I can’t put up the information yet, but very soon there will be some good news posted.
Let’s just say, one important achievement unlocked in the life of any writer.
More to come as soon as I’m able to disclose.
I can’t put up the information yet, but very soon there will be some good news posted.
Let’s just say, one important achievement unlocked in the life of any writer.
More to come as soon as I’m able to disclose.
So once again, it has been ages since I updated. I always feel the need to give a mea culpa for that, or an explanation. This time, I will simply attribute to an upheaval in my life that continues to upheave. I suppose that one can say that there’s always going to be things distracting us from work, and if we want to do something we will. I have, instead of posting here, been actually working on the book I dedicated myself to finishing.
The book I’m speaking about is the project I began for NaNoWriMo this past year in November of 2010. I achieved the word goal of 50K that qualifies you as a NaNo winner before the end of November, as I had done for a few years. However the novel itself, whose title is still in flux, was not finished. With 50K in the bag the book was only half done. So I decided to say NO to starting a project and leaving it half-finished. And so I decided to pick it back up.
It has taken me until now, with the massive nonsense in my life, but I’m at 92,779 words. It has taken me over six months to add another 42K and change to the book, but it is on its way to nearly completed. It will need massive editing and a staunch head-shake from me on a number of issues, including my pacing, but it’ll be done. I refuse to leave another project half done and waiting in my laptop’s depths for me to ‘come back to it someday’.
So the update stands like this: NaNo Continuation 2010 = 92,779 words, three sections (plus interlude) and many, many chapters.
I’m going to finish this one before the Office of Letters and Light (NaNo’s parent company) launches their summer program this year. They’re calling it Camp NaNoWriMo and it’s a second shot at the 50K party for the summer. I’m excited to give it a shot, and I even have a novel concept. But I will not start it before this one gets done. So? It means crunch time. Working on a deadline will give me the focus to get this finished. And I want to check off ‘Completed a Novel’ from my list of things to do category. After that, all I’ll have to do is get this published for another achievement unlocked.
So I’m back. Or at least, I found my way to this blog again. I have been away for quite some time and below will be a rather candid explanation of why:
It happens to everyone. You write until your brain starts to leak out of your ears to get to the end of a project. You work it until you think you never want to see it again. And when it’s over, finally over, you look at what you’ve created and realize… it ain’t over yet. There’s editing. There’s final touches. You’re never quite happy.
I beat NaNo this last year by a goodish amount of time. I made it through and have a manuscript that is not finished. I have a story I really like and a large chunk of it done. I was proud of my work at the end of November. And then? Then I got really kind of burnt out.
One reason was my health. At the end of November I ended up on disability leave from work due to a back injury which, actually, turned out to be a chronic health issue I was unaware of until then. I was left to rest up, not going to work, and get healthier with medications and painkillers, the works. So you’d think that would mean I would get work done. You’d think.
What actually happened was a level of burnout I never imagined. Due to my health issues, it became almost impossible to concentrate on writing. I meandered through getting more done on my NaNo from last year. I pressed other projects, fiddling here and there. But I have now been on disability leave for months (as this is the midst of April and it started December 1st). I have gotten very little work done and it frustrates me. But I realized, in the end, what was keeping me away from writing was a few things: my own health making me unable to focus, my lack of focus damaging my self-confidence in my work and too many voices in my ear about my writing.
The first problem is self-explanatory. Medications make my head fuzzy or make me sick to my stomach, so it’s hard to get my head together. Fibromyalgia (which is what I was diagnosed with) comes with not only back and neck pain that is severe sometimes, but also a kind of fog in my brain sometimes that makes me feel weird. At first I just thought it was me, but other people who I’ve met with fibro recently say it’s not uncommon. Dealing with all that has been a major hurdle in getting my mind in the game. And that lead into the second issue of my confidence going way down on my writing, which of course does not make me want to write. See the spiral developing? Terrible place to be.
The last issue came about when I was trying to fix the previous two. I was trying to force myself to get back into writing, so I started going to writing groups. I started working on collaborative projects. I talked more to other writers. And in the end, I got a very mixed bag of responses. One writing group was all about just getting together and writing quietly in a group, for mutual support (on Meetup.com as ‘Shut up and Write’ in NYC). They’re great, and I found that writing among other people who were as passionate as I was really helped me get my creative juices going again. Then I joined a writing critique group and hit a wall. When asked to produce on a weekly basis for them to critique, I felt too nervous. And when I got up the courage to give over a piece to be critiqued, it got wacked about for grammar/editing. I felt very demoralized afterwards, and kept pushing off going back. My problem, not theirs, but it highlighted a problem in me that I’m going to share.
My problem right now isn’t writing. It’s self-confidence in my writing. It’s showing it to others and taking critique. And its kept me from trying to publish yet, or pushing myself to work harder. The constant question of ‘is this good enough’ has kept me from going forward with my writing in the last six months. And it’s a dangerous creative killer. It almost made me put down writing permanently.
This is an ongoing problem that I am happy to say I am combating, thanks to the support of a great friend and writing mentor. He has pushed me to continue to work, to nurture the creative energy, and be kind to myself in realizing that while things might need work? That doesn’t mean you suck. Talent, he’s told me, is common enough, but the discipline to work that talent is what makes you a successful writer. With his fosterage, I’m developing better habits and, honestly, flourishing more just from the support.
So I’m still writing. It’s slow. I’m working on a couple of projects all at once, reading some great books on writing (which I will comment on later). I’m even screwing up my courage to go back to that writing group, which I’ll probably bitch about incessantly. And, I came back to this blog. Because more than anything, I couldn’t write anything here about my writing since… there was nothing going on.
But I’m still here. And it’s all still going on. And there is a lot more to come. I’m back in the saddle again.
So apparently, my muse jumped out and mugged me last night. I sat down at 11PM and said I was going to write for an hour or so after watching walking dead. I have the day off the next day, why not, right?
It’s after 4AM. I’m still wide awake. And my word count from yesterday has jumped.
Day One= 4,060
Day Two= 11,847
Yeah, it’s like that. mugged in a dark alley by the muse. Whatever, the story is shaping up wonderfully. The main character has just made an appearance, or at least… well, I’d say the main subject. One of the main characters has been going strong since the first page, and his section of the story is now done. I go on to the next one very shortly. The story has a few characters which you flick through to chase the subject of the story and… well, it’s complicated but I’m enjoying teh hell out of it. And like I said, one character down. Now I’m onto the next one.
Only my sleep schedule is shot to hell. I’m going to bed.
I guess it can’t be called a completed piece because it just got workshopped in class, but it is almost completed, I believe. This was a departure from my usual fantasy and sci-fi writing, which I don’t do very often. I went ahead and tried to write a story that is one we’ve heard quite often: woman gets into a relationship, relationship is abusive, woman runs. But I wanted to do it with a new twist, and out came a story called “Of Ghosts and Sky.” It’s a departure for me because even the tone sounds different, turning it into something else that I haven’t really written before.
Completed (almost?): “Of Ghosts and Sky”
Word Count: 4,777
Pages: 16 (double spaced)
It’s a good feeling to get something different out there. I can’t describe exactly where the story came from, but when my roommate read it she said she nearly felt a panic attack coming on. Apparently, my work still does the heavy feeling of anxiety/horror well, even when I’m not aiming for overtly horrific, and that’s what I wanted to bring across. So I’ve achieved what I set out to achieve. It’s not finished, of course – my workshop in class said I had some things to adjust to make it more effective, but I think that with some changes it can be a really effective story.
Speaking of doing effective stories: I am working my way through Stephen King’s non-fiction book, Danse Macabre, his analysis of horror in not only literature but television and film. It is right up my alley as part of my studies at college have been film and television as well as literature. I’m hoping that it gives me a better appreciation of what to look for to create more effective horror. It’s given me a lot to think about in terms of what kind of psychology and themology should be going behind every story, and where the horror in a story really comes from. I really love his analysis of classic monster/horror books such as Frankenstein and Dracula as well as his recommendations about things to go out and ready/see. I am certainly tracking down a copy of Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House after everything he said. I can’t believe the mess they made of the movie by comparison to what the book describes… though should I really be surprised?
I now have a list of stuff I need to go read, but I’m tearing my way through this book as best I can. I seriously recommend.
There is nothing in the world that can make it hard to write like being ill. Since last January I have been battling massive stomach/intestinal issues which have knocked me on my ass, coupled with the problem of ye olde migraines. And you know what I’ve found? Being sick drives the old muse away. It just kicks it right in the ass and sends it running in another direction, far far away. Today however, I managed to write something finally, and I think I may be on a roll.
The piece was originally named ‘Anie’ and now I’m not sure what it’s called, about a Muslim immigrant woman who ends up in an abusive relationship. And you know what? It’s not about anything supernatural. AT ALL. I managed finally to knock out a story that didn’t have anything supernatural in it and I did it on a sick day, recovering from not feeling well. So hah. I can do it after all.
Final page count: 16 (double spaced)
Final word count: 4603 words
And all it took apparently was a few weeks. This is the first work I’ve done really and it feels really good. I may keep it up right now.
In the land of struggling writers, nothing is more terrifying than the concept of getting a rejection letter from someplace you submitted your work. At least, that’s how I feel about it – I am petrified by the whole process. You pour your heart and soul into a story, you pound at it until it hurts, and then just when you think it’s safe to feel good about things, you realize that you need to send your stuff out for submissions. You realize you need to listen to someone else evaluate your work. You realize that, in the end, the creative process is up for review by some editor somewhere who can decide whether or not your work gets published.
Hurts, don’t it?
Submitting my work is the most difficult thing I can imagine. I have stayed away from it, preferring instead to ‘hone’ my work. Really what I was doing was hiding, but I didn’t want to call it that. So yesterday, when I was busy being utterly ballsy about finishing my grad school application (more about that in next post) I decided to just get it over with. Get my first rejection letter – who cares! Just do it! And so I sent out my story. To hell with it! I know the work I sent out isn’t half as good as it should be, but there it goes. And if it gets rejected, well… at least the first one’s out of the way. Then, I can just keep going from there.
First one underway. Let’s see what happens.
So writer’s block is a big, frickin’ stinking bitch and I hate it. I have been kicking at it and not feeling anything but push-back for weeks. Instead of bitching about it however I have devised a scheme to get myself writing again. The plot is as follows:
I need to produce more short stories. To that end, I will put myself to the task of creating three short stories a week of various lengths and kinds. There is no limit to what I can create but I need to put myself to the discipline of it and giving myself plans of action or challenges will get me moving. For this week, I have already written one, and I will go on from there and put down more work this week. Two more to go before next Monday.
Short Story #1: “The Crossroads and the Field” about being weighed and measured by a guy in a funny hat.
Let’s see what else I come up with.
Also updating: a few of my friends are getting into the idea of working on creative projects as well. A friend of mine, Evan, has asked me to write a graphic novel with him, and I think that the project that has been sitting on my shelf, Wanderlust, is perfect for his kind of art. I’m going to see what we can come up with. Meanwhile, the Big Project is still sitting on my head, though I have seemingly lost the spark for it at this exact moment. I will get it back. Other friends of mine want to start up a group of people to pass around work and help each other with stuff, to which point I’m really excited. We might even go on a retreat for writing, which I can’t wait to try.
Went to an autograph signing by Neil Gaiman the other day. He is both a gentleman and a fantastic writer. He sat for an extra two hours to sign everyone’s books and was very sweet. I wanted to see what kind of impression I got off of him and came away with the notion of nothing but a sincerely good man, humble and honestly happy to see his fans. I was, if you can’t tell, most amazingly impressed.
So I’m back in class this semester, of course, with a full course load. That’s what one does when one is a writer and needs a degree to, eventually, get a job that pays the bills. The trouble is that the work load I have for this semester has officially driven my mind clear away from writing, and it’s only week one! I know that one has to push through writer’s block, but my mental muscle gets co-opted to other things. So I think a stricter regime of writer’s discipline is necessary:
I will institute mandatory writing times. I must sit down and write something, even if it is utter nonsense. Otherwise, I am going to get distracted, tired, and not get anywhere. My current project, the behemoth, has receded into the back of my mind again and baiting it out might be like baiting a bear to come chew on my leg, but I digress – I have to get back into it! I can’t just let the muscles atrophy into sleep because I have to do college work. That’s wasting time. So what if I’m tired?
Though, I really am very tired.
That’s not going to slow me down. Onward, they say, and more words to come. Hopefully.
The biggest problem I can imagine in the world is this:
I have come upon my particular novel, which I am codenaming “Big Pete” for the purposes of this blog, with a purpose I haven’t had in any of my other projects. I have enlisted friends and I have sat down and talked the plot out with them. I have made notes. Gads of notes. And then it occurs to me-
I need to just WRITE.
The size of the project intimidated me so damned much that Big Pete has become this monster, Moby Dick-sized nightmare that I am not sure I can tackle. And the funny part? I am blowing the size of this thing way out of proportion. I’m trying to write a fantasy novel, not give birth to a litter of puppies or climb Everest! It’s a novel! I created it! And my own insecurity is making mountains out of molehills. This isn’t Shakespeare, this is my own creative process, and the size of the project is giving me the screaming willies enough to make me hammer about with this thing on notes and discussions and such-
Where does the actual writing come in?
So I resolved tonight to sit down and come up with the first few words of the book. The book, I decided, had an intro page and I am going to come up with that tonight. I have the idea/layout for the first eight chapters, and I shall tackle those as well. But tonight, I will put down the intro at least, or forever be a horse’s ass about this. It’s just a few words-
So why is this so damn hard?!