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Showing posts with label unsolicited. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unsolicited. Show all posts

Friday, September 21, 2012

Writing motivation on the cheap

Two weeks ago, I finished a second draft of a novel.

But first, to be honest? It's really more like the twentieth draft. I started writing in 2010 and the thing ballooned from its natural setting of Silly Fluffy Thing I'm Messing Around With into this crazy godzilla of an Actual Book, so I can't say with any clarity when one draft morphed into another. Clearly these mystical "drafts" are only for professional published writers.

In any case, I gathered it all together, called it a first draft and sent it to a few friends for beta reading. They said very nice things, as friends are wont to do. They also told me which parts of the story they disliked, which parts they found boring, and which parts made no sense whatsoever. After I finished pissying around the apartment (three weeks later) I sat down and started the second draft.

I should probably send it out to more kind readers, to see if I've fixed the first/twentieth-draft problems, or if I've created new problems. But I'm finding I feel even more insecure about this second draft, something I didn't think was possible. At least with that one I could pretend that oh, I banged that out so fast, of course there are problems. But with this version, I have responsibilities. The mysterious climactic event in chapter 28 that happens without any sensible or at least satisfying explanation? Best get one in there. That character who lives? Think about killing her. That character who dies? Think about letting him live. Drinking booze in space? Really, Norm? Really? And on, and on, and on. In essence, do away all the melodrama and purple prose without losing any of the goodness my readers mentioned.

The cleanup was pretty intense and I didn't want to look at it when I finished; I was worried - I still am worried, in fact, that if I did a final read-through at the moment, I'd skim and skip and sicken on the familiar characters, scenes, words. So I'm letting it sit a few days more.

In the meantime I'm working on a short story, which brings me around to the whole motivation theme. For the first time in my spare-time writing life, I'm shoving this story forward when my brain doesn't want to write, something I'm ashamed to say happens so often. Even, embarrassingly enough, in the morning time allotment I've specifically and painstakingly created for Greate Actes of Writinge. But I seem to be finding some way to dig in, plow it forward.

One thing that's definitely helped is hearing other writers, generally the successful ones who can take some downtime or catch some extra funds giving seminars, doing podcasts, or whatever; it's helped me to hear them promote bad writing. From that point of view, it's all about getting the story down. It can be the shittiest, simplest drivel as long as it gets the bones of the story locked into that page, for you to play with until it's transformed into...hell, I don't know. A stuffed roast chicken? My metaphor's getting a little gristly.

But it works.  I still read those Ask Metafilter threads where someone's saying I need to know how to buckle down and how do you make yourself accomplish things and I needs me some willpower, stat, HALP? And people try to answer with something other than you just do it.  It's hard to come up with anything beyond that.

Unrelatedly:
Tig Notaro telling a story I've liked since I heard a version of it on This American Life:







Monday, July 4, 2011

Recent hilarious Google searches

I love the search engine terms that bring people to my site. They're usually hilarious, whether in the context of the inadequacy of the search, the suspected knowledge of the searcher, or the absolute uselessness of my blog as a helpful result for their query. Some of the highlights:

ulcerative colitis blog
Probably (when they reach my domain) the most disappointed searchers.

smoking and ulcerative colitis
house prescribes cigarettes
smoking causing ulcerative colitis
soup and ulcerative colitis
Without a doubt, the most popular thing I've ever posted was my loose-and-crabby critique of a House ep. I'm a bit sad that the soup search went there, though, since I have posted quite earnestly about soup, making soup, and what soup works best for my UC. Phooey.

y does painkillers work for my colitis
I don't know, dude.

colitis knickers
WHAT IS THIS I DO NOT EVEN KNOW.

Wait a minute. Yes, I do.

can i eat expired yogurt
Heh.

they'll fix you. they fix everything
Hits my old post about Robocop and how sometimes I suspect if I get an colectomy that I too will be transformed into a part-woman, part-machine cop with an awesome gun, mad driving skills, and no home or family except a steel mill and a severely-injured partner, respectively. That's some colitis.

Overall I hope the people who clicked got something helpful out of this blog. But it's doubtful. I guess them's the dangers of writing a hybrid of horrible chronic disease-Star Trek-movies-food-videos-random dorkiness, rather than just a straight colitis-time blog.

In that light, I give you my kind of joy:



May your visits to this blog never get old, nor may they get rebooted/retconned.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Happy horseapples and the like

The Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America is starting to irritate me. Naturally, I have no real evidence against them other than the fact that they send my membership bills at very inopportune times (say, every Christmas season when I'm paying two hundred and some change for heat, so I do not have money for gifts, let alone thirty dollars for a single membership fee. Pathetic. Now I feel much better) but today I came home to THIS.



All right, so this is my garbage bin. I come home to it every day. Let's see what's inside! (Okay, we can't, because the evidence is in shreds, obviously the result of some mad berserker just passing through eel infested waters...)

Suffice to say, it was a letter from the CCFA. A membership reminder, you ask? I thought so at first, until I noticed hmm, zero percent financing for all of 2008? Wait a second. I see. In addition to Shire, Salix and Bristol Myers Squibb, CCFA is also in bed with Bank of America! So nice of them to sell my address! Of course, since it's in the interest of getting a hot little BoA credit card with the CCFA logo on it, I guess it's okay.

Oh no, I see, through some halfhearted googling, the Bank of America is CCFA's bank! That explains ... something?

I give up. Too much homework (a state which will change next Thursday midnight) has obviously addled my brain.



Neat fact of the day: you can warm dying rechargeable AA batteries in your hands and they will then work in your camera. Wow! I guess it's better then if they exploded. Or is it? Eh. Useless post. Back to homework.