NaNoWriMo Day 1

The Work:  5956 words written today. I started at midnight for the “midnight sprint,” which in my case was more like a midnight marathon. I worked until 4, but let me be clear. I only wrote for a few hours of that. I didn’t intend to take such long breaks, but that’s exactly why, outside of NaNoWriMo, I don’t get much done. I just lack the discipline. On the plus side, though, before I went to bed, I had a word count of 3507. That is a bit more than two days of work. So that was nice. Then I did a 20-minute sprint during the day. That’s how I normally write now. Twenty minutes (sometimes more or less than twenty) of non-stop, mostly distraction-free writing, then a break of some length, then do it again. I’ve found it’s the way I work best. In the evening, I did two more 20-minute sprints total, finishing the second right before midnight. Now I’m taking a break, then plan to do a bit more before bed.

The Story:  I do have a full outline to write from, but the first bit of it is rather vague. It sets up the story and the main character (named Alexander), but doesn’t really say what will happen from a story viewpoint. Just an overview of the character’s life during the first few years. So I started in and tried to make a real story out of those notes. Somehow I spawned a new character that I’d never even considered before. I’m still not sure if this new character will stay, as I have only a vague purpose for him. It’s interesting, really…I guess I thought the story was already boring without him, but with him, it just gets more complicated. That’s the nature of writing fiction, though. NaNoWriMo just compresses it.

Total word count: 5956

day 1

2014 NaNoNovel

Here is the synopsis I whipped up for the novel I’m writing for NaNoWriMo starting this Saturday:

Pursuit of Power

Destry Surett’s death may not have been the accident it was claimed to be, but it was well concealed for years. When Destry’s son, Alexander, stumbles onto an innocuous item from his dad’s past that leads him to question the story of his dad’s death, he is told to let it go. He chooses instead to dig—slowly at first. The more he uncovers, though, the more he has to know the truth. Soon it becomes clear that his father’s death is only the tip of the iceberg, and Alexander finds himself the target of both expected and unexpected forces. Friends and loved ones around him are put at risk due to his quest, but he cannot bring himself to back down. He has already gone past where he thought his own moral boundaries would lie, and it’s too late to go back.

 

My NaNoWriMo profile.
2014-Participant-Facebook-Cover

October 21

Time worked:  2:30

Work done:  Twelfth meeting of the Tri-County Sisterhood of the Traveling Book. We got through just over three pages, and were pretty happy with it.

I have decided not to push myself to continue my individual revision of “Adventures in Pithea,” in anticipation of NaNoWriMo. I don’t want to burn out on the daily evening grind before November even starts. However, I would like to take some time in the next 10 days to write up a story introduction for “Pursuit of Power,” as well as at least one character introduction from the story, all from Drear’s POV (the narrator). We’ll see how that works out.

October 14

Time worked:  1:30

Work done:  Eleventh meeting of the Tri-County Sisterhood of the Traveling Book. We got through two and a half pages, and made a few notes for things to come back to later.

I haven’t posted in a week, and that is thoroughly reflective of the work I’ve done in that time. Actually, that’s not completely true. I did go over my outline for “Pursuit of Power,” the story I plan to start writing for NaNoWriMo in a few weeks. The busy season at my work has reached its conclusion, with the last show we have to go away for happening last weekend. I’ve been tired, cranky, busy, and just generally unable to focus on writing. The once-over I gave my outline happened in the evening at the show, but it was all I could do the whole weekend. These weekly meetings are wonderful, because I know that no matter what, I’ll still be brought back to my story every week. I truly can’t say what my plans are for the next two weeks until NaNo starts. I feel I should keep going forward on my revision for “Adventures in Pithea,” but at the same time, I’m not sure it’s worth dragging myself back into that story, just to completely switch gears to a new story when November hits. But I also don’t feel like it’s good to do absolutely nothing. So we’ll see.

July 31

Time worked:  :33

Work done:  Revising “Adventures in Pithea.” Still writing out the action. Missy is going to the aid of Quinn, who is a lot less helpless this time around.

I’m so glad I worked extra last night to be only 20 minutes shy of my Camp NaNo goal today. I had a hard time getting 33 minutes, because I have a headache that’s quickly growing in strength. Even with that, though, I did fulfill my goal of working an average of an hour a day throughout July! Now to keep it going…maybe longer than a month this time.

July 30

Time worked:  1:32

Work done:  Revising “Adventures in Pithea.” Not going to be counting pages for a few days, because I’m working on making an action scene. The whole thing is maybe 3-4 pages, but it’ll take me days to get it how I want it. Took me a lot of the time I spent today just trying to organize my thoughts. I compared the entire battle with the parallel battle from the original version of the story, and decided I liked some of the elements of the original that hadn’t made it into this version, so I’ll find a way to incorporate them. I also like the way some of the events flowed before, so I’m reordering some of the battle now too. So where I left off today, Julius was the first to be injured, but has been mended. And I’m not sure what Naolin was doing while Missy was trying to help Julius. Probably standing around being bored.

Also, I’m about 20 minutes shy of my goal for Camp NaNo, and tomorrow is the last day. I’ve totally got this.

July 15

Time worked:  1:01

Work done:  Rewriting and revising “Adventures in Pithea.” Just shy of two pages today. I may have to stop counting how many pages I get done in a day, unless it really picks up. This is depressing. At this rate, I’ll be done in December. Except not even then, because I’ll stop working on this in November to write a new story for NaNoWriMo. On the plus side, I’m apparently only about 5 minutes behind my monthly goal for Camp NaNo now. That’s good.

July 7

Time worked:  1:21

Work done:  More revising of AiP–I didn’t get far, but I did fix up some paragraphs that were very plain. It makes perfect sense that in NaNo, the focus is on quantity, because if you focus on quality, you can spend 45 minutes writing a few hundred words. It doesn’t really get you far. Unfortunately, that lack of quality can leave you with a whole book that needs fixing…I know that I would probably still be writing the first draft if I hadn’t sped through, ignoring how bad it was, but sometimes I miss the way I used to write. I don’t know why I don’t have that motivation without NaNo anymore.

June 1

Time worked:  1:57

Work done:  Writing new scenes for the story that I’ve marked as being needed, but hadn’t written yet. Compared to how much I can write in 2 hours during NaNoWriMo, that was actually pathetic, but…NaNo’s different.

There may be no events going on, and no fun websites to keep track of my progress or give me goodies if I win, but I still wanted to tally up my total hours for the month of May. I worked 24 hours and 57 minutes for the whole month. That comes to an average of 48 minutes a day. Considering that during April, while participating in Camp NaNo, I wrote 30.5 hours the whole month, I’d say that’s not too bad for needing to self-motivate!