Sunday, December 8, 2013

Nanowrimo 2013

So you see the topic post and if you're unfamiliar with it you must be thinking, Nanowhatta? 

Maybe your eyes would be popping out of your head. Maybe. 

Nanowrimo stands for- National Novel Writing Month 2013, Nano for short, and as the name implies, it all happens in November. The goal is to devote 30 days of your life and however many hours it takes to write a novel at least 50,000 words long. And I DID IT!!! 50,009 words to be exact, which ended up close to 80 written pages. 12 point font. Single space. In 30 days.

Crazy right?

Who would do such a thing? Only someone who really loves to write, because I'm telling you it doesn't matter how much time you have. It's not about having the time at all. It's all about making the time. You will always make time for the things you love to do, right? If you have a favorite TV show, I bet you watch each episode every week, regardless of what else is going on. Or if you're in love, you'll always take those moments to spend time with your loved ones, right? People always will make time for the things they love most. 

So for me, Nano 2013 started in late September. If you haven't read my previous posts, I've always dreamed of being an author and I'm currently enrolled at University of Houston working on getting into the Creative Writing program to fulfill my childhood dream. So late September, me and my husband are at a friends house on a Sunday evening, playing some board games. The thought comes to my mind, and I'm pretty sure it came from God, to do Nano in November. 

At first I was like, 'Uhh...I don't know if I'll have time." Because I was working 30 + hours a week and going to school, plus spending time with my beloved spouse as much as possible. And I had tried to do Nano before with my best friend years ago. I only lasted the second day. It was pretty sad. I had run out of inspiration and I just spent more time staring into the blank space of my computer. 

But the more I thought about doing Nano, the more excited I got, until I decided and set my mind to the fact that I was going to do it, and succeed at 50,000 words in 30 days. Now you have to understand that I'm one of those people who once they set their mind to something, it's going to happen. Period. 

So with the badge of victory, I'd like to dedicate this post to those aspiring writers out there and share the three most valuable lessons I learned through my experience.


  1. Great Novels Are Planned. (I wish I could add a few more underlines to that word.) Ok honestly before this year, I never used outlines for my novels. Ever. I'd write down ideas as they came, but that was pretty much the end of my "planning". After I'd get the plot and the beginning and end of the story secured in my head, I'd sit down at a computer and let my imagination do the rest. Can you guess where that got me? Nowhere. (I have only finished one story idea that way, but compare that to the dozens of other ideas that have never been finished.) In October, which is the official Nano prep month, I tried doing a very simple outline of my novel idea. It was a simple three paragraph plot summary. One paragraph for the beginning, one for the middle and one for the end, which basically summarizes the idea living and bouncing around inside your head. Then you take that simple outline and build on it. Not like a little log cabin but build like a five story skyscraper. A great outline would include not just a chapter by chapter summary of your entire novel, but more importantly a scene by scene summary. What was hard for me during the 30 days was feeling like I was forcing myself to write because my imagination had run dry and I had run out of ideas for scenes. That's when writing sucks because you know what your writing sucks but you still have to make 50,000 words somehow. You can't always rely on your imagination to save you in those "pulling out your teeth" moments. You have to plan, and plan well. It will save you when you're running out of steam.
  2. Don't Revise Until You've Hit 'The End'. I'm serious, save the editing and backspace key for when you've finished your idea. That doesn't mean you have to write every single scene, but make sure you definitely write the important plot scenes, and especially the ending. For me, Nanowrimo was all about taking my idea, chewing it in my mouth a bit and then spitting it all out on paper. And in the end I have a completed idea, not a perfect idea, but a completed, workable idea. I will definitely edit and maybe the entire plot will change, but I finished an idea and that's important. I no longer have a blank canvas with only a few splatters of paint. Before this year, I would write and then go back and change scenes and edit before I finished the book. I have not finished a single book that way, so take my advise and jail up your inner editor until the sentence is up.
  3. Discipline, Discipline, Discipline! Writing takes allot of that, at least for me. And the month being November, things come up. I had to finish a paper for my English class for college. I had tests to study for. Sleep to do. Work, school, driving through traffic, spending time with my husband and driving down to Florida for Thanksgiving. I'd have to push myself some days to get my writing done. But I always made sure I got it done because I knew if I fell behind, it would only make it that much harder the next day. What helped me the most here, having a calendar as my laptop wallpaper of what my daily word count should be in order to make 50,000 by the end of November, which is about 1,667 words a day or around three pages. And yes I did write on Thanksgiving. Like I said earlier, things come up as they always will but you will always make time for the things you love. I found that I was able to do that. There were only a few days where I didn't write, but I always made sure I caught up. I learned to discipline myself in order to meet a goal and I succeeded, which is probably the greatest lesson I learned through this project. We can always do more than we think we can. 
(for more information, visit www.nanowrimo.org)