Monday night I went to Toronto's NaNoWriMo kick-off event and I had a fantastic time!
This event really starts off the 'season' for me - I find it impossible not to feel filled with Nano spirit after meeting so many people all gearing up for the event. It's also a treat to spend time with all the friends I've already made through Nanowrimo, but whom I don't really get to see during the rest of the year.
So, my preparations for November this year are mixed right now. I have about four pages of notes on ideas that I could use in my story. I have some vague character ideas, and I know that I want the whole shebang to end happily, of course.
My big concept this year is an esports-themed contemporary romance, with the new team manager of a team with a pretty big legacy falling for one of the player's on the team. Unfortunately, her manipulative ex is a player for a rival team - a detail that wasn't exactly on her application for the job.
I also have a list of player names and team names and I've got a vague, slightly undefined idea of what the game will look like (think DotA2 with objectives to take that give bonuses to teams, with still that base defense premise).
What I lack is a solid idea of how the plot will flow. I have a starting point and ideas for little conflict and a few big conflicts along the way, but nothing set 'in stone'. Hopefully that won't come back to bite me ;)
Good luck to you this year! Drop me a note in the comments to tell me how prepared or unprepared you feel as we head into the final pre-Nano hours!
Friday, October 31, 2014
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Prep Phase: Non-Writing Prep
With a week left to go, the last component - after writing prep and commitment - is the non-writing prep.
This is when you need to:
November is also not a good month to embark on a massive cleaning spree. Get your fall cleaning done before the 1st of the month. Plan to decorate for Christmas after the 30th. Do not commit to anything new this month - this isn't the time to become your kid's room parent at school, nor to volunteer at church or anywhere else. It may sound a little selfish, but you will have your hands full of 50,000 words. Load up on added responsibilities and obligations in the post-Nano-season (aka the other eleven months of the year!)
November is nearly upon us.
This is when you need to:
- consider your schedule
- consider your writing space
- check out your region on the forums and potential meet-ups
- plan for reduced chores/easier meals/etc.
Schedule
In order to write 50K in a month, you need to plan to write a minimum of 1667 words per day. Some days you will write more (check back next week for a post on buffers) and some days you will write less, but overall, you will want to average 1667 words. How much time it will take you to write this will depend on how quickly you write in general and on how much time you actually spend writing and how much time you spend thinking, plotting.
Pull out your calendar for November, with your work schedule, your school assignment due dates (and build in time for working on those assignments), reading you need to do for classes, appointments, classes you're taking, childcare responsibilities, social commitments and so on.
Figure out which parts of the month will be quieter, when you can try to write some extra words, and identify those parts that will be busier, when you might feel lucky to squeak by with your daily word count intact.
Go down to your average week day and average weekend daily schedule. Do you usually have an hour or two in the morning to yourself? Maybe in the evening? How about a lunch hour at work when you can handwrite a few hundred words? Identify spaces in your day to day schedule when you can get some words down on the paper.
Writing Space
Plan now where you'll try to get most of your writing done. Maybe you're going to stop at a coffee shop on the way home every day for an hour or so. Perhaps you have a home office that will suit.
Think also about distractions and minimizing them. All time you spend answering your children's questions, people-watching or checking out your Twitter feed will be minutes you're not investing in writing your Nano story. Plan your writing space to minimize whatever it is that distracts you the most. Write better in silence or with sound? Alone or with people around? Internet available for encouragement and quick research or will you sink time into playing Facebook games instead of working?
Lastly, some people like to load up on snacks and writing totems. If you write better with a speciality tea in your mug or a bowl full of M&Ms, then buy them now. A writing totem - maybe a hat you will wear, a good luck charm to rub or a candle to burn - may also help get you into the mood to write. We'll talk more about settling down for writing sessions next week - but start thinking now about what you might like to include as part of your writing ritual and make sure there's a home for it in your backpack/at your desk/in your coat pockets, etc..
Nano Region
Your home region on the NaNoWriMo forums is going to be a great source of support and enthusiasm. Everyone there will either be doing Nano or has done it in the past. Everyone is excited about the event, and the forum should be a source of great positive energy. You'll also find information here about meet-ups that your local Municipal Liaison has prepared. Hopefully there's one or two taking place that you'll be able to attend. I find that my odds of completing NaNoWriMo increase when I have met other local people who are doing it as well. I think I feel obligated to complete my 50K when I know I'll be meeting up with other people who are trying to do it too.
Turn to your Nano Region when you need to commiserate, when you want to go out and write in the same space as other writers and when you want someone to brainstorm with. It's much easier to have a conversation in this space than, I think, the Nano forums at large.
Reduced Responsibilities
If you're in charge of cooking for a family - or just yourself -, try to plan meals for the month as much as possible in advance. This is not the time to try out a lot of new, complicated recipes. This is the time to freeze lasagna and cabbage rolls and casseroles in advance. It's a time for pasta with meatballs, for frozen pizzas, for breakfast for dinner (which I find is faster and easier to cook than most dinners). This isn't the time to roast chickens and turkeys, to make ratatouille or anything that requires an hour or two to prep.November is also not a good month to embark on a massive cleaning spree. Get your fall cleaning done before the 1st of the month. Plan to decorate for Christmas after the 30th. Do not commit to anything new this month - this isn't the time to become your kid's room parent at school, nor to volunteer at church or anywhere else. It may sound a little selfish, but you will have your hands full of 50,000 words. Load up on added responsibilities and obligations in the post-Nano-season (aka the other eleven months of the year!)
November is nearly upon us.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Prep Phase: Commitment
50,000 words in 30 days is a big task. It's 1667 words per day, every day for the entire month of November.
The single biggest thing you need to do before November 1st is commit.
Don't just sign up on the website, set up your profile, come up with a story idea.
Don't just tell your friends and family, strangers on the internet, readers of your blog, your beloved pet that you're doing Nanowrimo this year.
Commit to yourself. Know and acknowledge that it will be hard, that you will have to *work* at it to finish your 50K. Know that you will probably need to sacrifice something - social life, chores, sleep - and commit to doing that. Promise yourself that you will not let anything keep you from finishing Nanowrimo, as hard as it may get.
If you want a shiny banner like this one:
If you want to feel the raw satisfaction that comes with accomplishing your goal, you need to commit now.
*2008 was the first banner I found when I went looking for a winner banner in my admittedly messy computer folders.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Prep Phase: To Pants, Plot or Somewhere In Between?
There are many different approaches to NaNoWriMo - and none of them is the best way for everyone. Some people like to start the month with a blank document and see what comes to them as they write. Others like select a genre and have the most basic idea - perhaps a major character and their primary conflict. Some prefer to have a much clearer idea of what they will be writing, creating character sheets, elaborate plot outlines and worldbuilding to their heart's content.
Others fall elsewhere on the spectrum.
Personally, I embrace the official line of thinking regarding working on something new - if you are too attached to your project when you start, you will have a harder time writing as quickly as NaNoWriMo requires because of the quality level. If you've been thinking about a project for years, you will have a hard time letting go and allowing for glaring mistakes to creep into your draft. Your inner editor will be louder and more fiesty, and generally harder to shush.
My approach starts with something fresh, a new idea. It requires a premise, a character cheat sheet, an 'ideas' cheat sheet and nothing else. If I plan too much, I get too invested and that makes me write more slowly and cautiously. If I plan too much, I get frustrated when new tangents present themselves but I feel like I can't explore them because PLOT OUTLINE. It makes me want to write linearly, which means if I'm really stuck, I can't skip ahead to an easier scene. And most importantly? It means I get bored. All of these things spell disaster for me when I'm doing NaNoWriMo.
If I don't plan at all? I inevitably run into a wall and have no ideas for how to get out. My story has no direction and I panic and flail and give up.
I need to be armed with a basic idea of where I'm going and some tools to get me out of the weeds, but nothing too rigid!
Others fall elsewhere on the spectrum.
Personally, I embrace the official line of thinking regarding working on something new - if you are too attached to your project when you start, you will have a harder time writing as quickly as NaNoWriMo requires because of the quality level. If you've been thinking about a project for years, you will have a hard time letting go and allowing for glaring mistakes to creep into your draft. Your inner editor will be louder and more fiesty, and generally harder to shush.
My approach starts with something fresh, a new idea. It requires a premise, a character cheat sheet, an 'ideas' cheat sheet and nothing else. If I plan too much, I get too invested and that makes me write more slowly and cautiously. If I plan too much, I get frustrated when new tangents present themselves but I feel like I can't explore them because PLOT OUTLINE. It makes me want to write linearly, which means if I'm really stuck, I can't skip ahead to an easier scene. And most importantly? It means I get bored. All of these things spell disaster for me when I'm doing NaNoWriMo.
If I don't plan at all? I inevitably run into a wall and have no ideas for how to get out. My story has no direction and I panic and flail and give up.
I need to be armed with a basic idea of where I'm going and some tools to get me out of the weeds, but nothing too rigid!
Genre
Know your genre and its expectations. Know why you want to write in a particular genre - do you love reading it? Do you watch a lot of television in this genre? Perhaps you've written this genre before? Have some familiarity with your genre. Know the tropes and common elements - both so you can avoid them if you like, but also so you can fall back on them if you hit a real wall.
Premise
I always want to have a core idea - a sentence or two that gives me a couple of characters with a goal and a conflict. They don't need to be pretty, or spot on - they just need to give me a sense of where things are going to go. These sentences will give me the start of my cheat sheets, and they will get me through the month. These sentences also give me the grounds for brainstorming - who is involved, what are they trying to do, what goes wrong?
Characters
I usually want my main character - I tend to write in either first or limited third person. I will want to have the basic details: name, general appearance, personality and goals. I also want a sense of who there is in that person's life, but only in very basic terms: annoying co-worker, klutzy friend, lenient boss, sexy vampire lover. I don't want to get a lot of specific details because too many will make me feel locked in and also obligated to use the character.
Names
Names are one of the hardest part of character-creation for me. I have a really tough time coming up with the exact right name for a character, and trying to find one from the various available resources (more on these in a later post) can suck up hours of precious writing time during November. So my strategy during the Prep Phase is to make a list of potential names. This list will be ten or twenty names long, and whenever I write a character in November whose name doesn't immediately come to me, I'll grab a name from this list. The name might not be the perfect fit, but it'll work as a placeholder for this draft, and because I take the time to prep this list, I know that at the least, I like the names for whatever universe I'm working in.
Plot
Do not outline. At least, I do not outline. Instead, I recommend brainstorming ideas for concepts to include in your draft - these can be characters, scenes ideas, crazy items that you want to make use of, settings that you really like, a conflict - anything you can sum up in four or five words. "Epic rap battle between gnomes," "haunted house," "charity misusing donations to buy alcohol" - these are all good ideas for a cheat sheet. Some might get a little longer: "Joe confronts Claudia about missing page in book," "Mariah plays D&D for the first time", "killer uses toaster and a lime."
These ideas will be your 'get out of jail free' cards during November. Use them when you get stuck and have no idea what should happen next. Once you've started writing, you may also find your brain drawing a map of your story through your idea cheat sheet, and that is completely cool. Don't lock anything in, but instead let yourself play with the possibilities.
I like to have a list of 20-30 ideas before I start the month. More is always better. One year I assembled these ideas into a vague order that I might use them in, but whenever I got stuck, I never hesitated to grab them out of order.
Thursday, October 16, 2014
November is: NaNoWriMo!
Nanowrimo is nearly upon us now - November 1st is when thousands of authors, both new and old, around the world will start putting words down on paper and computer screens. The goal is to write 50K words in 30 days, and to revel in the experience alongside other writers.
This will be my twelfth year of Nanowrimo. I've written while doing my undergraduate degree, while doing a graduate degree & working a job or two, while working full-time, while working part-time, while pregnant, with a newborn, with a newborn and a preschooler, and this year I'll be writing with a toddler and a child in junior Kindergarten.
Fun times, folks, fun times.
I've got a record of 7 wins and 4 incompletes. Never a loss, because I always got words down that I wouldn't have otherwise, and that's always been huge for me. I am *happiest* during November, when I am writing regularly, which speaks volumes about what I *should* be doing with the rest of my year.
Over the next couple weeks, I'm going to post my tips and tricks for getting prepped for the month of November, as well as reflections on how I'm actually getting ready (or not) and really, any odd ramblings that come to mind as we head towards the big day.
We've got two weeks to sharpen our pens, focus our minds and creativity, create our personal maps for success, and make sure we kick things off with a bang! I'm eager to get started, are you?
Fun times, folks, fun times.
I've got a record of 7 wins and 4 incompletes. Never a loss, because I always got words down that I wouldn't have otherwise, and that's always been huge for me. I am *happiest* during November, when I am writing regularly, which speaks volumes about what I *should* be doing with the rest of my year.
Over the next couple weeks, I'm going to post my tips and tricks for getting prepped for the month of November, as well as reflections on how I'm actually getting ready (or not) and really, any odd ramblings that come to mind as we head towards the big day.
We've got two weeks to sharpen our pens, focus our minds and creativity, create our personal maps for success, and make sure we kick things off with a bang! I'm eager to get started, are you?
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