1,000 Words of Spring 2024, Day 16

Photo credit: Miguel Bruna on Unsplash

We’re into the second half of the month, and I’ve met my word goal every day. So far, so good.

If I’d been thinking, I’d have noted how many words of this book I’d already written before I started this challenge so I could know exactly how far I’ve come. As of tonight, the first draft is 20,523 words. I know I’ve written at least 16,000 words this month, but the truth is that I routinely go at least a little bit over the 1K daily minimum. So all I know right now is that if I continue to meet my daily goal, I’ll have another 15,000 words written by the end of the month, for a total of just over 35,000 words of my first draft.

Sounds impressive, doesn’t it?

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1,000 Days of Spring 2024, Day 7

My copy of Jami Attenberg’s wonderfully encouraging book

I know what you’re thinking: “1,000 words of spring? Day 7? Did I miss something?”

No worries. It’s not you. It’s me.

First of all, the marvelous Jami Attenberg, who oversees the annual #1000wordsofsummer challenges, hasn’t actually established 1,000 Words of Spring, at least as far as I know. That’s just me on my own, using her incredible work as inspiration to write more.

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Fourteen

Photo credit: Junior Moran on Unsplash

I’ve finished. At least, sort of.

Is there still material to write? Yes. Should I have worked on that today? Yes. Did I do it? No. What did I do instead?

Start from the beginning and edit what was already there.

Was this a good idea? Who knows?

To back up a little: last night, I fell into bed by midnight which—for me—is extremely early, but I was exhausted. Except for a few brief occasions when Ned woke me, meowing for food (which he didn’t get), I slept until about 9:30.

I had grand plans for the day. Laundry, housework, bill-paying, minor home repairs, errands—and, of course, writing. Except it didn’t turn out that way.

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Twelve

Apparently, Olivia feels I require supervision

Day Twelve is now in the bank, albeit a day late. I have two more days to this challenge.

Obviously, I won’t finish the book in two days. I was naïve to think it was possible. But I’m a whole lot closer than I was two weeks ago.

Some of what remains is simply about making choices: will a character do A or B? I’ve written both versions. It’s time to choose. See which version is more lifelike, more resonant, more emotional. See which offers the best options for conflict and resolution. See which advances the story and which is merely a tangent.

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Because Life

Photo credit: Tom (analogicus) on Pixabay

So close to the end, and I missed a day. Day 12 of fourteen days. I didn’t write yesterday (except a few notes and a bunch of work stuff, which doesn’t count), but that’s okay, because . . . life.

This week has been busy: three doctor appointments for me and one for Ned, plus non-medical appointments and a long-awaited show at a local theater last night. Plus several work deadlines. Plus, of course, #1000wordsofsummer 2023.

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Eleven

Photo credit: milivigerova on Pixabay

A much better day today. For one thing, I just finished, and it’s not even 11:40 p.m. So, relatively early night.

Second—and more importantly—I made actual progress. I did some editing, which went back to the ever-important question, Did I cut more than I wrote? But in the end, I ended up 1,000 words ahead of where I started, which is definitely a win.

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Ten

Yes, the clock was accurate.

See that clock? That’s when I started writing for Day 10.

I didn’t write 1,000 words. I worked on my book for around forty-five minutes before I called it a night. But I did write.

To back up: Monday was a busy day. Working around a follow-up appointment with the surgeon’s office (they say all is well!), then researching and writing three motions that need to be filed today (didn’t finish until about half an hour ago), interrupted by a board meeting (on Zoom, thank heaven), after which I fed the cats and microwaved leftovers for my own dinner as I resumed work on the motions.

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Eight

Can you believe it? I’ve hit my target, and it’s only the middle of the afternoon!

Photo credit: Erwan Hesry on Unsplash

If we lived in a perfect world, I could devote the entire weekend to working on my book. Alas, the world is imperfect. The house is in desperate need of cleaning, errands need to be run, I have to take dinner to Mom both tonight and tomorrow night since my sister leaves tomorrow for a business trip to Iceland (don’t get me started on her efforts to micromanage how I do this), and billable work needs to be done since I’ve run the calculations for how much extra money my recent appendectomy is going to cost out of pocket, and It Ain’t Good. (Especially since this year is already proving to be expensive with Ned’s chemo, the house in desperate need of painting, my formerly trusty car requiring many pricey repairs over the past few months, and my even more desperate need for new glasses.)

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Seven

Photo credit: Hana El Zohiry on Unsplash

Halfway through the challenge. I’m creating a lot of new material. Just not quite certain what I’m going to do with all of it.

The answer, of course, is to be creative. Like that’s so easy.

Tonight, I had The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on in the background while I was brushing my teeth. Out of respect and solidarity for the writers who are on strike, they’re running older episodes. (I promise, this is going somewhere.)

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#1000wordsofsummer 2023, Day Six

As managing editor of Tuxedo Cat Press, Charlotte clearly has complete confidence in TCP’s leading author

Nearly 1,100 words tonight. The biggest issue is going to be weaving all this new material into the existing book. But at least the material finally exists. That’s a big deal. So grateful to Jami Attenberg and the #1000wordsofsummer challenge for getting me moving on this!

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