Showing posts with label diligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diligence. Show all posts

Monday, 16 November 2015

Week 2

Some thoughts I've had during week 2:


Writing for a deadline is hard.

The words will flow organically when there's no pressure. When a deadline's involved? Nope. They just don't come.


Writing for the sake of writing? Also hard.

I know I spoke on this last week.. See, a lot of writing a first draft under pressure involves getting the words out. It doesn't matter that wordy is generally considered bad; in this draft, the wordier, the better because you know you can edit later.

I loathe leaving a scene messy and poorly written, but going back to edit uses up precious time I could be spending on writing. The struggle is real.


Research your subject in advance.

Honestly, the biggest lesson I'm taking away from this exercise is doing the necessary research before the writing begins. The main character within the work is a cellist. I believed I knew a decent amount on the instrument but the amount of research I've found myself doing disproves that. Half the time, I write on it without much confidence. At least I can go back and edit later.


Word Count: 18,135/25,000

I'm still behind, but I'm still confident I can catch up. Even with my addiction to editing.

Happy Monday, everybody! Here's to another week of steady writing!

Lia

Sunday, 8 November 2015

First Post!

I'm going to start this blog by offering an explanation for why it exists. I've decided to participate in NaNoWriMo this year as it's something I've always wanted to do but could never muster up the courage to do. However, I've finally come to terms with the fact that there's no better time than the present to try something new, so now it's happening.

NaNoWriMo, which stands for National Novel Writing Month, is a challenge many different writers participate in where the goal is to write a 50,000 word novel within a single month. If one does the math, that's approximately 1,700 words every day. This might not seem too difficult on the surface, but a little over a week's already past, and I already find myself behind. This is also my first time having a blog. There will be at least 1-2 posts a week documenting my progress, any new hurdles that arise during my time writing this month.

So far, this challenge has had me thinking about two different things: diligence, and editing.

Diligence:
I say diligence because this challenge demands a writer's time, no matter how frustrated the writer becomes. If you give up one day, you still need to sit back down the next day. In my case, you find yourself going to bed later and later. And still, it doesn't seem to be enough, as I'm already so behind.

Editing:
This one comes up as more of a problem, specifically as a personal problem of mine. Given that the challenge demands words out of you, but not necessarily quality writing, it's easy for me to get stuck on the parts I know are badly written. So I'll go back, nitpicking and changing everything up when I know I should be churning out another 1,700 words. Realizing that there's always time to edit later, that the most important part of a first draft is just getting the ideas onto the paper, is actually such an important lesson, which is something I've only just started to learn.

By the time this post goes up, I should have already completed 13,600 words with another 1,700 on the way. Naturally, this isn't the case. I've only managed to do 8,217 words, most of which was written in two big chunks rather than cumulatively every day. It's really nerve-wracking to have this kind of expectation on how much I'm supposed to write every day because it's almost impossible to do. I've realized by schedule makes it basically impossible on some days, for example the days where I'm out from 9 am to 9 pm and the only way I'll get much writing done is to sacrifice sleep. At the same time, that also makes it more engaging.

In spite of my struggle with both of these elements, I'm committed to this challenge, even if I don't succeed. At the very least, it's definitely a good lesson in writing-to-deadline.