How’s everyone doing with their NaNoWriMo goals?

Yeah, me too.

I started with good intentions. Really. Before Nov. 1, I wrote a detailed outline that I vetted for storytelling soundness while leaving room for inspiration. I thought deeply about the characters and how I wanted them to unfold. I gave myself reasonable goals.

And all that planning went to hell around day two. Word count too.

I’m trying to be glass-half-full about this. Since Nov. 1, I’ve already started and trashed two beginnings. Yeah, I know we’re supposed to continue on regardless, but that goes against my writerly instincts. Why waste a month writing a book you know you’ll have to chuck at the end, just to make a word count, when you could stop now, begin again and have something potentially viable to work with on Dec. 1?

What I like about NaNo, and what I think is the most valuable aspect of the month-long marathon, is that you get into the habit of writing again. You also find out what’s NOT working fairly quickly, because you’re deep in the weeds, head buried in the story. I’m at peace chucking the first two attempts at this new project, because in my gut I knew I was heading down the wrong path. The 50,000 word goal? C’est la vie.

How are you doing with your NaNo story at this, the midpoint of the month? Are you still committed to your original story? Have you found that your story wants to go a place you never intended? Have you logged an impressive amount of words that you’d like to brag about in the comments?

Buddy Therese and me at Therese_Walsh and Kathleen_Bolton. If you leave your NaNo ID name in the comments, I’ll buddy you so I can cheer you on with your word count goal (and sympathize with those who may not have logged as many).

Keep on keeping on!

Art by mrcool256.

Kathleen Bolton is co-founder of Writer Unboxed. She has written two novels under the pseudonym Cassidy Calloway: Confessions of a First Daughter, and Secrets of a First Daughter--both books in a YA series about the misadventures of the U.S. President's teen-aged daughter, published by HarperCollins.
Kathleen Bolton
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