*I explained this in an old post, here
As the month of November comes to its inevitable conclusion,
all across this land writers either pat their own backs because they made it or wail that they did not reach the goal of fifty-thousand words
in thirty days. The latter is more common, as it turns out.
I hope that if you participated you made your goal. I hope
that if you didn’t make it, it was worth doing anyway.
But I must say I don’t get it.
Writing by the word count is something I finally understood
as helpful to pacing in a novel. Butt-in-chair is also something I understand. Sometimes
it’s just like that. You have to sit and do it, muse missing. Writing every day
is what many think is the only way to do it if you are serious.
But writing with the crowd?
For me, the very notion that I am part of millions doing the
same thing at the same time is an anathema. I have no illusions that when I sit
down and conjure a story I am doing something no one has ever done before. But, at
the same time,I tell myself I’m doing something of singular value. If I don’t
do it, it won’t be done.
I also found the value of the self-discipline. "Self" here stands for creating in a pace and a manner assigned to oneself. I struggled
with this issue until my late twenties. I had no problem meeting others’
deadlines. But I rarely managed to finish anything that no one was waiting for
and that was self-assigned.
Then I found a way, and I’ve been fortunate ever since.
Thank you, the great guardian of creativity, for this gift.
If National Writing Month is your thing, I raise a toast to
you for the fine effort. I hope the result is just as fine. But if you
failed to meet this goal please consider that your way of creating may not fit
with this painting party, and keep looking for how *you* work best to do your best work.
Wise words, my friend.
ReplyDeleteYes, it's all about what works for YOU.
ReplyDelete50,000 words is a lofty goal! I think writing any number of words is an achievement, so kudos to anyone who participated in the challenge, even if they didn't quite hit the mark.
ReplyDelete