Friday, November 30, 2012

How I Failed NaNoWriMo and Why I'm Okay With That

I entered NaNoWriMo with the rough beginning of a story in my head, but no real sense of who my characters were or how my plot would play out. I also had huge vacation plans for 10 days in November. Oh, and I'm not really a writer. I mean, I journal sometimes, and there's occasional clumsy attempts at poetry, but I've never actually written fiction. Not even short stories.

I learned a lot. I'm not sure I'll do this again any time soon, but maybe... If there's another piece of a story in me. Maybe I'll do a sequel.

I had taken Friday off work so I could finish it... but Thursday night, I did the math and realized that I had to write about 25,000 words in order to "win" by Friday at midnight. When I'm writing well, I'm at about 1,000 words per hour. 1,200 if I'm going a mile-a-minute and times are good. When I did the math, I realized I'd have to keep that 1,200 words per hour pace through Thursday night, all through Friday, miss the parent-teacher conferences I had scheduled for Friday, and not stop to eat longer than half an hour, working until almost midnight on Friday. That was never going to happen. So I got to sleep in, probably avoiding the cold I'm still fighting off.

That flat place is the day before vacation through a few days after vacation. The slow rise after that is where I listened to the voices.

What Went Wrong

  1. No plot, no problem, my butt. I know there's a movement out there full of people who believe in letting the story write itself (they're called "pantsers"), but that doesn't work for me. It rambles. And there are severe eddies, where it's pretty obvious there's no exit plan.
  2. There was this vacation thing... Vacations are great, and especially this one; I wouldn't have traded it for all the novels in the world. But, well, I could have done some writing on vacation. I mean really. Even 500 words a day might have been enough to let me win this one, if not also for number 1 above.
  3. No character development. Or characters. I tried "pantsing it," but, like with the plot, it's hard to develop characters you don't actually know. The character sketch templates included with Scrivener (see below, in What Went Right) really aren't very detailed, and I didn't really think much at all about my characters, even after having started writing them.
  4. Listening to the voices. The voices are like a little mini-form of depression, and depression lies. I don't mean to make light of depression here, or of novel writers. The same little voice that says, "You're already so far behind. Why fight the fail?" and, "Besides, this is crap and you know it." and, "Who are you, that you think anyone wants to read this drivel you're penning?" is the same voice that whispers things like, "You're not good enough" and, "You'll never be pretty. You never were." and, "No matter what you do, you know it's just going to fall apart." and all the other horrible things we tell ourselves in the darkness. Don't listen to any of the voices. They all lie. (We'll revisit this later in the post).

What Went Right

  1. I got this awesome software called Scrivener. If you write fiction, I highly, highly recommend it. I don't write plays (though, I guess one could argue that I don't write fiction, either), but I can't imagine writing a play without using Scrivener. If I were to write non-fiction, I can't imagine a tool more appropriate than Scrivener. It practically does the writing for you. It has a place for research, places for notes, a nifty cork-board thing, pre-made templates, a great tutorial (one of the best software tutorials I have ever seen, and I've seen a lot), and it's a quick download and not very expensive to begin with. It really helped me organize my thoughts, and write more coherently.
  2. I had a great beginning. Look at the first half of those numbers! I was ahead of schedule, and being really good about writing... up to a point, anyway.
  3. I had some concept. I knew just enough to get a framework down - where the story would take place and what the basic premises of the story were.
  4. The challenge words. This year was the 200th anniversary of the battle of 1812, and Maryland NaNos were challenged to use the names of the ships (Meteor, Devastation, Aetna, Terror, Volcano, and Erebus), the numbers 1812 and 200, and some of us opted to work "Sandy" into our works, too. This was super-fun, and solved the problem of coming up with quite a few names.
  5. Having a Pinterest board for NaNoWriMo. This was a source of motivation and a place to put tips and tricks I wanted to save for later. Wish I had started it sooner, though.

Different For Next Time

  1. I'll find my old AD&D character sheets and use those as a basis for coming up with characters. Or I'll find something like them online (actually, that website I linked to has some downloadable PDFs. And Scrivener supports PDFs. Hmm).
  2. I'll start coming up with characters and a plot in October. Or sooner. With an outline. Or at least a short list of basic plot elements.
  3. I'll attend more write-ins. But not with the Things. Those were great for silent, focused time, when I didn't have to get up to let cats in and out constantly, or break up fights between the Things, or answer questions about who's been on the computer longest and when is dinner.
  4. I'll shut those voices down by staying ahead of schedule (and not trying to do NaNoWriMo in years when there's a big vacation planned). I'll use the pep-talks and the things I posted to Pinterest to shut those voices up. I'll get better about recognizing those voices, so I know when I need to go get some motivation. 
  5. I'll take a creative writing class? Maybe go through the high-school version of the work-book from the Young Writers Program.

Way Forward

So, what do I do with 25,367 words of unfinished novel? Well, first thing, I'll do some thinking about this plot I don't have and the characters involved. If I stick with this, even just a little bit (not necessarily 1,667 words per day), I can finish it within the next few months and then start trimming out all those eddies, and firming up my characters and revising, revising, revising. 

If it ever gets published, you'll be the second to know. And in the mean-time, I'll do some guilt-free knitting and some guilt-free spinning and some guilt-free reading.

6 comments:

  1. I've found that even if you go for the "pantsing" NaNo approach, you don't have to completely Pants it. My usual plan of attack is to sit down and kind of do a basic overlay on the first day. Kind of "these are some major plot points I can think of off of the top of my head for the first several chapters of NaNo." So boom, maybe 20-30 minutes and I have a kind of summary for my first 5+ chapters. Then I'll take the first chapter and spend maybe 10-15 minutes brainstorming and blocking out scenes for it and then it's kind of filling in the blanks. You draft up a character here and there. Write a couple of scene summaries (Scrivener is awesome for this, because you just poop out a bunch of index cards for the chapters and then inside of each chapter you break down all the scenes, etc). I didn't "win" this year either, because I was on a vacation of sorts for the first 10 days of the month... but it's just an excuse to write, right? The important thing is to finish what you start, no matter how long it takes. So good luck finishing, just make sure you do. And then, do it again ;)

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    1. Thanks! I'm still fumbling around with Scrivener... I'll have to take another look at the index cards and the tutorial, I think. I was mostly using the file/folder tree on the left side for what little outlining I did, but there's plenty of room for growth!

      Do you generally know how it'll end and/or what the climax is? Or do you leave that for later in the month?

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  2. Congratulations on trying NANO this year!!! It sounds like you learned a lot from this experience.

    Anne

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  3. It's hard to think of it as a failure when you've learned so much: about process, about motivation, about yourself.

    And you are too pretty. so shut it!

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    1. Thanks. :)

      I meant it when I said I didn't regret a single minute of the vacation, you know. Even if this really was going to be the great American novel, still TOTALLY worth it.

      Love you always!

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  4. 25,000 words is 25,000 words and that's a lot of words. Good job.
    My first few years I really did pants through things, which was much easier for my first book, because a large part of it was inspired by old Shaw Bros kung-fu films, and any time I got stuck, you do what you do in any crazy 70's kung fu film. Random fight scene. The key for me has always been having a clear end point and shooting for that climactic emotional payday.
    And Scrivener is awesome.
    Last thing - for the past few years, I've done a daily podcast to go along with NaNoWriMo, (this year hosted at madpoetfiles.com) and I think putting out a short daily encouragement to my fellow NaNo writers really helped me stay on task through the month.

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