Words/Time: 30 minutes responding to notes made on the TCSTB shared document by one of the other members, in anticipation of our Skype meeting tomorrow night.
writing
Liebster Award
I was nominated for a Liebster award by lovesstorms, who writes stories for Sims 3 and Sims 4 on her blog. She is also my sister (and one of the other two members of the TCSTB). There is a lot of camaraderie in that community, though I am not a part of it myself. My sister, though, decided to include my blog in her list of Sims 3 & 4 stories that she nominated. Normally, accepting this award includes nominating other blogs. However, to quote Cecily Q. Cauliflower, “I’m not going to [nominate] anybody because I’m ornery that way.” (Also because I’m not very jacked into the blogosphere and only read a few myself.) I am, however, going to answer the questions lovesstorms posed to her nominees. They are somewhat oriented toward Sims story writers, so I will only answer those I can.
1. When you write, do you choose the computer or paper/pen? I use both in different situations. I enjoy the experience of writing with a pencil and paper so much, so I do so now and then. However, it is just so much faster to write on the computer, so the bulk of my writing is done there.
3. What made you want to start writing? A book? Life? A person? Other? I’ve enjoyed writing since I was a kid. I still have a few stories that I started when I was ten or twelve and never finished (I fully intended to write a series of books both times, but never even finished one). I wrote (and finished) a few short stories in high school. My more recent push came from playing a video game and getting all sorts of ideas for characters and stories from it (not Sims). That was actually over 10 years ago. It took a lot of time and even more work to get to where I am now–writing original fiction in a world I created with characters that I have lived with for 10 years.
4. What’s a country you’ve always wanted to visit? It might sound cliche, but I’ve always wanted to go to England or Ireland. Or Germany.
5. Outside of the Sims, what’s another favorite game you play? I’ll answer this one, because I do play Sims, as well as other games. I actually prefer Sims 2 most of the time though, but I won’t go into reasons why. I tend to go through waves of what game I’m playing at the time. I haven’t played Sims in a while, but will go back to it someday and probably stick with it for a while then. For now, I’ve been playing Diablo 3 lately, and Civilizations games before that.
6. When you become disinterested in your story/characters, what do you do? This question is difficult for me to answer. I have a lot of ideas for stories in the same world, and a lot of characters to go with those stories. As of right now, including the one I’m revising currently, I have seven novel-length story ideas in mind. And outside of that, a lot more nuggets of ideas that could be grown into full stories. I have dozens of characters who overlap and some who are more solitary. I do sometimes get tired of revising “Pithea.” When that happens, I usually turn to working on “Pursuit of Power,” which is also in revision stage, but I haven’t delved as heavily into it. I’m still in the broad-changes stage of revision, since writing the novel during NaNoWriMo in 2014. And then sometimes, I just want to write and not edit, so I work on a storyline that isn’t even included in the count of 7 novel-length ideas, because it’s too narrow to be its own story, that takes place after “Pithea.”
I have it in my mind that when I get burned out on this world of stories and want to do something else, I will pull out a random prompt or such from one of many sources and just write something unrelated. But I never quite get to that.
7. When you write, do you prefer quiet or noise in the background? I used to prefer all quiet. Then I realized the joy of having something in the background. For a while I played writing-related music (yes, such a thing exists), but then I was introduced to coffitivity.com, and now I always have that up on my laptop or computer when I’m working.
10. Do you keep a notepad & pen/phone/tablet by your bed for those late night ideas? If so, do you actually get up and write them down? I do have a notepad in a drawer next to my bed. It looks like this:
It’s always there, just in case, but it has turned into more of a dream journal (which is also currently neglected). Lately I’ve taken to bringing another notebook to bed with me, because I’ve been more actively trying to think of some specific things, and want to write them in that other notebook. Basically, I have tons of notebooks, big and small, so ideas tend to get stuck wherever. It’s a messy system.
11. When you write, do you just do a quick glance and post? Or do you take a day or two or more and proofread, move things around, delete, re-write, etc, etc? This last question is probably one I should skip, due to the fact that I’m not currently posting my writing online. However, I did used to write fanfiction and post it online, so I figured I’d answer based on that. I used to like to get a few chapters written into a story before posting the first chapter. Then I’d keep a buffer of 3 chapters, in case I had to make any changes to the actual story based on what I was still writing. I usually read over each chapter after I wrote it, sent it to a friend who was my biggest fan at the time (his words…well, actually he always said he was my “#1 fan.”), made any fixes that either of us found, then read over it one more time before I actually posted it. I usually did very little big changes or rewriting. I have since realized a lot of areas that could have been better, but I’ve had 10 years to get better.
Thanks again to my sister for nominating my blog for this reward. I know I’m keeping myself isolated by not nominating others, but I’ve always been the kind to keep to myself, so it’s in my nature. If anyone’s interested, check out lovesstorms’ blog for her Sims stories.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 31, 2015
Words/Time: 45 minutes revising “Pithea.” It was just one area, but it was a history lesson. Very expositiony and dry. It’s necessary and fortunately a short time out from the story, but takes more work to fix than the actual story parts. We’ll be working on that during the next meeting of the TCSTB, but I had some changes of my own to make in advance.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 29, 2015
Words/Time: 20 minutes adding revisions for “Pithea” that were made on paper into the computer, and then transferring those changes to the TCSTB shared document. Nothing spectacular, but at least it was 20 minutes.
On another note, I’ve been contemplating trying to make this blog a little less selfish and share things I’ve learned about the writing process with anyone who may pop in to read. I suspect most of my likes and follows come from people who are hoping I’ll check out their blog in return. But now and then I do get some legitimate page views, and it’d be nice to have something to share besides how much or little work I’ve done. I can’t be consistent with a plan for how often or when I’d post these extra things, because my family has never been much for schedules and I never really know when I’ll have time to work on something like that. But now and then maybe, if I can come up with ideas for insights that I do have that are worth sharing.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 28, 2015
Words/Time: 47 minutes adding revisions for “Pithea” that were made on paper into the computer. I also made some new edits while doing that. This section I’m in seems so much messier than everything so far. Plus there’s a new element that I want to include–sort of a waking dream from the perspective of someone who’s sick and a little delusional. It’s not going to be easy, and to be honest, I don’t know how the other members of the TCSTB (editing group I work with) will like it.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 26, 2015
Words/Time: 655 words revising “Pithea” with two of my sisters over Skype. Also known as the 41st meeting of the Tri-County Sisterhood of the Traveling Book. We tackled another expositional, between-parts chunk today. We only got through part of it, but a lot of that was due to me not really being fully prepared. It also did take a while to do the part we did do. Those parts, which are sort of like articles explaining specific aspects in my story world so I don’t have to find a place to include it in the story, are always harder for us to get through than the prose is. That’s okay. We also figured out a system in Pithea tonight and made sure the last 200 years of history made sense for this fictional nation.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 25, 2015
Words/Time: 40 minutes revising “Pithea.” After the epicness of Saturday’s marathon meeting, the TCSTB is nearly caught up to my own personal editing. I edit ahead because I know there are bigger changes I want/need to make that would affect the notes they may leave. Especially in the next area. I worked on trying to get ahead again today, but I was distracted and didn’t get very far. Some pages though. Our normal weekly Skype meeting is tomorrow night, though one of the members is busy lately, so we may skip it this week. I normally would be bothered by that, but I’m so behind, there may not be enough for us to do tomorrow to warrant pushing for a meeting. We’ll see what happens.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 23, 2015
Words/Time: 7514 revising “Pithea” with with two of my sisters at the 4th marathon meeting of the Tri-County Sisterhood of the Traveling Book (42nd meeting overall). We got through 24 pages of double-spaced text, which was amazing. We were actually surprised by how far we went, as we did talk about unrelated things quite a bit early on, and some more throughout. And we spent a while outside doing various related and unrelated tasks.
Our first venture outside was to feed chickens and gather eggs. My parents have a few dozen chickens in their backyard, and they were out of town this weekend. One of my sisters was taking care of the chickens and dogs (and plants) while they were gone, so my other sister and I went out to see if we could help with the chickens when it was time to feed them. As soon as we opened the coop, most of them ran out, but this one apparently likes to roost more than the others, so we had to…help her share her eggs with us. A stick was involved, and I was the one brave enough to risk getting pecked to get the 5-6 eggs she was guarding.
The following video was our second outing. We had decided we should act out a conversation in the book that was carried on while walking. The original point was to find out how long it would take, so following events could be planned correctly. But my sister decided it would only be done right if someone was carrying something heavy, as one of the characters who was involved in the conversation was indeed carrying an unconscious friend. The 50+ pound dog food bag was the best thing we could find. I didn’t think about taking video until the “conversation” was over, and by then, the one carrying the bag was having a rough time of it. So she switched it up a bit.
Then we did further research into the best ways to carry someone, and went back out to test out another specific moment in the conversation. At that point, we switched to a 40-pound chicken feed bag, and she carried it across both shoulders. It went much better, not just because it was lighter, but because it was more evenly distributed. And because the chicken feed didn’t shift inside the bag as much as the dog food had.
With warm months upon us and a lot more outdoor things to be doing, we may not have another marathon meeting for a while. But this one left us on a stellar high.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 22, 2015
Words/Time: 20 minutes revising “Pithea.” Responding to notes made on the TCSTB shared document by the other members, in anticipation of our marathon meeting coming up tomorrow. That means 12 hours of comparing notes on the story, acting out events or scenes to make sure they’re as realistic as we can, and generally having a blast.
Daily Challenge Check-in: May 21, 2015
Words/Time: 30 minutes revising “Pithea.” Responding to notes made on the TCSTB shared document by one of the other members, in anticipation of our marathon meeting coming up on Saturday.
And I just want to say that, while I didn’t post any work yesterday, because I didn’t do any, it was not just a missed day. It was one of those deliberate ones, where I knew pretty early in the day I wouldn’t have time, and gave myself that leeway. I haven’t missed many in the last few weeks, so I didn’t feel the need to push. Plus, my husband and I went to a funeral yesterday and ended up hanging out with family until late. But I don’t post on days off, even if they are intentional days off, so I just felt I should mention that here.

