6/12/2013
UGH! I am in the same boat and cannot write and NOT edit at the same time. It’s so annoying. I reached about 25K for NaNo this year, of which I am still pretty proud! Good job, doll! 🙂
Yes, very well done to Sarah, but even to agree to take on the challenge deserves a ‘well done’ too. You never know until you try, and you’re 25k words up on October!
Thanks for your comment.
Thanks for your kind words Nicole, and 25K is nothing to sneeze at! The most important thing is the end product, and kudos to you for adjusting the goal to reflect your writing needs.
Wow!!! thank you sooo much DR EZIZA, it’s people like you in this world that help people stand back up :i know what i have to do, just gonna tell the whole wide world about your genuine work. Please help me in thanking him for his help, here is the email: [email protected] ALSO CONTACT HIM FOR HELP IF YOU HAVE ANY PROBLEM. You call him with this number: +2348058176289
I’m a writer based in South Wales, with an unhealthy obsession with stationery and baking. I mainly blog for my own sanity, but I’m also working on a novel. Still.
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Nailing NaNoWriMo
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Good afternoon everyone again, thanks for stopping by my weekly writing blog! This week I welcome Sarah LaFleur, NaNoWriMo winner for 2013. She’s here to share how she (and 311,830 other dedicated writers) conquered the international NaNo challenge and managed to write a novel in one month. I’ve invited Sarah to tell us what she learned about her skills as a writer, and to see if she’d brave NaNo again! Take it away, Sarah, and thanks again for guest blogging.
How I Nailed NaNoWriMo Now as most writers know, writing daily can be easy or excruciating depending on the circumstances going into the session. One of the most difficult parts of this challenge was the feeling that I couldn’t miss a day, even if I wasn’t particularly inspired to write anything. My initial goal was to get ahead early. That plan failed miserably! If you look at my NaNo graph, every time I pulled ahead, something would come up (remember those break days?) to thwart my advance. Yet, somehow I managed to “win” by getting all my words. How did I accomplish this feat? Well, I had a great support system of writing buddies to cheer me on and keep me going. Often we would meet on twitter and complete “writing sprints” together by writing for a set amount of time and then tweet our word count for the duration. I also had my own motivation in the form of a sticker chart (yes stickers!) where I would earn a small sticker for every 250 words and a big sticker when I hit my daily goal of 1750 words. There were so many days I would have quit if it weren’t for that big sticker reward. So, what did I learn from this experience? Firstly, I am a very consistent writer. Whatever word count I achieve in the first thirty minutes of writing typically stays the same for the duration of the session. I have always been a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants author, but I outlined extensively (meaning I spent an entire hour placing chapter markers and notes for all 30 days) and that helped get me through the dead zones of the book. I am incapable of writing without editing at the same time, and although it cost me on my daily count, I’m hoping it will also mean when I revisit the story in a few months, I’ll still like it. Finally, all this begs the question; will I participate again next year? Well, in the interest of preserving my marriage, my official answer right now is “maybe”. However, I predict that by the time next November first rolls around, my fingers will once again be poised over the keyboard ready to type with reckless abandon for another 30 days… Sarah LaFleur ———– Thanks Sarah, that was a really interesting account of your NaNo experience – love the sticker chart idea! Getting ahead of yourself and something coming up to ‘thwart’ your advances sounds so familiar, even to me, an as yet non-NaNo writer. Check out more from Sarah Lafleur on her website, find her on Facebook, and on Twitter – how we connected initially! She’s also got an author page on Amazon, so take a look! More from me next week – keep writing! Lou x Find me on Facebook
elaine
20/8/2014 08:55:15 am
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