Behind on Your Word Count?
We are officially a week into NaNoWriMo and it is at this point, that many participants begin to fall behind. Sometimes these are the same people who were massively ahead in the first few days.
So what do you do? Do you throw in the towel? Absolutely not.
Here are a few ideas that might help.
- Word Wars. Try participating in a word war with someone. Set a specific amount of time and write your heart out. Try not to stop and keep it focused on what you need to happen in your story. I’ve come out of many writer’s blocks by participating in word wars, and then I’ve also wound up with whole sections I needed to delete at the end, but for right now – they are still part of the story.
- Chapter Hop. Try writing ahead. Try writing a particular scene or situation that you know you want in your story. Even if you aren’t there yet, sometimes it will help you go back and fill in the gaps down the road. Last year I did this, and in one writing session I wound up with over 5000 words on one chapter that I was dying to write. I was able to then go back and it was much easier to fill in the gaps leading to that scene.
- Try a creative writing exercise. Find a word prompt or just write something creative from the viewpoint of your character. Who knows, perhaps at the end you can use it in your novel, and if not, you might feel more prepared to begin writing again.
- Take a break. Try watching a half hour of TV or reading a book. Don’t just sit and mindlessly stare at the TV. Think about the plot of whatever you are watching. Think about the characters. Think about what you would have changed or written differently, if you had been the writer of the show or author of the book.
- Try using Write or Die. If you’ve never used it before, many NaNo’ers swear by it. It keeps you writing non-stop and sometimes you can even come up with new material and your characters can take you in directions you didn’t see happening. And now there is a desktop version. You don’t even have to be connected to use it, keeping the distractions at a minimum.
- Plan a vacation for your characters. Take them somewhere new. In your story, have them go on a short vacation. Even if it doesn’t fit in the theme of the book, you can have them win a weekend getaway or something similar from a local radio station or library or something. Taking your characters on vacation could be just what the doctor ordered – for them AND for you.
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This post was mentioned on Twitter by simplywriting: Behind on your word count? Just need help keeping it going? http://bit.ly/2Zsdmt #nanowrimo…
I’m not doing Nano, but quite a few people on TomeCity.com are, and it’s interesting to see how everyone’s doing. There’s a forum dedicated to Nano there too. It’s at:
http://tomecity.com/smf/index.php/board,54.0.html
…if you’d like to take a look, and even post your work there!
The Nano-ers there also spoke about Write or Die. I like the concept of the Kamakazi version! lol.
I just tried the online version of Write or Die for the first time today, and I had fun challenging myself with it to keep writing. I watched the video on the desktop version, which looks intriguing, but I’m wondering if anyone else out there recommends it. Do you prefer the desktop version, and if so, why? (That question is open to anyone!) I’m trying to decide if the investment is worth my $10…
Thank you!