I mean, it only took five continuous days to copy and paste text into over 200 files but it's done now :)
(And if you're interested, I'm on sync.com and used ZipCrypto encryption with a password that should take four thousand years to guess because I'm paranoid even though there is no identifying data inside that zip... heck, I wanna keep my secrets, 'kay??)
Apparently, Camp NaNoWriMo was meant to have been going on this month. I didn't realise; time has become meaningless to me. But still, now that I have scarce little to do between now and the fateful 20th August and I really don't fancy trying to read Thai again, it's time to get some sweet words onto the paaaage!767Please respect copyright.PENANAAFkv6Vn5xc
767Please respect copyright.PENANAKHobrlbYyi
Me: *opens laptop*767Please respect copyright.PENANAXiE8FJ3Kej
Me: *opens WordPad*767Please respect copyright.PENANA7hXRhOBaDO
Me: *saves file*767Please respect copyright.PENANAFkJwqA5mp2
Me: *poises fingers, ready to type*767Please respect copyright.PENANAoIYc4M9CBn
Me:767Please respect copyright.PENANAtkJ5TtwnGY
Brain:767Please respect copyright.PENANAGYej3dvPhf
Me:
...Wait. What? I had this weird thing called motivation a second ago, but now that I'm sitting down and primed to write, there's nothing on my word processor!!767Please respect copyright.PENANAXjJ789cPOq(Clearly not in this specific case, but this is because I sometimes break out the Grandparent Ability, allowing me to spontaneously prattle nonsense and spew it all over the keyboard. I will later return to edit and organise my thoughts in a somewhat coherent and understandable way.)
Motivation's strange. It's there sometimes, and not there whenever you need it. Life's strange. [Insert existential crisis here]
So here are a few tips from yours truly for dealing with this strange phenomenon.
1. Note your ideas!767Please respect copyright.PENANAISmBhU0RkM
Writing's an art. Art requires inspiration. So if you're lucky to get hit with such a spark (or a lightning bolt), note it. As soon as. It helps to keep a physical notepad somewhere - I have a small one with rainbow tape on it - but you're allowed to make do. Piece of paper in your front pocket? That does the trick, just don't lose it. Notepad app? Me too, nice.767Please respect copyright.PENANA8vi2yrniUF
767Please respect copyright.PENANAMlO0mkQ88j
I'm an orange on a roll so let's follow this tangent. I've gone through the dilemma of finding a notepad app, and I'm currently settled on ColorNote (which allows you to sync between devices. Sooo handy.) EverNote's a nice alternative, and then there a few more I can't remember off the top of my head. Might elaborate on this in another part because I feel I'm veering off-topic.
2. Find your optimum operating hour.767Please respect copyright.PENANAxApTWBYszJ
I'm not sure if this works for everyone, but I'm fairly sure I can't be the only human-like organism for which this applies... When I'm writing fiction, I work best in later, unholy hours of evening and night. (Perhaps it's a state of delirium that does the trick? I'm certainly more grounded in the day time, ideal for non-fiction entries such as this.)767Please respect copyright.PENANAJNZmESklUT
I'll start writing after food, around eight o'clock, and I can easily continue into 1-2am. Please do not follow my example on a regular basis, this is likely an unhealthy habit, but I'm not doing this every day, promise. I'm just turning nocturnal very, very slowly.767Please respect copyright.PENANA9FBIh4fApyHopefully, you'll have a healthier optimum operating hour at which you're best at writing. You could experiment with this by trying to write at different times and see how you feel about each time. This leads on to...
3. Set habits.767Please respect copyright.PENANAqNbIxREHwO
Writing for a hobby is all well and good, but I know I have a short attention span, so if I leave something unattended, it'll fast fade from my memory. Or it might wreck havoc on everything depending on the nature of the work. It definitely becomes a bit easier to finish something when you're working on it periodically.767Please respect copyright.PENANAwLQpoo3kyr
Timetables are helpful for this. I find them tough to follow at first, but it gradually gets easier as you fall into routine.767Please respect copyright.PENANArPJB9uM1Yw
Unfortunately, it's all too easy to break timetables and routines unless you're a highly organised super-individual. Still, I reckon it's enough to just write something every single day, or every two to three days.767Please respect copyright.PENANAzqSiw0OQWE
It doesn't have to be at the exact same hour each day, but it certainly goes a long way in terms of progressing your work. I for one know that I've half-finished a helluva lot more following loose schedules for past NaNoWriMos than without.
4. Just write something.767Please respect copyright.PENANAT0DUlookFs
This works for essays, at least. If it's meant to be based on a topic, stare at that topic. Do a few searches, but limit this to ten minutes or else risk the abandonment of your train of thought into the abyss we call "the internet". 767Please respect copyright.PENANAaLtD1mPBRh
Stare at the topic some more. Any ideas yet?767Please respect copyright.PENANA4zC7yPr5Uk
Write words. Maybe the same word over and over until you get bored and leave. (Mission failed.)767Please respect copyright.PENANAsRCafPJNbg
Take a walk. Drink water. Come back, and write something.767Please respect copyright.PENANAee1NDgXOAd
Just write anything. As a perfectionist, I know it's agonising when you read back on something that's nowhere as good as it could be. But we all need a starting point, and it's much easier to improve a first draft than it is to edit the writing of a blank page.
5. You're doing fine.767Please respect copyright.PENANAY0ZjfkpG1i
Seriously, tip #5 is purely motivational. Odd, perhaps, but this is exactly what I needed to hear as a confused, small human trying to put one foot after another in this desolate writing world.767Please respect copyright.PENANABCo5Bd5Mmo
I've abandoned so many stories in their early stages simply because I didn't feel like they matched the standard I wanted them to be; yet my standards keep on getting higher. How will I ever reach them? Not in a single jump, that's for certain, but in steps. Start somewhere and keep working up. You can learn from everything, even stories that you look back upon in future and cringe at, because I know I do.767Please respect copyright.PENANAkKlTFzgzlf
767Please respect copyright.PENANAyEYOZrlhwg
(E.g. I did a romance story once. I don't like it nowadays because the pacing seemed off and everything happened unrealistically fast. Conclusion: Remember to pace naturally unless you're trying to prove a point, like the whirlwind romance of Romeo and Juliet proving that the couple's love burnt out too quickly.)767Please respect copyright.PENANAjWkko3OYWV
767Please respect copyright.PENANARcfRMNsWyA
Lesson learnt. For you to progress, you gotta finish this (even if you hate it for its tiny flws), get it over with and on the page and you move on. After all, practice makes perfect, right?767Please respect copyright.PENANAxrbZ7FiCBH
This is essentially a rewording of tip 4. You shouldn't expect to get everything entirely perfect first time. As long as you have something down, you're doing good.767Please respect copyright.PENANAi1mN7nuuQN
767Please respect copyright.PENANAs0oiny594C
Now, this isn't to say I improved from practice alone - if I can claim I've mproved at all. But it certainly helped when it came to waffling for exams :D
In conclusion: this is all quite personal to me... but if any of my own observations can be of help any of you readers, then I'm happy. If not, well. I hope it was an interesting read nonetheless.767Please respect copyright.PENANAw4jVbVWOIA
...Not to judge, but767Please respect copyright.PENANAtNFSX0xe6D
if you didn't want the writing tips767Please respect copyright.PENANAcWVQAzDvku
then why are you here?767Please respect copyright.PENANAnmpqt25IyC
767Please respect copyright.PENANAnWC1UYmXtt
Do I seem like the kind of person with enough competency to provide valid tech support to you? Operating on nothing but my own self-taught skills and an entry-level computing theory course? Nay, for I have far more personal experience in the field of writing than anything! Hours of my life spent analysing compelling character portrayals and realistic development arcs, hours spent dreaming up conflict-driven plots! Not to inflate myself as a pompous fool, but I have been dabbling in this trade for foUr yEA_
:(767Please respect copyright.PENANAjyYrNTscHB
Your PC ran into a problem. Now attempting to restart.767Please respect copyright.PENANATGjh6ixLdb
767Please respect copyright.PENANAh1z2oXX4cP
767Please respect copyright.PENANAlHFNQEmN6B