My life seems to have gotten a little out of balance lately. I say this because it's a modestly better reintroduction after five weeks of silence than the traditional "*tap, tap* Hey, is this thing on?"
It's not that I've been too busy to write; I've got no less than three unfinished short stories (and some completed song lyrics) on the front burner. But that's the problem. For a while my creative urge just dried up (or sublimated into roleplaying, one of my ongoing offline activities that has happily picked up the pace). And now that fingers are hitting the keyboard again, there's such a backlog that I'm dancing around from project to project and falling back into my old bad habits of leaving everything 80% finished. And with so many stories crowding around seeking resolution, I've been putting off journaling in favor of fiction.
The good news is that this creative burst is carrying me into winter in high spirits, rather than a few months of endless freaking out over the weather and general lack of daylight. And procrastination has its fringe benefits: for instance, I'm up at nearly 4 AM putting some final polish on a relaunch of the
TTU Wiki. I just upgraded its back-end software (after three years and seven releases), which was a lot less painful than I expected, so I wrote some custom code for it to make its
category listings prettier (i.e., sorted by columns instead of rows, which is slightly less trivial than it sounds).
The wiki has been getting a lot of attention lately, actually. I'm really proud of the
glossary of TTU slang, and there's now some excellent detail on events like the
New Year's Flyby. And I finally fixed the permissions so that any registered user can make edits wiki-wide -- which should make it a lot friendlier as a collaboration tool.
All of which is well and good, but ... it's almost November, and
you know what that means.
Yes: NaNoWriMo is upon us once again. And, 48 hours from the start of the race, I find myself dithering.
On the one hand, a lot of close friends are committing to write, and I really want to join them in solidarity. It would also do me good; some of my
best work has come out of the frenzy of the November word-count dance. My creativity is currently working overtime and crying out for outlets.
On the other hand, I know, with great and terrible certainty, that if I make any sort of NaNo commitment, all of my half-done projects are going to die ignominious deaths, and that rankles. I've also got more social commitments than usual this year and don't feel like I could devote the time to NaNo that I really ought to. (I also wrote 50K words of
Legend of Hero last year, and traditionally I've taken a year off after each NaNo success.)
I'm juggling a few ideas for "alternate" NaNos -- I'm no stranger to the idea, having moved from
BaMoJoEnt to
BaMoTTuSto to novels and back. Perhaps I could create a new page on the TTU Wiki every day, or go back to the classics and post some nonfiction every day? Or maybe I ought to just keep on keepin' on, and spend November finishing my 5-story backlog ...
Thoughts? I'm in a state of severe waffle here, so reader input (and especially fellow NaNo-er input) will go a long way toward helping me channel my pent-up writing bug.