To nano or not to nano

yournoveliscalling5

Last year (2016) I did national novel writing month. The aim is to write 50,000 words in one month; November, a busy social month for most Americans.

I missed the cut by 421 words, officially. I wasn’t so much angry as disappointed in myself. As I said in a blog post, all I needed to do was write 14 more words every day.

Since then, I’ve written two (maybe three) more novels and failed to publish them. I am honestly getting very annoyed with myself, which of course cycles back into putting more pressure on myself.

I don’t know what it is about Nanowrimo that works for me but I can usually do it and win. I’ve even done the camps and set my own word count of higher than 50k.

So I guess I may as well do it.

And I literally just made up my mind right then as I typed that out.

What’ll I write? I dunno. I’d better think of something fast. It starts tomorrow.

links:

my 2016 blog post

My nanowrimo page

 

Don’t waste my time

This week I signed up to a video promotion. The guy running it promised that we would learn how to use a program to save us valuable time. He offered to teach us how to do that in three videos with an offer at the end to sign up to a free live webinar. Each video was 30 minutes long, so I’d already spent one and half hours on it.

Webinars are often problematic for me with my southern hemisphere location, but I put it in my calendar.

I didn’t make it live at 4 am… and I’m rather glad.

The replay was available and it repeated much of what he had said during the three videos but with a hard sell at the end to do his course for US$299.

The replay ran for 3 hours and 48 minutes.

Just to remind you, the whole premise for this was to save you time. And he’s already used more than 5 hours of a viewer’s time AND he’s asking for money. A lot of money for a how-to course on using a free app.

And even worse, he STILL hasn’t told you much about the program. He emphasised three things that if you’ve used it at all, or read any of the info the app provides for free, you’d already know. And he could have taught you about them in less than 15 minutes total.

I have a theory that if I can learn something from these free webinars, then it isn’t wasted time. But this one definitely was. If I see his name on anything in the future, I’ll be deleting it.

Sorting out my values

I was reading Mark McGuinness Motivation for Creative People and for once, I was doing my homework.

He suggests writing down your values; the things that drive you. He gave a short list for you to sort from highest to lowest, then added in dozens more. A few of the original list values didn’t make it onto my second list.

It ended up being this in no particular order:

  • Knowledge
  • Creativity
  • Justice
  • Diversity
  • Generosity
  • Prosperity
  • Discipline
  • Courage
  • Integrity
  • Professionalism

Huh. Interesting. Some of these surprise ME.

Why did I choose these?

  • Knowledge defeats the darkness of ignorance
  • Creativity brings joy to myself and to others – painting, plays, opera, stories – even arranging a garden or a house is creative
  • Justice is vital to the world – without it we fall into the dark places
  • Diversity IS the world; why ignore it?
  • Generosity – again – without it – we let others down.
  • Prosperity – is good for us all – the true trickle down.
  • Discipline – without it you don’t get much done.
  • Courage – taking the first step may be the hardest part, but it’s not easy to keep walking.
  • Integrity ties into being able to trust and believe people and it also means being whole and undivided
  • Done is better than perfect but it sure helps if it’s done well.

So perhaps I should make one of my goals giving away a part of whatever I earn from my writing? It seems to be a much stronger value to me than even I realised.

Links:

Mark McGuinness

Motivation for Creative people

 

Book hoarding

I was talking to a friend about going to a second hand book sale last weekend. She asked me how many I took back each time. I blinked at her. ‘Took back? There’s no taking back.’

I keep ALL my books. It has to be something truly dreadful for me to evict it from my home. And yes, we have a lot of bookshelves, and also not quite enough of them.

And I have thousands of eBooks in my kindle and a few less in Kobo.

I am trying to keep track of the eBooks that I have actually forked out my cold hard cash for. It seems like I ought to read them first rather than the free ones. Does that make sense?

So I tagged the confirmation email in Outlook with red for ‘bought’ and then I go back and change it to green when I’ve read it. Still got a few dozen to go. The boxed sets knock me around.

Up to 329 books so far this year; read and reviewed. I’m shooting for 365. Note to self: work out how to add in the Goodreads app to this website.

Wherever you are, I hope you’re enjoying a good story, too.

Audiobooks and steps

My reminder list shouts at me, ‘you need to write a blog post’.

Fine, I grumble… and then I wonder ‘what shall I write?’

Who the heck is interested in whatever happened to me this last week? And then, of course, aging as I am, I struggle to even remember what happened to me in the last week. A friend suggested it might be menopause and I assured her that I have always been a bit scatty where memory is concerned. Unless it’s useless trivia.

I did manage to install overdrive on my phone and PC. It’s an app that allows libraries to lend e-books and audiobooks. And best of all, it’s free. You just log in with your library card and you’re away!

So I have been very busy listening to the kind of books I might not have spent my jealously hoarded Audible credits on. On Audible I find myself trying to get best value for my money, so I choose very long editions or boxed sets for extra value. They count as one purchase. So I’ve been listening to shorter editions and trying authors and genres I haven’t tried before – that kind of thing. And it’s been great fun.

All my reviews are posted at my Goodreads account.

I have read 320 books so far this year, and I am #8 reviewer in Australian. Nice.

I’ve also walked miles (literally) more than I normally do as I listen while I’m walking, so it’s all good.

Links:

My Goodreads account