.

Instead of a very healthy 6,500+ word count tonight like I was anticipating when I went to sleep, I am staring at the 5,000 mark. I'm a little bit ahead of where I was when I went to bed... which is something.

I console myself with the knowledge that I am still well ahead of my goal so far, and that I am light years ahead of where I sat at this time last year. As for what tomorrow holds? We'll see.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

A Follow Up to NaNoWriMo CD Share

When I logged in to post my first NaNo total for the day, I found a comment waiting for me in response to a blog I wrote at the beginning of last month about NaNoWriMo CD Share. I was asked to post an example or two of playlists NaNoers have listened to. I can certainly do that, but with this caveat - no one has exactly the same taste in music, and what is going to work for one NaNoer isn't going to always work for another.

I know, for me, there are a lot of variables when I make up a playlist. A few examples: 

  1. What state of mind is my MC in? 
  2. Where is he/she during the scene I'm writing? 
  3. What type of music does my MC strike me as listening to?
Not everyone writes the same way as I do, though. A lot of people need instrumental music in order to write, because songs with lyrics get to be a distraction (especially when the song is catchy enough to start singing along to). Some people can't write to music, period. No one person writes the same way, so you really do have to find what works for you.
 
Now, to the playlist examples:

Example #1: (sent to me last year in the CD exchange)

  1. Love I Not Honor Anymore - Gods and Generals Soundtrack
  2. Farewell - Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Soundtrack
  3. Mad World - Gary Jules
  4. I'll Be a Virgin, I'll Be A Mountain - Maximillian Hecker
  5. Stormy Weather - Billy Holiday
  6. My Funny Valentine - Frank Sinatra
  7. Baby (Is What He Calls Me) - Peggy Lee
  8. Mornings Eleven - The Magic Numbers
  9. Immaterial White - FreeTEMPO
  10. Dipper Mouth Blues - Arturo Sandoval
  11. We Go Together - Grease Soundtrack
  12. Dancing in the Street - Sister Act II Soundtrack
  13. I Don't Feel Like Dancin' - Scissor Sisters
  14. Get Away - Matthew West
  15. Liars, Inc - Freakhouse
  16. A Knife in the Dark - Lord of the Rings Soundtrack
  17. Through the Bamboo Forest - Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Soundtrack
  18. Theme from Jaws - John Williams
Example #2 (A playlist I put together for a series I've been outlining that wasn't going to be my NaNo this year):

  1. Somebody Told Me - The Killers
  2. You're Not a Reaver - Serenity Soundtrack
  3. Innocent - Fuel
  4. Wild Thing - The Troggs
  5. That Ain't My Truck - Rhett Akins
  6. Lady Marmalade - Christina Aguilera/Pink/Maya/Lil Kim
  7. Fully Alive - Flyleaf
  8. Name - Goo Goo Dolls
  9. If I Can't Have You - Kelly Clarkson
  10. Windy - The Association
  11. Crash Into Me - Dave Matthews Band
  12. Overture - 101 Dalmations Soundtrack
  13. Hicktown (Radio Edit) - Jason Aldrean
  14. Push Me Away - Kutless
  15. Let's Go to Vegas - Faith Hill
  16. The Unwinding Cable Car - Anberlin
  17. Dance, Dance - Fallout Boy
  18. Hemorrhage (In My Hands) - Fuel
  19. Only Happy When It Rains - Garbage
  20. Breathe You In - Thousand Foot Krutch
Hope this helps!

Day One

Day 1 Word Count: 2,735
NaNoWriMo Total: 2,735

It was a slow start, but a couple of hours ago, the dam burst. It's certainly looking better than last year's fresh out of the gate total (927 words for the day). But a better start this year doesn't necessarily mean a better finish. This is an encouraging starting point, though. I'm pretty excited about it, and it certainly gives me a lot of hope for the rest of the month!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Edit From The End?

Maybe this is more of NaNoEdMo-relevant blog, but it's on my mind tonight...

I'm in the process of revamping the Receptionist Manual at work. Today, I was in the middle of retyping a list of suggestions to help a receptionist in training (or receptionist brushing up on things) better perform their job. One of them was proofreading, and in that tip was something I'd never thought about before.

Edit from the end.

I've only read through these tips about fifty thousand times - whenever I'm looking something up, or just wanting to refresh my memory. I want to ask myself why I missed it before, but I don't know that it's all that important to ask that particular question. The bigger question is - what do I do with this revolutionary thought, now that it has entered my brain?

I have to admit - this guy gets along great with all my other ideas. It's a beautiful idea. But how do I put it into practice... especially in a month where suppressing my inner editor is a requirement for getting through NaNoWriMo?

The simple answer, I guess, is to hack away at whatever stories I have ready to see the axe... to look at the short stories languishing on my memory stick, start at the end, and start editing. But how much time will that take away from writing once November 1st strikes and I barely have enough time to work, write, and get all my have-tos done for The World Race?

I guess I'll just have to dive in and see. Anyone else who can try this? Let me know how it works out!

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Detailed Outlines Are For The Birds

When it comes to writing, I'm much more of a "fly by the seat of your pants" kind of girl than an "every detail needs to be set to paper before I start writing" girl... which sounds incredibly funny, because I love details in real life. I'm getting better, but there was a time when I had to known when everything was happening, who was involved, how long it was going to take, where everyone would be, the color of the trim of the building, the shape the bushes are going to be trimmed to...

Okay, so maybe I wasn't ever that horrible... but there were definitely moments when I felt close to it. I don't know why, but the knowing gives me comfort. It tells me exactly how much of a breather I can take, so I know whether to plan on relaxing or preparing for the next giant hurdle.

Writing is the opposite for me. Once that document is open in front of me (or blog form, or sheet of paper), I forget all about the little things. It's like putting a giant piece of blank canvas in front of a painter. My fingers hit the keyboard (or pick up the pen) and words appear out of nowhere. I don't even realize what is being spit out half the time until I'm nearly to the end of a page and see it full of things I didn't think were possible fifteen or thirty or forty-five minutes ago. It's the bigger picture breathed to life by all of the words swirling around inside my head just waiting to get out and be heard by someone.

That's why I don't like to sit down and write out an outline. Outlines are rigid. A canvas leaves room for my imagination to wander wild and free. For once, the details aren't so important.

If outlines are rigid, then I guess detailed outlines are just stifling. Suffocating, even. Where does imagination fit in? Is there any room for it at all? Maybe detailed outlines should be for the birds.

Even with all of that swirling around in my head, I find myself staring at the word processing document currently open on my computer... a detailed outline of the prologue and half of the first chapter of the novel I will be attempting to write next month. Ten minutes ago, it was beautiful and inspiring, but right now I just want to delete it and start all over again from scratch on November 1st - completely plotless, just aimlessly writing words because I can.

The thing is... I can't work like that this time around. There has to be an agenda. There has to be an outline. I don't have the time or energy to play around trying to figure out what I want to write about November 1st. Playing around will be suicide.

In that case, detailed outlines may be for the birds, but if they are... well, don't call me Cat for the next couple of months. Just call me a birdie.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Target This Year: 60,000

60,000 words.

That's right. Your eyes are not deceiving you. 60,000 words is my goal this year. Even with a full time job and The World Race looming on the horizon, I aspire for greater heights than a 50,000 word manuscript I probably won't touch again until December of next year. I am determined to pound "60,000 words for the win" into my head, instead of 50,000. It will still be sitting and waiting for me when I get back in December 2010, but it will be longer... and there might be a little bit more to salvage at the end.

Why 60,000?

So I can stretch myself. It's like physical training, really. The more and further I stretch myself, the more and further I can go. I want to work myself up to 100,000 words.

It doesn't seem that unrealistic, if you think about it. When others crank 100,000 and 200,000 word manuscripts in the month of November, it seems like a drop in the bucket, 60,000... and not quite so crazy. 60,000 - here I come!