It’s July 5th, 2015. Week twenty six of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 179 through 185 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 179 to 185: Continue reading
It’s July 5th, 2015. Week twenty six of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 179 through 185 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 179 to 185: Continue reading
It’s June 28th, 2015. Week twenty five of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 172 through 178 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 172 to 178: Continue reading
It’s June 21st, 2015. Week twenty four of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 165 through 171 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 165 to 171: Continue reading
Twenty third in the 1K a Day Motivational Series, in which I talk about something that happened in the previous week that could have or did prevent me from writing a minimum of 1,000 words on a given day, or possibly talk about something that provided support to get me through the day.
So last week would have been the more appropriate time to drop this news, but I asked for a demotion at my day job, in other words stepping down from management. Continue reading
It’s June 14th, 2015. Week twenty three of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 158 through 164 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 158 to 164: Continue reading
Twenty second in the 1K a Day Motivational Series, in which I talk about something that happened in the previous week that could have or did prevent me from writing a minimum of 1,000 words on a given day, or possibly talk about something that provided support to get me through the day.
This past week I’ve been working on The Children of Avalon Circle, what I thought would be a simple little short story, cute, fun, nothing major.
Instead of that, it’s already broken 20K words, which is entrenching it firmly in the novella category. For context, The Recluse and the Runaway on Amazon is only about 23k words. Roughly a quarter the length of a standard novel these days. I let this one run away from me and I’ve been chasing it back down ever since. It’s been a lot of fun to write, just kind of letting it go where it wants, pushing towards a conclusion that is foggy and uncertain at this point.
This is great, but it’s also kind of rough. I have many stories I want to work on and this one’s intruded upon the docket I’ve built for myself this year. After the staggering work I put into Gridfall, I was a little lost. Didn’t know quite where to go next. I fiddled around for a day or two the week before, I’m constantly thinking about other writing projects. Things are happening that have me distracted, that are keeping me from paying attention and writing in the more focused manner that I should be.
It’s difficult to transition to a new writing project so soon after finishing a big one. The mind is still abuzz, a little burnt, from the previous work. Capturing that drive, that focus, is next to impossible for some. It’s been very difficult for me.
The only thing that really helped me was the routine. It’s already in place, so even though I’m a little bit wanderer right now, I’m still pushing forward. I still know where I’m going even if my mind isn’t quite there yet.
So it’s a double-edged sword, this routine. I had to break the routine a little bit simply because I wasn’t working on the same story anymore. Any break in the routine can lead to a total collapse if I let it. And some days are harder than others. some days are just “But I’m Distracted and I just want to watch X-Files and forget about things for a bit, come back tomorrow when I will be able to focus.”
But you can’t do that. You can’t let it lapse or it sets the precedent. One of my favorite standup comedians at the moment is John Mulaney, and he does this bit where he says something like, “It’s so much easier not to do something than it is to do something. That you would do anything at all is incredible. Percentage-wise, it is 100% easier not to do a thing than it is to do it.”
And I don’t think I’ve ever heard a more apt breakdown of letting routine lapse. Not doing a thing is easy. Doing it is hard. Doing it every day is impossible.
But we still do it every day, don’t we?
Get back on track and write the hell on, writers.
It’s June 7th, 2015. Week twenty two of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 151 through 157 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 151 to 157: Continue reading
Twenty-first in the 1K a Day Motivational Series, in which I talk about something that happened in the previous week that could have or did prevent me from writing a minimum of 1,000 words on a given day, or possibly talk about something that provided support to get me through the day.
So Saturday I wrote a mighty amount, finishing up the rough draft for Gridfall, the story that was essentially my entire life for the past five months. I had ripped the words kicking and screaming from my brain, and it felt so good.
It was time to goof off. It was time to rest, let the brain relax, let the words jumble a while and see what popped out. Continue reading
It’s May 31st, 2015. Week twenty one of writing 1,000 words per day of fiction. It’s time for another update!
Days 144 through 150 have been successes, with a minimum of 1,000 words per day written.
Stats for Days 144 to 150: Continue reading
Twentieth in the 1K a Day Motivational Series, in which I talk about something that happened in the previous week that could have or did prevent me from writing a minimum of 1,000 words on a given day, or possibly talk about something that provided support to get me through the day.
It’s the last week of May so it’s time for the next Inspiration post!
Let’s talk about Brandon Sanderson, shall we? That most prolific of fantasy authors, that speed-demon famous for Mistborn, Wheel of Time, Steelheart, The Stormlight Archives, and more.
He of the googolplex of words published every year. Continue reading
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