Eventuality

A blog that is sometimes frequently updated, and sometimes abandoned completely, from an aspiring writer and professional procrastinator.

November 09, 2011

Please Don't Quit While You're Ahead

I'd like to share with you, if I may, a brief history of my dealings with NaNoWriMo.

I don't know for sure what year I began, but I know it was when NaNoWriMo was still relatively unknown--I think 2003, which would make me a junior in high school. The concept was new and exciting, and I found myself really looking forward to November, when I would tackle my first ever novel-length writing project. I'd write the novel I started developing in junior high and had written an opening chapter to once before. Most of the book (I thought) was already planned out, so it was just a matter of writing it down. How hard could it be?

My first NaNoWriMo, I wrote roughly 200 words.

I tried again (with the same story) the next year. And the year after that. I managed to crack into 4 digits, writing probably 1000 words each year. 2% of the 50,000 required for NaNoWriMo. It was around that time I decided that NaNoWriMo was not for me--though oddly, I still believed I was capable of completing a novel. Just not in one month.

I stayed away for a few years until, late in the summer of 2009, I mentioned NaNoWriMo to my writer-type friends, forgetting that not everyone spends as much time online as I do and assuming they already knew about it. After I hesitantly explained to them the wonder and madness that is NaNoWriMo, they decided this was something we would do.

At first, I was adamant that I would not be participating. I knew better. I'd been where they were--the excitement that comes from a ridiculous, but plausible goal--and I knew the disappointment that lay ahead. But they were persistent. It would be different--I was older now, and my writing had matured. We'd be doing it as a group, so I'd be pushed to carry on. So against my better judgment, I went for it. But this time, I did things differently. I went in completely blind, making up my plot on the spot November 1, 2009. That year, I made it to 10,000 words. A vast improvement, to be sure, but another failure.

By fall of 2010, I knew what to expect. Again, they talked me into it (my wife, in her rookie NaNoWriMo year, was the only one of us to reach 50K). So I tried again. My 2010 count? 20,000. Still better, and still failing.

So this year, I convinced myself that I was going to give up the dream that NaNoWriMo was something I could accomplish. I told my writing friends that they'd be doing this one without me, and I stuck with it. Until a week before November.

I decided that I wanted to--needed to, even--try again this year. (Why I decided that is another post in itself). So at midnight on November 1, I again dove in.

And I don't know what it is--maybe I found the perfect combination of an idea that I had invested in but hadn't planned much, or maybe now that I'm out of school I can finally feel like writing is not something to be feared and avoided--but this year, for the first time, I feel like I have a chance at winning. At just over a week in, I'm already caught up with last year's all-time high word count.

It's today that worries me. Today I wrote only 100 words.

The key, I know from experience, is to get back to it tomorrow. And maybe I have nothing to worry about. Let's face it, I'm not exactly a prolific writer, and for the last week I've been putting in an average of 2300 words a day. To borrow an analogy often made by Mur Lafferty, it's like deciding to run 2 miles a day after years of sitting on a couch. You will burn out if you push too hard.

So I'm hoping that today was just the break I needed from the fatigue that comes from writing more in a week than you have in the past year. I'm not in any danger, since according to NaNoWriMo's handy graph I can actually go another two days without writing and be on schedule, but I can't let myself fall into that trap as I have in years passed. Tomorrow, it's back to work.

And somehow, that idea no longer fills me with dread.

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