Achilles’ Heels

Some of you might be wondering why The Lady Of The Blog™ hasn’t been posting on a terribly regular basis since the end of the year.

You might think that her hands have shattered under the sheer volume of words typed; and you’d be forgiven for being wrong. After all, 650,000 words is a lot of words, in a single year. That’s more than ‘War and Peace’ (587,287 words), which took 3 years; ‘Atlas Shrugged’ (either 565,223 or 645,000 words depending on source) completed over 6 years; Les Misérables (530,982) a staggering tome over 17 years; and more than half the size of the entire Harry Potter series (1,084,170 words), which—according J.K. Rowling—took 17 years for all of the books.

The Lady Of The Blog™ would never claim that these were edited, readable, coherent, or even the slightest bit planned, but I watched her writing, through every struggle and trial, in every environment and circumstance: suffering illnesses, making a pilgrimage to San Francisco for ‘A Night Of Writing Dangerously’, completing 49,430 words in a week (an iPad is a great carrot to dangle), a third-degree burn (on her hand, no less), thousands of words lost to software glitches, whiplash, writing a guest blog for the folks behind NaNoWriMo, a birthday party, losing 10 days of writing time attending a wedding, and a friend’s death.

So why in the world—with all that stunning determination—would she slow down? Is it because car died and she had to shop for a new one? Is she busy writing up a couple short stories for an application to Clarion? Is it because she’s feverishly editing the miles and miles of sentences?

I don’t know. But everyone’s got a weakness. 650,000 words are not hers.

 

Spreading sturdy, delicious, and fresh-out-of-the-fridge butter on a stout slice of sourdough… might be.

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I Wrote Thirteen Novels in 2012. Now what….. and retrospective.

I feel like I am just beginning.

Last year I wrote thirteen novels, 650,000 words, and a handful of blog posts. I started the project with the idea that either I would find out that I am really a writer, and learn what it is to have writing a constant thing that must be done regularly, to have it a habit to sit down and type what I daydream more than I imagine that I might someday write some of it down.

I thought, when I started, that either I would end up a writer on the other side, or I would know that I never want to write again. I thought that when I finally crossed the finish line that I would collapse, feeling like I was full of words and stories I had told, ideas spent, projects behind me like miles of track and I would be the triumphant marathoner.

And I thought that I would feel finished, like I had completed something.

And yet, no. I feel tenuous, green like fresh grass out of a snow drift, fragile and new and so very timid about even sharing these few words. I have written post after post and then deleted them, because they only said what I thought I wanted to say, and yet the old formula does not touch my heart the same way. It is different, the words, the meaning of this life, the things that I want, and the realization of who I am.

I must begin. Again.

I wrote thirteen novels in 2012. 650,000 words of fiction. It still feels surreal, like an object so precious that I must keep touching it to know that it is there. I have to keep saying it to people, to myself. That I did it.

And then the lingering question.

Now what?

Again, there were assumptions. That I would dive immediately into editing what I did, that I would comb through in horror and amazement at what I had written and start to pull it all apart and see what could be made of the mess. I thought I would have used up my ideas, and that I would want only to examine what has already come. And in that assumption, I thought that the value of writing thirteen novels would be in what was produced itself. Again, I find myself wrong.

I'm sure that what I have written has potential; it would be lovely to have some of the stories that I so enjoyed writing be viable. Surely, at least four of five of the books have potential, at least I think.

But like all the other assumptions I made, it is hollow. Like the possessions of a human do not mean anything about themselves in the end, the true value of writing so much had nothing to do with what I wrote, but more in the writing of it, the abandon to write whatever it was within my heart to write and to witness it as a part of myself.

The value came in blogging my adventure and meeting the wonderful people who have been here with me on my journey, it came from writing a guest blog for the Office of Letters and Light, and taking a whirlwind trip to Write Dangerously in San Francisco, riding on the amazing kindness of donations from strangers and friends alike.

The value came in forgetting to worry about who I seemed to be (or simply being too tired all the time to pretend to be anything else). It came in the terror of beginning, and pushing through resistance and old beliefs because there was nothing else to be done but to move forward.

It came in the form of finishing against all odds, in writing a novel in a week, in the incredible support of my parents and friends and strangers who have taken it upon themselves to keep me buoyed up, who comment on this blog and make me smile, and in the act of blogging at all, sharing myself with anyone who wishes to look.

The value came from the steadfast devotion of my amazing irowboat, who would so often turn to me and say not “I love you,” or “You've got this,” but instead “Wordcount” – a demand and not a question, and he even made me an action figure to egg me on. He stayed up nights with me, endless coffee and peanut m&ms on demand, his shoulder always there to lean on, and the constant demand for my wordcount pushing me past exhaustion. I could not have done it without him.

The value came from slowly feeling myself turn into a person, to feel the parts of myself that I adopted to appease those around me become uncomfortable and hang from me like an old coat I don't need anymore. I can feel the solidity of this person I am, even if I am not entirely sure who that is now.

And of course, the value is in having become a much more able writer, a much more confident writer, who is not afraid of putting junk down on the page. And a better writer by far.

And as a bonus to all that and more, I have thirteen novels to edit if I want to. It is all so much to process, and I have fallen into a deep silence since the new year, one of reflection and living and lots of deserved sleep.

And still I keep asking myself:

Now what?

Writing more, of course. I have some new stories to tell, ideas to explore. There is Clarion West to apply for, and writing contests to compete in, and publication to seek.

There is blogging to do – lots of blogging, and catching up on responding to comments and emails since before November, and life and cleaning and all the movies and television I was too busy to watch last year.

And editing, of course. I cannot forget that – the terrifying unknown of editing. Because while last year was valued past the produced work, it should not forget that I want to be a published novelist sometime, and it's a good place to start.

And besides, I have a new irowboat action figure to pester me.

Happy New Year, everyone.

What happens next for you?

 

Thirteen Down, None to Go!

So this happened…

And yes, that is my gorgeous irowboat surprising me with his little video stunt.

We are in New Orleans to ring in the new year. May you all have a wonderful one as well. The cemetery is Lafayette Cemetery in New Orleans, and I wince because we are drinking the Worst Wine in the World. No really, it was.
(Check my twitter @partlypixie for more)

And HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!!

 

Twelve Down, One to Go! with looking forward….

Two novels in November; 100,000 words. 600,000 words since January.

It has been over a year since I decided to write a novel a month for 2012.

And it's hard to believe that it is almost over.

Honestly, I expected to feel more relief than this as the end drew near, as the hurdle of two novels in a month passed and I could see that proverbial light at the end of the wordy tunnel.

But oddly, I am not, not entirely. I am feeling a little wistful, a little melancholy that this is my last month of this marvelous and hard and awesome and hard year. I have met so many amazing people both in person and online, I got to go Write Dangerously, I got to blog for the OLL, I have discovered so much about myself and I have finally put writing as the priority in my life.

To think that this time last year, I had never done more online than to post a few little essays to my personal blog. I never wrote regularly, always trying to squeeze in an hour or two at a coffee shop to jot down ideas in a journal or on my old bulky laptop. And I never, ever, finished anything.

I'm close to really being a writer; I can feel it.

Wanting to be a writer sung me to sleep and woke me up and chased me down in the silence of my car as I drove home at night, scenes and characters rising to me unbidden, like a waking dream whispering that I needed to be doing something else with my life. Reading books I loved by other people hit me like an icicle in the chest, that yarning to do it, to feel the weight of my book, heavy with the ink of my words in my hand one day.

I still wonder what the pages of my first book will smell like; will they be sweet and musty, or sharp with shiny white pages? And for the first time, I actually think I will get to find out one day.

I am making plans for the future. Between here and then is one more novel, and a ton of catching up, a wedding to go to, New Years in New Orleans with irowboat, and many adventures to have between. But I am making plans to be the writer I am becoming. I will enter contests and edit my novels and apply to Clarion West.

And I'm going to keep this blog going for as long as you guys will have me.

But for now, right now, what I really want is for everyone reading this to feel how I am right now someday. I want all of you, no matter who you are or what your passions are, to feel the solidity of accomplishment, the fatigue of perseverance, and the realization that one day you will succeed because you know how, you have learned how, and you keep learning how.

I blog not just for myself, but because I want to use what I am doing to inspire. Nothing makes me happier than when someone tells me they are going to try writing a book because of me, or that they have decided to go back to school, or travel, or whatever. We can make each other better by doing what we love, and wanting others do the same.

I believe that all of us have something that we cannot keep ourselves from doing, whether it's the drive to feed people, to make things, to serve tea, or to catalogue books. Our job is to find whatever it is we can't not do, and to do it, and to be happy doing it.

So whatever it is, whoever you are or wherever you are starting from: this is your time. Think of what you want to do, it need not be so bold as my goal, but bold is my favorite way to be. Just think, feel out what part of your story is ready to be told.

And, in January, start.

Last November, I decided to give myself a year of the life I thought I wanted. I decided it was time to begin. I was so frightened and timid and unsure, but I did it; I started and I kept going and now, I am 50,000 words from triumph. It's an incredible feeling, and it has been the best year of my life so far.

I want that for all of you.

So tell me, what do you want to give yourself a year to do?

 

NaNoWriMo 2012 Complete!

Achievement Unlocked

Tonight, I drink. Tomorrow, I will blog.

 

Ten Down, Three to Go! With other thoughts.

October was a wild ride, and this ending feels hard won. There was the loss of irowboat's cat Felix, the win of the NaNoWriMo post, the daily life in-betweens of it all, and working in the words wherever they fit. The anticipation of November has hung on us all heavily, and today it is here.

I spent Halloween dressed as a writer, with a patched-elbowed sweater, hair tied up messily, and the telltale squint of one who has been putting words in strings for hours. I held the bowl of candy for trick-or-treaters with whichever hand didn't have my coffee mug, and I believe I wished more kids a Merry Christmas than Happy Halloween.

In the bleary and achingly wee hours, I finished my tenth novel. 500,000 words. And celebrated with three hours of sleep; the deepest I have had in a long time.

And now it is time to start again. This time, the first of two novels for the month: one for NaNoWriMo, one to satisfy my goal for the year.

It is hard to believe that I have come nearly full circle now, that I am less than a month away from when I first got the idea for this project. It seems like only a few months ago that I sat here where I am now, and I looked up and proclaimed to my visiting friend, who sat writing beside me, that I wanted to write a novel a month for a year.

Irowboat gives me awesome shirts.

Now I can write.

He, of course, told me it was a terrible idea. Maybe he forgot that I live to break rules and to chase down terrible ideas.

It was my 1-UP, a new life.

And my beginning happened then, in that instant. I have not been the same since. I wish I knew where it was all going to lead, what adventure I'm in the middle of finding.

But I'm still in the middle of my story. And if there is anything I have found out for sure, it is that we never know what story we are writing until we are at the end.

Only three more novels to go. Three novels, and one night writing dangerously, thanks to the amazing and heartwarming donations I received. I cannot thank you all enough.

Keep your eyes out for more NaNoWriMo tips. Coming to a blog near you.

Now, hand me some more coffee. I have a novel to start!

 

Photo credit: irowboat

 

Nine Down, Three (four) to Go! Or, what it is like to write 16,000 words in a day.

There is no other way to say this: September was a bitch.

It didn't come smoothly, despite finding regular writing times every week, and despite my efforts to not fall behind. But I did. Again.

On the bright side, I only had 16,000 words left on the last day of the month instead of the 20,000 on the last day of August. It may not seem like a large difference, but when the last hours of the month are slipping past and the haze of so much to do hangs like one of those cartoon clouds that only hover over the gloomy character in the scene, raining only on their heads, every little advantage counts.

And in case any of you are wondering what it feels like to write somewhere around 20,000 words in a day, it feels like an absolute blur. It usually begins well, with lots of hope and the words all making sense. And then in the middle, it begins to feel like carrying a weight that is just a few pounds too heavy to carry uphill very far, and you're sure that if you can just get a running start you could get to the top before your arms give out, then it will all be downhill from there.

So you hurry. And as you hurry, you realize that the story is not coming together as readily as you hoped, that you are getting nowhere very quickly. In fact, hurrying seems to have slowed you down. So you decide you are hungry, you need chocolate and dinner and maybe a few gallons of alcohol.

And then you can get started again.

So you take a long break and hope that in the back of your mind you are solving the problems of the little world you have created, and you hope that you can remember all the name of the characters you introduced to flesh out the ending.

And as the night comes to a close, as the end becomes clear, you realize that it is all lost. You can't go on, there is nothing left to write, the story is dead,band you are stupid for letting it all get like this. You shut down the word processor and you close the computer and walk away. Sad, but with the absolute knowledge that you cannot finish, so why even try.

You go to the kitchen for some of that chocolate. And liquor. And you catch a fragment of story as it passes through your head, just a small glimmer of hope that there might be an actual ending after all, a single element to finally tie the mess together.

And you think of all the people you have told about what you are doing. And how they all believe in you.

So you pour another drink. A big one. And make a cup of coffee, even though it is now very late. And then get a bowl of peanut m&ms.

(Or if you are as lucky as I am, you have an amazing significant other to do these things for you, and friends who will remind you that “You've got this.” And these people hover next to you with with encouragement and tough love, like a runner with her coach following her along the sidelines, keeping her feet moving.)

And you open that word processor again, and you decide that as long as you finish before dawn the next day, you will count this as a win, even though there is an excruciating 8,000 words left to go. And every one of them feels like breathing through a straw with an asthma attack.

The alcohol helps. Until it makes you sleepy.

That's okay. You have coffee for this. It'll wake you back up, even if it is cold now.

The story jitters along, sparked by that little stroke of insight that happened in the kitchen. You long ago gave up on remembering all the characters' names, and have settled for things like “kind old guy,” and “suitor seven” to keep the characters straight. Your fingers start to feel vaguely numb, and your brain, if you could see it, would resemble some kind of terrible jello dish. The kind with carrots and marshmallows in it.*

This is your brain on too many words.

The last thousand words happen at long last in a burst of completion, if not speed. And there is exhilaration somewhere beneath a swaddling of fatigue as the word count arrives at 50,000, and then, miraculously, stretches a little bit beyond, just to wrap things up neatly.

You know, for when you get to edit the mess you just left for yourself.

But another day. Because now, you need to sleep. It's a good thing you have alcohol because your mind is chattering like a squirrel having a manic episode, and you wish it could have been so verbose only half an hour ago. Tell it to shush. Brush your teeth. Remember to tell Facebook, or twitter, or at least the cat that you have just performed a miracle.

And sleep. Sleep well.

Tomorrow, you'll write again.

 

*Forgive me for this. I did grow up in Utah.

 

Eight Down, Four (Five) to Go!

Like last month, I finished on time, but found that I needed a few days to recover. To be honest, I finished at four in the morning of the first after a long day of marathon writing, curled up on irowboat's sofa with a glass of bourbon and the UK version of Being Human playing in the background.

A lot happened this month that got in the way of writing – and that is why the blog has also been sparse. There were family health problems, sick cats, and I took several days off in a small mountain town about an hour away to celebrate my thirtieth birthday. Then, of course, several days to recover my brain cells after successfully celebrating my thirtieth birthday.

Regardless of the reasons and my best intentions, I ended up the month with a twenty thousand word deficit for the last day of August.

Of course, I did it. It was not pretty, but irowboat, coffee, and willpower managed to get me through.

It was a good win, a big win.

But what I count as the best part of all is that no one in my life, not my parents or friends (especially not irowboat), and not even I, had any doubts that I would finish.

It makes sense that at three quarters of the way through this year, I should have found a way to not doubt. And it makes me wonder if it was not an accident that I left so much for the end. I wonder if I wanted to test my resolve and my ability. Or maybe things just got hectic.

It's hard to tell, and I'm still too tired to think or write in anything but circles.

No matter what, I can be happy that I have written eight novels, most of which I am excited to continue editing and polishing. And I am positive now that I can handle writing two novels in November. I mean, twenty thousand words in a day, people.

Thirteen novels, here I come!

 

Seven Down, Five to Go! (Reflecting on silence and

Yes, I finished last month, and on time. I just didn't talk about it.

I've written over 350,000 words of fiction since January first.

It's been three weeks since I have blogged, and it is because I have nothing much to say. I can think of lots of topics and witticisms, many strings of words to display, but they are hollow; the echos of thoughts I've had in the past. And I am no longer sure if I think those things.

So silence remains.

The silence is born from outgrowing the old format of my writing, my life, my blog. I no longer know what I want to say. So I am quiet. I quietly go about my job, my workouts, my writing. Old conversation happens like a habbit, and I can taste the stale crumbs. There is a sweet melancholy to this, a mourning period in which I sit and wait to see what creature rises from the ashes.

And as I wait, I still write. Fiction, at least. The story rolls or skips or is forced out and I manage to each month end with some small amount above 50,000 words.

My stories reflect the complexities I am discovering in myself. I am a much better writer than I was when I began, and now I challenge myself each month more, with greater plot points, more characters, much more difficult problems to untangle. It gets harder, not easier, the farther I squeeze through this rabbit hole; I can no more ease up on myself than I can stop breathing. I must grow, I must push my own limits.

I read somewhere once that “writer's block” can actually be a period of silence in the growth of a writer's skill and craft, a void from which a new universe must bloom. (We all know that universes need voids to incubate properly.)

I know one thing, now. I want to have a different conversation about writing than we have been having.

I also know that things around here are going to change a little, to make room for whatever comes next.

I know I sound dark now, but In the Beginning there is always darkness.

And then there is light.

 

Six Down, Six to Go! (Holy crap, we’re halfway there!)

First of all, a quick shout-out to my 12noveling sister. This was her last month of the project, and she did an amazing job, especially considering that she never wrote anything nearly this big ever before and she chose actual genres for each month. I barely know what genre I will write in until the day I begin writing! She’s finished up the year with 3 manuscripts and I am totally proud of her.

Secondly, what a month! I’m so tired I can’t even feel it any more. And yes, that is partly because I got myself in a time crunch and had to write 12,000 words today. If you ever want to know what it is like to be truly without a clear thought in your mind, give this a try. So you can all forgive me for the rather nonsensical and teensy post tonight. It is 2:30 in the morning where I am, and I have decided to stay up late with a celebratory glass or five of wine. Ok, a celebratory bottle of wine.

Don’t look at me like that. I earned it.

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