Monthly Archives: April 2011

Easter Writing Check In

I know I promised to check in a couple more times over the weekend, but on Sunday I was hit hard by the flu (i.e. that dreaded lurgy) and have been sleeping it off ever since. Just call me Sleeping Beauty (except there’s nothing beautiful about mucus and puffy sinuses).

So my Easter Writing Marathon progress kind of stalled. As in, I did okay on Friday, met my word count Saturday, and pretty much haven’t touched Scrivener since. So this is where things stand at the moment:

16276 / 70000 words. 23% done!

I’m hoping this coming weekend will get me to my Easter goal of 20,000 words, as the husband is running a LAN and will be away all weekend.

I’m also hoping I’ll have the energy for a longer blog post and will FINALLY be able to post the before and after pics of my first DIY project.

But now I’m off to eat pizza and sleep some more so I can kick this thing in the butt once and for all.

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Richard Castle and Me

One thing I cannot resist is a mystery show with quirky, lovable characters in which the relationships are just as important as the crime-solving, i.e. Bones, Castle and Veronica Mars. In fact, I can’t resist any show with quirky, lovable characters. Gilmore Girls, Office, West Wing, anything by Joss Whedon. I loves them all.

That was a long way of saying Castle is one of my favourite shows.

I mean, come on. Who can resist Nathan Fillion?

But more than Fillion’s quirky lovability, the character of Castle and I share some very similar qualities, beyond the crime-solver by day, writer by night life. (Unfortunately I am yet to solve any crimes working at a PI office, but I’m certain that day will come). (Although I will always remember the day my brother in law told me "you’re just like Castle!").

No, the reason Richard Castle and I are basically the same person (other than our liberal use of hyperbole) is that we both buy into the romance.

This may be the worst structured blog entry I’ve ever written, and I totally understand why you are confused. Let me step back for a moment.

As I’ve grown older I’ve begun to understand some fundamental truths about my personality, about what makes me tick. And I’ve found the more I understand myself, the more I can use that understanding to my advantage. One of the things I’ve learned about myself is that I find my motivation in story.

I like to think of life as a series of grand social narratives that we all subscribe to, more or less. Narratives like ‘coming of age’, ‘high school milestones’, and ‘starving artist/student’. Now some people remove themselves from the narrative altogether, not liking being told how to feel. Think of the people who refuse to go to formals/the prom or celebrate Valentines Day. These people don’t like being manipulated, and I totally get it. But I like being manipulated in that way, because I recognise that I’m the one doing the manipulating by the very act of ‘buying into the romance’. I’ll get back to that.

Another thing I’ve learned about myself is that I need purpose. I cannot do something ‘just because’. I need a reason to go to work everyday, to study, to go for a walk. I was that annoying kid in school who whinged about having to take Maths because ‘when would I ever use that in the real world?’ (For the record, I stopped studying Maths after year 10, and while I value knowing the basics, like how to use a calculator, I in no way feel disadvantaged for not having studied Maths in year 11 and 12. But that’s just me.)

It can be very frustrating, because sometimes the answer to ‘why do I have to do that?’ is ‘just because’. Or the answer is incredibly mundane like – ‘you need to work so we can pay rent this week’. But in recent years I’ve learned that I can motivate myself to get through the annoying parts of life if I buy into the romance. And no, I’m not talking about the harlequin kind of romance, although that is definitely a grand social narrative I’ve chosen to buy into.

I’m talking about the romance of everyday social situations. For instance, as I’ve gone on and on about recently, a few months ago I got my first full-time job. Now, for someone who needs a purpose for everything she does, spending 40 hours a week in an office – time I could be writing, or studying, or adventuring, mind you – can be a little bit crazy-making. But I’m able to get through it by finding the story, the romance, of the situation. In my story, I’m the 20-something city girl climbing her way up the corporate ladder. In my story I’m the struggling artist, who spends all day at a hum-drum office job, in order to go home and spend a few hours on her art. In my story, I’m the private detective, solving crimes and making the world safe and just. Of course, none of these things are altogether TRUE but they each have elements of truth, and elements of romance, that I use to get  through the boring parts of life.

I do this in every area of my life. It’s how I convince myself to stay up that extra hour to write a few hundred words. It’s how I keep my house tidy. It’s why I get so over-the-top excited about holidays like Christmas and New Years, and the seasons, and major life events like friends getting married and having babies. Because I choose to buy into the romance.

It makes life more fun.

You can see now why Castle is my character alter-ego. He, too, gets exited by everyday things. Remember the episode at the archaeological museum, in which Castle pretended he was Indiana Jones? He, too, uses the story to inform his experience of the world. Remember every single Castle episode ever, in which he’s certain that guy didn’t do it because ‘it wouldn’t make a good story’? Castle uses the story to enhance his enjoyment of life, just as I use his story to enhance my decidedly more mundane life.

Because in my imagination, this is me:

And this is me:

 
And this is me:

And this is me:

How awesome am I, right?

Just kidding.

But I love the story. And I will always buy into the romance.

So how is my Easter Writing Marathon progressing, you ask? No so bad:
 

12402 / 70000 words. 18% done!

It may look like I didn’t achieve much but yesterday was probably my busiest day of the whole long weekend, what with church, doing the bulletin and THREE different groups of visitors over the course of the day. In the end I got a couple of hours and I finished chapter 5, so I’m doing a happy dance. It does mean I need to get about 1900 words written per day for the rest of the break, but I’m down with that.

I gots my tea and I gots my chocolate, the husband is out shooting paint bullets at his brothers, and I’m all set for a perfect writing day. I may even take a break later and go for a walk in the glorious sunshine we’ve got at the moment.

How’s your Easter going?

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Easter Writing Marathon

So somehow the public holidays have aligned just perfectly so I have 5 full days off in a row. This is a tremendous, amazing thing. I have 5 days to write. Sure, I also have two church services and numerous social occasions but, come on. FIVE DAYS. Even if I only get an hour or two each day to write, it’s more than I’ve had in… well, it’s been three months since I started this job.

Here’s where the book is sitting right this moment:
 

11654 / 70000 words. 17% done!

My goal is to get to 20,000 words by the end of the five days. That’s roughly 1700 words per day, which I think is achievable.

I’d also like to try and write a blog post per day, or every couple of days, to check in and ‘prime’ my writing brain. Here are some of the posts I’ve been writing in my brain to and from work lately:
- How I Am Exactly Like Richard Castle
- My First DIY Project
- my experience in writing the second book
- Crit Partners

So, we’ll see how that goes.

Right now I’m heading to church service numero uno, but I’ll be back tonight or tomorrow morning to let you know how I’m doing.

Happy Easter, everyone!

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Quarter Year Goal Check-In (Or Giving Yourself A Break)

I can’t believe we are already into the fourth month of the year. So much has happened, but it feels like no time has passed at all. And it’s the ‘so much has happened’ part that I want to talk about.

In my opinion the best kinds of goals are flexible ones. Life changes, priorities change, and our goals need to be able to change with us. Otherwise we will spend all our time beating ourselves up rather than enjoying life and the opportunities it brings.

I think 3 months is the perfect point to start re-evaluating our resolutions.

Here are the resolutions I posted in December last year:

1. Read more books than I did in 2010

2. Have some sort of conclusion regarding my first book, whether that’s a sale or retirement.

3. Finish the first draft of another book.

4. Make progress on research/planning for Secret Project

5. Travel to the US

6. Secret goal to do with day job

I’m pleased they weren’t as crazily ambitious and utterly unattainable as some goals I’ve made, and I’ve actually achieved two of them:

2. Have some sort of conclusion regarding my first book.
Now, this isn’t an ultimate conclusion because I can easily see myself pulling it out again in a year or so and having another look, but I decided I didn’t want to belabor the submissions process too much longer as it was interfering with my writing anything new. I only submitted to 20 agents, and I received responses that were more positive than I could have hoped for, but I think in my heart I knew Tiger Eye wasn’t ready. I realised that no matter how many revisions I performed I couldn’t make it any better – I was way too close to the project to see clearly, and I was basically laying bricks on a broken foundations. I still have hope for Tiger Eye but for now I am SO HAPPY to be starting something new.

6. Secret goal to do with day job
Yup, I got a new job. An utterly perfect and fulfilling day job, better than I could ever have imagined for myself. They only problem – it’s full time. This is only a problem in that it impedes on some of my other goals, but in my mind it is totally worth it.


It’s funny to me that achieving one of my goals has meant I can’t possibly complete another – I just can’t see myself, as a full time worker, reading more than I did when I was part time. Devoting that much time to reading impacts on how much writing I can do, and on the special times I spend with friends and family. 

So here are the goals I have left:

1. Finish the first draft of another book.

2. Make progress on research/planning for Secret Project

3. Travel to the US

The first of these it totally achievable. Evidence:

10273 / 70000 words. 15% done!

How awesome is that? It’s slow progress but I am totally infatuated with this story and its characters. The other day I turned to Michael and said: "Honey, I think this is my Forest of Hands and Teeth. I think this is the story that will define who I am as a writer. I think this story is ‘the one’." I could be totally wrong, but that’s how I’m feeling, and it’s a wonderful feeling. A writing-related goal I’d like to add to that is to find three blocks of time a week to devote to writing. At the moment I’m finding one, maybe two. The goal is three, and I’m already scheming how to do it.

The second goal? Um. I’m pretty sure I know what that was. Almost certain. Ha. I’m not sure what was so secret about it – perhaps I was trying not to jinx us – but I think the Secret Project was finding a house. And we are definitely making progress on that front, so if I had to predict, I’d say we’ll get further than just research and planning. But shhh! It’s a secret :P What I’d like to add to that one is to A) come up with an organisational system for our future home – cooking schedules and the like and to B) complete at least two DIY house projects. At the moment I’m thinking the dog house will probably be one of them.

The third goal was slightly impacted by my getting a new job. Still waiting on word from work on that one, but we’ll see.

So here are my fresh, new, re-evaluated goals:

1. Finish the first draft of a new book

2. Find three blocks of time a week to write

3. Research/plan (and maybe go ahead with) buying our first house

4. Complete at least two DIY house projects

5. Come up with an organisational system for our future home

6. Travel to the US

Oh, and hey. What do you guys think of the idea of naming our new house The Clubhouse? And changing our names to Daphne, Fred, Velma and Shaggy, with a dog named Scooby? Brilliant, yeah? Michael doesn’t so much agree.

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