katster: (Default)
Good morning!

Today is World Hello Day.
Today is also World Television Day.
If you happen to be in Bangladesh, today is Armed Forces Day

On this day:

In 164 BC, Judas Maccabaeus restores the Temple in Jerusalem. This is the event Hanukkah celebrates.
In 1620, the Mayflower Compact is signed.
In 1643, explorer René-Robert Cavelier de La Salle was born.
In 1694, Voltaire was born.
In 1784, the province of New Brunswick was founded.
In 1789, North Carolina became the twelfth state to ratify the Constitution.
In 1794, the harbor at Honolulu is discovered by Captain James Cook.
In 1877, the phonograph was invented.
In 1893, educator Angus McDonald was born. (Haligonians! He's the one your bridge is named after!)
In 1898, French surrealist Rene Magritte was born.
In 1905, Einstein's paper that revealed the relationship between mass and energy (e=mc2, fool!) was published.
In 1916, Emperor Franz Josef I of Austria died.
In 1920, Cardinals first baseman Stan Musial, one of the greatest players ever in professional baseball, was born.
In 1922, Rebecca Latimer Felton of Georgia takes the oath of office and becomes the first woman US Senator.
In 1940, musician Dr. John was born.
In 1944, Illinois Senator Dick Durbin was born.
In 1945, Goldie Hawn was born.
In 1952, the first US postage stamp in two colors was issued.
In 1953, the Piltdown Man was found to be a hoax.
In 1958, Giants outfielder Mel Ott dies.
In 1962, musician Steven Curtis Chapman was born.
In 1964, the Verrazano Narrows bridge opened.
In 1965, Bjork was born.
In 1966, football quarterback Troy Aikman was born.
In 1969, the first ARPANET link was established. (Hey, today is the Internet's birthday! How cool!)
In 1969, Mariners and Reds outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr. was born.
In 1970, Nobel Prize winner Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman died.
In 1974, the Freedom of Information Act was passed over President Ford's veto.
In 1977, the Concorde made its first flight (London to NYC).
In 1980, a deadly fire breaks out at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas -- the worst disaster in Nevada history.
In 1980, the "Who Shot JR?" episode of Dallas was aired.
In 1986, Ollie North started shredding Iran-Contra documents.
In 1988, Giants pitcher Carl Hubbell died.
In 1993, actor Bill Bixby died.
In 1995, the Dayton Peace Agreement ends three and a half years of war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
In 1995, Toy Story becomes the first feature-length film created completely with computer-generated imagery.
In 2000, the Supreme Court of Florida granted Al Gore's request to keep the presidential election recount going.
In 2002, NATO invites several former Warsaw Pact members to join.
In 2004, the second round of the Ukrainian presidential election was held.
In 2005, Alfred Anderson, the last Scottish WWI vet died.

and yeah, on this day in 1978, a certain person whom I'm sure you're all familiar with was born. It was a Tuesday, at 4:44 AM, back in '78. While it's not 4:44 AM yet today, it's still a Tuesday. Isn't Tuesday's child supposed to be full of grace or something? (I guess technically I am, my middle name means 'graceful'.)

katster.age++;
katster: (bloodsport)
This is in response to my offer to [livejournal.com profile] fairoriana to offer tips on how to make it through. [livejournal.com profile] rolypolypony took me up on it. And then I figured it's probably general interest, so I decided to post it here.

katster's tips for succeeding and staying (mostly) sane during Nano

They're pretty basic.

The first and most important is that "It's Nano. Embrace the suck." (This is actual advice I gave to the Sacramento Nanoers last night.) Authors are not the most objective when it comes to their work, and will go on and on about how much the book sucks. Granted. It's Nano; you're writing 50k words in one month. Of course it's going to suck. If you embrace the suck, it makes it that much easier to get through it.

Two, it really does help to write a bit each day. Nano suggests 2k a day so that you can have slack for days when you absolutely cannot write. But try to get a few words down every day. If it's three or three thousand, every word is one step closer to that magical 50k.

Three, do not go back and edit. If you can avoid it, do not go back at all. Because seeing text on the screen seems to draw what Chris Baty calls "the internal editor." You do not want the internal editor to show up! It makes it that much harder to make it through 50k. This ties into my first point about embracing the suck, because the internal editor is the guy mumbling that your work sucks, and well, if you just change this word to that word, and delete that sentence...the internal editor wants you to get *rid* of words, and that's fatal when you're trying to make word count. Lock the internal editor in a box, and don't let him out until May at the earliest.

Four, get started. Write as much as you can while you're still bright-eyed and raring to work. Because it will slog later in the month, as the rest of the world, who doesn't understand this whole Nano thing, will start making demands on your time, and you're also going to hate this writing thing and curse whatever deities you believe in about letting you think you could actually do this. That's natural. Plus, if you get behind on word count early, it's somewhat discouraging. I know this one well because I didn't get started until November 8th last year. I still managed to win, but that's because I'm a fast writer, and the story suddenly just avalanched onto the page. I do not recommend this technique to anyone.

Five, use nasty tricks to get your word count. Is your character baking cookies? List out all the ingredients. Another great one that was given at the Sac Nano meetup last night was "When in doubt, describe." Description eats word count like nothing else. And if all you feel like writing that day is "I hate this; what got into my mind?", go ahead and write it into the file. Yeah, it'll end up a bit disjoint. But that's okay. Your inner editor is locked in a box, and when you let him out in May, he can take stuff like that out. Right now, all you care about is word count, and that sentence is eight words closer to it. If you write it a dozen times, suddenly, you're 96 words closer to your word count. Plus, it's a good frustration reliever. Also, RaBiChi, from the Sactown Nano group reminds me: Eschew compound words! Don't shove words together! For example, it's word count, not wordcount! Another suggestion to think about would be to get rid of all your contractions. But do not take this to extremes...

Six, you don't have to write in chronological order. There's a neat invention on the computer called "cut and paste", which you can use to move chunks of your novel around later. (Don't do it in November. That's dangerously close to editing.) If you have to write chronologically, but you can't think of a scene, write "And then something happens" and go to a scene you know about. Remember, style doesn't count for much in Nano.

Seven, it isn't Nano until you kill somebody in your novel. Last year, I killed a minor character, but it lead to wonderful things happening. Also, I found out I can get in the mind-set of a sociopath. It's not a good place to be, but it makes the character that much more believable. And folks at the meetup last night suggested being even more drastic, like killing your main character. Yeah, it seems insane, but death scenes take up lots of word count. And if you have to kill a few kittens along the way, well, at least you're just doing it on paper.

Eight, if you haven't grasped it from everything else I've said, your mantra is "Word count. Word count. Word count." Whatever you do, just keep putting words on paper, and trust that your brain knows what it's doing when it comes to this writing thing. I once saw a sticker on a friend's laptop that read, "You have 213 bones in your body. Surely one of them must be creative." Trust that creative bone, and keep trudging.

Nine, ignore those punks who write their entire Nano in a week. They're overachievers. Or they have *way* too much time on their hands. You're not in competition with anybody unless you want to be. (That said, competition is sometimes a good way to get your creative juices flowing.)

Ten, if you have the time, find a local Nano group and hang with them. Sometimes, just knowing there are other actual people out there suffering under the same delusion that they could write 50k words in a month makes it that much easier to go from delusion to reality. Plus, there'll be folks who have done it before, and they'll offer you nasty tricks on making word count and support when you cry that 50k is just too much! (Seriously, the Sactown gang is what got me through Nano last year.)

Eleven, you've won just by attempting this thing. The word count is immaterial. So what if you only get 15k or 30k down before you run out of steam? Yeah, it's not 50k, but it's still an accomplishment. 15k is 30%. 30k is 60%, which is more than half. It's an awfully big commitment to write a novel in November, and if you manage anything towards it, that in itself is an accomplishment. That said, it feels nice when Nano declares that you've written 50k, even if bells and whistles and confetti are only going off in your mind.

And that's pretty much all of my Nano tips. If you know any others, feel free to share in comments.

[Edit: Changed all of my wordcount to word count, because of RaBiChi's comment. See the end of the dirty tricks tip.]

Note

My main blog is kept at retstak.org. I mirror posts to this Dreamwidth account, so feel free to read and comment either here or there.

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