Another retrospective
2008-01-02 00:05Way back in March of last year I decided to resume writing in earnest, as I had been doing less and less over previous years. To aid in this I also started using a spreadsheet to track how many words I wrote, so I could have something to look at and show myself I was getting somewhere.
Further, I also set myself goals with the intention of getting into a productive habit. For the first month, one hundred words each day. Two hundred in the second and finally four hundred words each day of the fourth month, which was intended to be kept up indefinitely.
Over the course of the year I made three attempts at making it to the fourth month in this system and each time I stumbled at the 300/day mark and did not write anything for about a month after. Possibly from this I should take the lesson that two hundred words per day is the most I can manage now and to stay with that until I find myself comfortably exceeding it.
The last time I attempted it, in October, November and December of last year, I made some further alterations to my goals since they really did not take into account the need for editing or the fickleness of writing. It was not much of a change, really: treating the daily target as an average to be aimed for rather than a firm line which must be crossed each day, and two new columns. One to show my average word count for the month so far and one to show me the average I need to make to meet that month's goal.
In retrospect I think it worked well. My final sheet for the month of December tells me the total amount of fiction I wrote was 48,571 words. I do not have numbers for any previous year to compare with but it is a nice large number and I am suitably impressed, even if it would not quite make a nanowrimo novel. I did write the second part of a triplet of novelettes/short stories, which possibly made the bulk of that word total, along with making substantial progress on a couple of other long-term projects and transcribing two of my longer stories to electronic form.
( Containing a list of Nonreal Things, with accompanying links )
Further, I also set myself goals with the intention of getting into a productive habit. For the first month, one hundred words each day. Two hundred in the second and finally four hundred words each day of the fourth month, which was intended to be kept up indefinitely.
Over the course of the year I made three attempts at making it to the fourth month in this system and each time I stumbled at the 300/day mark and did not write anything for about a month after. Possibly from this I should take the lesson that two hundred words per day is the most I can manage now and to stay with that until I find myself comfortably exceeding it.
The last time I attempted it, in October, November and December of last year, I made some further alterations to my goals since they really did not take into account the need for editing or the fickleness of writing. It was not much of a change, really: treating the daily target as an average to be aimed for rather than a firm line which must be crossed each day, and two new columns. One to show my average word count for the month so far and one to show me the average I need to make to meet that month's goal.
In retrospect I think it worked well. My final sheet for the month of December tells me the total amount of fiction I wrote was 48,571 words. I do not have numbers for any previous year to compare with but it is a nice large number and I am suitably impressed, even if it would not quite make a nanowrimo novel. I did write the second part of a triplet of novelettes/short stories, which possibly made the bulk of that word total, along with making substantial progress on a couple of other long-term projects and transcribing two of my longer stories to electronic form.
( Containing a list of Nonreal Things, with accompanying links )
Story day!
2007-08-22 23:45 Click for fiction. Original title was Heading for the Light.
I have also started as an experiment a new linkdex, to be expanded as appropriate. The old out of date one is still here.
As far as I could find, the wiki farm I am using leaves it to me to set the licence my contributions are under, which means I do not have to worry so much about accidentally giving away rights I may want later. If/when I do release something under some form of copyleft I want it to be deliberate.
Still to do: Work out how to indent the beginning of paragraphs without indenting the whole paragraph.
I have also started as an experiment a new linkdex, to be expanded as appropriate. The old out of date one is still here.
As far as I could find, the wiki farm I am using leaves it to me to set the licence my contributions are under, which means I do not have to worry so much about accidentally giving away rights I may want later. If/when I do release something under some form of copyleft I want it to be deliberate.
Still to do: Work out how to indent the beginning of paragraphs without indenting the whole paragraph.
I was watching an old tape of Transformers last night. It doesn't seem too likely to me that a kids show made these days would blithely show a good character gambling (and cheating at it) and then going for force when they still don't get what they want, let alone having the main role model character endorse the activity at the end of the episode.
News from Enceladus (AKA that moon the name of which I always forget how to spell): Emily Lakdawalla of the Planetary Society writes about two papers, one suggesting that chemicals detected in Enceladus' geysers indicate warmth and chemical activity (warm here apparently means 300 to 575 degress Celsius, wow!). The other paper deduces from the lower elevation of the moon's south polar region that there could be a reservoir of melted water beneath the surface (this is where the geysers are active, I believe)
And now for something I forgot to include in my post last night:
Story Linkdex
fiction tag
A Day in the Life
Meditation
Rain
Maricia
'Vhrydal' Sketch
'Krellain + Than' Sketch
Sliced
untitled story
First
Jayde
Epic Fantasy
News from Enceladus (AKA that moon the name of which I always forget how to spell): Emily Lakdawalla of the Planetary Society writes about two papers, one suggesting that chemicals detected in Enceladus' geysers indicate warmth and chemical activity (warm here apparently means 300 to 575 degress Celsius, wow!). The other paper deduces from the lower elevation of the moon's south polar region that there could be a reservoir of melted water beneath the surface (this is where the geysers are active, I believe)
And now for something I forgot to include in my post last night:
Story Linkdex
fiction tag
A Day in the Life
Meditation
Rain
Maricia
'Vhrydal' Sketch
'Krellain + Than' Sketch
Sliced
untitled story
First
Jayde
Epic Fantasy