NaNoWriMo: Tips and Tricks by JC Rosen

[caption id="attachment_8262" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="Streeter Seidell, Comedian, photo by Zach Klein"][/caption]

It’s Day Three of NaNoWriMo. Some have already put down their pens or tucked away their keyboards. This next week sees many people fall by the wayside. Our heroine’s goal today is to help you stay on the NaNo path, dear Reader.

Yes, it’s a challenge, but you knew that going in. You can do this. Have you lagged behind, even missed a day altogether? You can make up those words by doing just a little bit more every day. You do not have to make them up completely within a day! That can be overwhelming. Being overwhelmed is probably the most common reason someone drops out of NaNoWriMo. Let’s try to avoid that, shall we?

The highlighter in Microsoft Word is one of my favorite tools when I’m writing, but particularly when I’m writing quickly. (I generally use the Fast Draft method explained in Plotting in 2009 for my rough drafts.) Let me give you some ideas:

 

  • Considering deleting a whole section? I know, we’re not supposed to rewrite. It can’t be helped at times. Sometimes there’s an entire section that has to go in a totally different direction for the story to progress, yes? Please, do not waste time actually picking through and deleting that section. Highlight the whole thing in red and keep going. As a friend put it, you can go back and “mine for nuggets” later. More importantly, you wrote those words. They count toward your total word count.

  • Can’t remember a name of a character from earlier in your story or a description? Stuck on a name altogether? If I can recall the first letter of the name, I put it in with “TK” after, such as “CTK”. The clever DebraMarrs teaches that “TKTK” appears nowhere in the English language. Therefore, you can search it without picking up other words. Can’t remember the first letter or description? I wrote an entire book with an important secondary character named “TKTK” because I couldn’t recall her name. I highlight all of these in yellow, whether I am using notes like “[check description, hair color]” or “XXX”, and just keep on writing. An important reminder: the asterisk is a wildcard, so you will not be able to Search for it (Find or Ctrl-F in Word). Using TK or XXX, something searchable, makes the editing process far easier once NaNo is done.

  • Not sure about a section? Don’t delete it and don’t highlight it in the red that marks deletion. Choose another color – I use green – and tell yourself that you’ll take a closer look at it during edits. Maybe you’re worried it lags, there’s no tension, or it’s all just headed for the cutting room floor. Do NOT go back and rework it. Just highlight it, take a deep breath and keep on going. You wrote it. It’s done. Move on.


 

Okay, enough of my blathering about my highlight hints. I actually do have links for you today. Here are a few that may help. Some of them overlap with one another and the information they give, but each contains bits of wisdom which may inspire you.

Write to Done has a guest post by Marla Beck titled First Draft Secrets: Five Simple Steps. It’s not written for NaNo, but it has some great information regardless of whether you’re writing a NaNo or standard rough draft. Lots of good reminders in there if you’re already in the know, too.

suite101.com has an article titled How to Write Faster and Reach Word Count Goals written specifically for the NaNoWriMo crowd. There are a couple tips that are repeated from the previous article but don’t skip this if you’re struggling with word count. One of the best suggestions is that you use DrWicked‘s Write or Die, available free on the web or as a desktop edition. You’ll be surprised at how much you can produce using WoD.

Having comfort issues? Writer’s Relief Blog posts Healthy Computing, all about how to avoid the most common issues that come up for writers. Avoid Repetitive Strain Injury, learn how to set up your workspace and more here. There’s a lot of self promotion on this page, just scroll down a little bit for the article and you’ll find some choice stuff.

And finally, some comic relief. Check this out and tell me if you don’t find at least something on it amusing: Famous Authors’ NaNoWriMo Tips (as found on twitter). It’s on The Inkwell Bookstore Blog, a terrific one you’ll want to look through. AFTER NaNo’s over.

One last note: I know I’ve said this before, but I encourage you to embrace the spirit of NaNoWriMo.The whole purpose of it is to get you to just write. No matter what your word count is, if you can just write, you’re winning. Practice telling your inner editor off and let the muse within fuel your writing. Write a truly rough draft, ugly and dirty, so you just get the story out. Only then can you truly edit. As they say, you can’t edit a blank page.

Keep going, wrimo!

 

JC Rosen has done NaNoWriMo for several years. She points to it as one of the reasons she began writing after a 15-year hiatus. On the NaNo site as JC_Rosen (isn’t that clever?), she’s open to buddy listing. She uses the #NaNo hashtag in addition to #amwriting during November.

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