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This is a continuation of my blogging here at WdC |
NaNoWriMo Okay, this is going to be brief. Regular readers of my newsfeed posts will know I have issues with NaNoWriMo, National Novel Writing Month. There has been a litany of things that have turned me off. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() And on a personal level: ![]() So, now that I have been negative, what am I writing this for? Because I am doing naNoWriMo this year. I promised an ill friend that I would accompany her on her first attempt to do it, and so I am doing it for her. I will encourage her and boost her and get her over the line. As for me… I’ll make it. The goal is hardly a challenge for me. This brings me to the crux of this post: To those who are doing NaNo, the goal is to write 50k words in 30 days, at 1667 words a day. Look at that goal. It does not say you need to finish a story. Just that you need to write 50,000 words of a story. Or you can rebel and change the writing goal, or write a series of short stories or poems (though that is more NaPoWriMo). Yes, technically, it should be 50k words of a novel (the No means Novel, after all), but by now people just write whatever they feel like, and push for 50k. We have a prep going on here at WdC ("October Novel Prep Challenge" ![]() But, and this is important, I do hate the “competition” aspect of NaNo. You “win” if you crack 50k words. Great. But that means you are said to “lose” if you don’t. That is rubbish! Every word you write is a good word you have written, and one more you have written that you have not written before. So many people claim they are going to “write a book”, but never do, so if you get words down, then you are ahead of the vast majority of the population. And just because you don’t crack 50k words in November doesn’t mean you stop writing. Keep working on it – you’ve got the base for a longer story. And it is only a first draft, so it does not have to be perfect. Not at all. Other drafts can occur at any time – this is 50k words of a first draft. This whole “winners and losers” thing sucks big time. I hate competitions and contests at the best of times, but making a challenge into a win/lose situation just reeks of elitism. So, write, do NaNo if you desire, or unofficially if not (which is what my region has opted for) and just remember: All writing is good writing! |