Na Po Wri Mo: Lessons Learned

Dec 01, 2009 07:34

Numbers
Total November word count: 21796. Stories begun: 18. Stories posted: 11. Stories that reached endings: 8.

What did I learn?
  • I'm rather more squeamish than I thought about writing smut, especially for weirdsex. That bothers me because it contradicts my self-image.
  • 1,000 words a day only works as an average - the stories that I was happy ( Read more... )

furry, personal, writing, nanowrimo

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Comments 15

paka December 1 2009, 16:19:01 UTC
I'm rather more squeamish than I thought about writing smut, especially for weirdsex. That bothers me because it contradicts my self-image.

I think there's more to look at than that. When you're doing online scening, you have at least one other person's enthusiasm and creativity to ping off of - compare to The open call for suggestions, on the other hand, was a great idea - but going it alone is a lot more dredging confidence, creativity and motivation all up out of yourself. And that's before getting into the technical aspect of "how do I write this and have it be communicative, readable, and interesting language use enough." I don't think anyone would fault you for getting cold feet faced with all of that.

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ribbin December 1 2009, 17:12:22 UTC
What paka said. It's always much harder to create fiction from a vacuum.

Also, look at your audience. If you're used to posting things to topic-specific venues, then odds are the audience is going to be into that specific topic. Post it in a mixed venue like LJ, and you have no idea what your reaction will be. Believe you me, as a writer and a writing tutor, I tell you now that 40% of good writing is confidence. The other 60% are education, natural skill, word skill, how many languages the author speaks, how edited it is, how much time there is, how much coffee/beer/speed the writer consumes, outside help, convenience of writing, inspiration, etc, etc, etc.

As a teacher once told me- nobody tells their students to go home and play clarinet brilliantly. They tell them to go home and practice playing the clarinet. So I'm not going to tell you to got home and write something brilliant. Go home and practice writing.

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krinndnz December 1 2009, 17:20:38 UTC
Yeah, the Butt In Chair method is still pretty much the most reliable way to get writing done.

I have some-but-not-quite-enough confidence. I know that once I sit down and commit, that once I've been writing, I can get into that zone where it feels like I could keep going indefinitely. Which is nice.

Thanks for the encouragement - I hope you liked the parts that you saw.

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paka December 2 2009, 06:23:05 UTC
A friend of mine has really been into the concept of "flow" proposed by Mihaly Czikszentmihaly. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_(psychology) is more about this, and I think it really is a good model of "being in the groove" as far as writing.

In my own experience with visual art, I'm rarely "on" enough to plonk down and work up something big and have it rock immediately. It does happen, but it's not frequent. Drawing badly enough that I need to move to a different page or just rework things a lot is a warm-up for me, equivalent to stretching or meditation before doing any martial art. So I think this is part of what you're noticing - the first ten minutes of writing aren't good before you actually get more into the feel of what you're doing - but I'm not sure how a writer could kind of push this one as intentional warm-up exercise.

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krinndnz December 1 2009, 19:55:17 UTC
GDocs is definitely great. Keeps a revision history, simple, searchable, good stuff.

My handwriting is okay - legible - it just hurts to write longhand.

Thanks - and there's more to go on this project.

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relee December 1 2009, 18:39:13 UTC
I only saw a couple stories early in the month, then it seemed like you stopped. I wondered if you gave up or something. I was kind of disappointed because I really liked your first stories...

Have you been publishing them somewhere else? I really want to read more. <3

You can use me or any of my characters in your stories, if you want. I don't mind. Non-canon of course. <3

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seritaph December 1 2009, 18:42:09 UTC
You had some fascinating reads that you were putting up, and hit the "I wish I could have written that!" button in my head repeatedly. It's something that normally comes up only when I'm rummaging through books at the local store, not so much online.

Ah, the butt in chair method of practice. I keep trying to master that, but my distraction fu is at such a level that mere concentration and proximity has no chance against it.

Squeamish on writing smut? Club. Jackets. Join?

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krinndnz December 1 2009, 19:47:02 UTC
Well, thank you.

Yeah, distraction-fu - ugh. Isolating oneself from "distractions" is annoying, too - I like keeping up with LJ, Twitter, IMs, and so on.

How much for the monogrammed club jackets?

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phoenixtril December 1 2009, 22:18:40 UTC
I find any kind of writing solo about kinkery just comes off as feeling really weird and awkward for some reason or another. Partially it's the bouncing-off-other-people thing, and partially it's what Cube was talking about before, about how it feels 'hackneyed' about why something like that would happen.
Justifying weirdness, even to myself, is a hard thing to do. Doubly so if it's really eccentric weirdness, which is what I tend to involve myself in pretty much all the time.

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krinndnz December 8 2009, 01:00:44 UTC
I definitely felt those factors. I'm glad I kept writing anyhow. Also, you are definitely one of the people that I am trying to pander to. :D

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