Dec 03 2007
Everything I needed to learn I learned from NaNoWriMo…well, almost everything
During the month of November I participated in Nanowrimo. For those of you who aren’t familiar, Nanowrimo it is a contest where participants are challenged to write a 50,000-word novel within thirty days. Those who reach the word count receive a certificate of participation.
When November 1st rolled around, I began the novel sans title and storyline. All I knew was how the first scene would unfold. By the third day of writing the title came to me (30 Days to Justice) and the plot was unfolding nicely.
Before the month was over, I reached the goal of 50K. I was amazed that I was able to write so many words in less than thirty days. With The Devil’s Playground, I’ve only written 4,281 words since August. The average novel is 90,000 words. I have a long way to go.
After Nanowrimo was over, I realized that it has been difficult for me to write The Devil’s Playground because I’m married to the outcome. The first draft has to be good. Scratch that. It has to be excellent. What I learned from Nanowrimo is that the purpose of the first draft is to get the story on paper. Tweaking comes after. I understood this intellectually, but before Nanowrimo I wasn’t buying into it emotionally.
Every Monday, I will provide a word count so all of you can take note of my progress.called I’m Outta Here. In it, he made a point that has stayed with me for all these years. O’Connor theorized that the reason most people don’t achieve their goals is because when they hit an obstacle or something else seems easier to accomplish they change their goals midstream (I’m paraphrasing).
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