Melting (or, why Nanowrimo is kicking my butt)
Nanowrimo total, as of yesterday: just a smidge over 9,000 words.
It’s humid today, which seems to be the weather pattern that really kicks my butt at the moment. As a result, I’m finding it very difficult to actually focus on getting any writing done.
I’m also beginning to think that Nanowrimo is a goal that’s not going to be met for me this year. It’s not even a matter of whether I can get 50k written in a month. Hell, I could sit down and spend a couple of solid days just churning out rubbish to make word count.
The thing is that I don’t want to churn out rubbish. I’m enjoying exploring a new fictional world, but it feels like I haven’t developed enough of the world itself to be able to write anything that’s going to be of any use. I just don’t see the point in churning out words that I’m going to toss in a few month’s time.
And yes, I’m aware that this is the same discussion I’ve been having with myself about whether to do Nanowrimo or not in the first place. I think it can be a very fine thing – it’s a good way to generate a zero draft of part of a novel. It’s a good way to just play with words, to see if you can write 50k words in a month. I’ve “won” it twice before, so I know I can do that.
But is doing it just because I can a good enough reason? Yes, I want to write this draft, but I also want it to be a useful draft.
I might keep on pushing forward. This might just have to be a lost day of writing.
But I might just pull back a little, spend some more time working on building the foundation of this novel.
Mirrored from Stephanie Gunn.
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As a society I think we've forgotten the value of play
:-)
Why do you want it to be a useful draft anyway? Shouldn't some things be ditchable just for the pleasure of it?
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Pretty much everything I do, I want to have value and use. I don't remember the last time I did something just because I enjoyed it, without actually wanting it to be productive and useful. Maybe it's high time that I did something about that.
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I was hoping to do Nano this year to remind myself that it's not all work, it can be fun too. Unfortunately, I just don't have the strength to add it to my list of current necessities.
:-)
But going for a long time without fun is far, far too easy to do. When Baby comes, you're going to be so very busy. There's amazing, amazing rewards, but you won't be able to have fun in quite the same way.
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Besides, I've read first (and second, and third) drafts of "non-NaNo" stories that were just as flawed as NaNo attempts. :) No story is perfect, regardless of the time spent on it.
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My Nano posts are only ever about me and my process. Nano can be a very fine thing for people (and it has been in the past for me - as I was hoping that it would be again. And maybe it still will be - I guess only the rest of the month will tell.) And as for defining rubbish, again, that's only my own definition and only my own perspective of my own work and process.
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I use NaNo to work on ideas I haven't puzzled out, because the time frame doesn't allow me to second-guess myself. Editing comes later. (In some cases never, if I don't like the story, but that has nothing to do with NaNo, per se.)
Maybe I've just seen the "I don't see the point in senselessly churning out words" argument too many times from NaNo detractors (& I know that's not what you're aiming at in this post), but I don't think any words a writer writes are ever useless. Even if the only thing you learn is "Wow, that was a crappy idea, and I'm never touching it again", you've learned something you didn't know before.
* = As always when I talk of writing in general, 'you' is meant in the general sense.
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For those of us who like to write but don't do it enough, NaNo is a good kick in the butt. I always thought the whole purpose of it is to get a writer writing, to kickstart a habit. You don't really need that part of it. But then again, it's always good to win something. :)
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In other words, unless you just want the fun of writing without the pressure of quality, you don't need to do Nano.