Writing

School's Out For Summer

It’s the last day of school. By the time I post this I will be on my way to pick up my kids up after the final bell, and that will mark the end of my first year of “full time” writing.

As I reflect back on the school year, my first thought is to wonder where the time went. I look at what I have written and I think, “Is this really all I have to show for nine months of work?” Certainly this year has not shaken out the way I imagined it would, and the ferociously ambitious side of me is sorely disappointed in myself for not making the best use of my time.

Fortunately, that impossible-to-please beast within is tempered by a kinder voice, the part of me that excels at identifying and celebrating the smaller victories in life.

So what do I have to show for my time this year?

When it comes to the actual writing itself, there have been two main accomplishments. To start, I finished the first draft of an as-yet-untitled story that I began last spring. When the school year began I already had about 45K words under my belt, and when November rolled around I decided to declare it as my NaNoWriMo project, hoping to write 50K more and end the month with a complete first draft. While I didn’t reach either of those (probably unrealistic) goals, I did still write over 25K that month, and by April I finally decided to call the thing done when, despite it being a bit of a mess, I knew that I had enough raw material to consider the narrative arc complete. I’ve been letting it marinade these past couple of months, but I’m thinking it will be my summer project to reread and re-outline it so that when the kids return to school next fall I can be ready to dive into rewriting.

Next I began work on a new project that for now I’m calling Leviathan. I came up with the idea for the story back in September and jotted down a few notes on my phone so I could return to it later. Over the next several months I would add to my collection of notes as new thoughts struck me, and every time I heard a song that really nailed the vibe of a certain character or scene, I would add it to my playlist for that project. By the time I began writing it, I felt like I already had a pretty idea of where the story would start and where it was going. I’ll close out this year with about 10K words and a working outline for the rest.

But this was also an important year for reasons unrelated to word count.

It was about seven years ago that I realized I wanted to be a writer, and in the years since then I’ve felt often like I’ve been tripping over myself as I stumble clumsily toward the ultimate goal of publication. It’s been a real struggle to establish a writing routine as I juggle my personal ambitions alongside motherhood, marriage, and all the many wonderful responsibilities of adulthood, not to mention the challenge of working out my personal writing style and determining the kind of stories I want to tell.

I used to feel like I couldn’t make any progress if I didn’t have several uninterrupted hours to work at a time. But this year I found that, while those long stretches where the words just seem to flow effortlessly are magical when they happen, most of the time I work best in short spurts, jotting down a paragraph or two between other tasks.

Because of this, I also discovered the joy of writing on my phone. I have always used my phone for keeping notes, but the actual drafting was always done on my computer. This latest project, however, has been written almost entirely on my phone, copied and pasted every few days into the master document on my laptop. It’s been kind of exciting to see how much I can write in stolen moments - waiting in line at the grocery store, leaning against the counter while dinner simmers on the stove, perched on the edge of the tub while my kids brush their teeth, or sitting in the car during my daughter’s ukulele lessons. Even on days when I’ve had a good chunk of time to devote to writing I’ve often found it hard to focus for long stretches of time. So I would go on a lot of long walks, pausing to draft a scene on my phone in the moment it became clear to me, sitting on a bench or on the edge of the jetty leading out to the lighthouse, my feet dangling above the waves, the gulls screeching overhead.

But arguably the most important takeaway for me from this past year is the importance of honesty in writing, by which I mean writing without self-censorship. I think previously I was afraid to write anything too dark or painful or explicit because I worried what people would think if they ever read it. Would they think it was weird? Off-putting? Even immoral? But the more I thought about the kind of books I enjoy the most, the stories I find most moving, the more I realized that what drew me to those stories was the brutal truth of the human experience I found in them, in all of it’s pain and glory. Those are the kind of books I want to write. Stories in which people can see and recognize themselves and walk away feeling like they have been changed somehow, even in some small, hard to articulate way. So I finally said fuck it and started writing what I honestly wanted to write. And it is, in fact, darker and sadder and realer than anything I’ve written before. But most importantly I’m proud of it, regardless of the word count at the final bell.

So bring on the beach days and the water balloons and the campfires. Maybe I’ll sneak in some words while the kids are riding their bikes or playing in the treehouse. Or maybe I won’t, because I’ll be too busy joining them swimming in the lake, running barefoot in the grass, or reading a good book in the shade on the porch. Either way, it will be time well spent.

Photo by Kindel Media

Fifth Time's the Charm

Whatever I may have dreamed my days would look like once both of my kids were in school, it’s safe to say that the reality has not immediately matched that vision. Rather than spending the last several weeks cozied up with my computer, sipping tea and finally finishing this manuscript I started last year, I’ve mostly been scrambling to deal with all the myriad things around the house that have suddenly and inconveniently become urgent. Or with fulfilling the role of nurse to a seemingly endless carousel of kids with sniffly noses and persistent stomach bugs.

But now that I’ve answered all the emails and our immune systems appear to have reached a new, stronger equilibrium, I’m hoping to start making some progress on my writing goals for the year. Or rather, I’d like to actually set some writing goals and then begin trying to achieve them.

I sat down today with my calendar to do that and suddenly came to the realization that there’s only a little over a week left in October. So I added “Decide on kids’ Halloween costumes” to this week’s to-do list and tried to wrap my mind around the fact that another month has somehow slipped by. That’s when I decided to, once again, attempt NaNoWriMo.

I had kind of thought I was done with NaNoWriMo, namely because I’ve accepted that November isn’t usually a great time for me to take on big word count goals. It’s an especially busy month for our family because in addition to Thanksgiving there are birthdays to celebrate, as well as our wedding anniversary. I’ve signed up many times over the years, each time glowing with bright-eyed optimism, but I’ve only ever actually hit the 50K word goal twice, and both times the resulting word salads were…not excellent. (Fun fact, I was working on the same project both of those times, with five years between the two attempts. And now, after many years of beating that dead horse, that project has been shelved.) Last year I thought I actually had a chance because my youngest was in preschool four mornings a week, so maybe I would have time to write that much. But the project I was working on began to fall flat, and then life got complicated, so I closed out that month with a paltry 7600 words.

And yet, despite my dismal track record, I’m signing up again this year for the fifth time. There are several reasons I’m maintaining hope that it will go well. The first is that both of my kids are finally in school full time. I have (in theory) more time to write than I ever have. If I can just get my butt in the chair, I should be able to do it. The second reason is that I won’t be starting from scratch. The project I hope to complete is already clocking in at around 47K words, so with an additional 50K I could actually finish it and it would be another typical-for-me, over-long first draft…provided all those new words move the story forward so it can come to a coherent end.

Finally, and one of the most helpful parts of NaNoWriMo for a recovering perfectionist like me, is that I’m at the point in this project where the remaining unwritten scenes are not so clearly outlined, and I know that writing them is going to be messy as I attempt to unearth what I need from them. I’m hoping that being accountable to a word count goal will give me the push I need to just pinch my nose and get that cringey first draft down on the page. Then I’ll be able to look forward to the real fun of polishing it later.

So here goes nothing. Will I make my goal of 50K new words next month? And if I do, will that translate to a completed draft? Or will this be another in a long string of NaNoWriMo crash-and-burns? Tune back in December 1st to find out.

Photo by Andrew Neel for Pexels

Well, hello again

About a month ago we moved into a new house. Actually, it’s a very old house, but it’s new to us. To be even more accurate, it’s newly ours but it’s actually very familiar to us because it’s the house where I grew up. When my parents started thinking about downsizing, Josh and I decided to relocate (yet again!), this time to my hometown to raise our kids in my childhood home. It still feels a little surreal; I never imagined that I would end up back here.

One exciting thing about this house, at least for me, is that I have an office space for the first time. And now that we’ve had a few weeks to unpack and the kids are back in school, I’m finally starting to try and get into the groove of a writing routine again. Now coming to you live from my very own office! The wallpaper in here is…not great. And there’s still a stack of boxes behind me that I’m choosing to not think about right now. But an office! With a desk! And a door! Dizzying wallpaper or not, it’s dreamy.

As I’ve sat down to write again I’ve felt like I have to get my bearings a little. For the last nine or so years I’ve been working almost exclusively on the same project. Then, after a brief but enthusiastic affair with a new idea resulted in the birth of a messy and very thin first draft, I wrote almost nothing for the next year. Part of that was due to COVID and having the kids home all day every day again. But a big part of it was also that I had hit walls with both of my other projects. I felt a little lost at sea, unsure of what to do with either of them, so whenever I did find the time to make an attempt at writing I found myself bouncing between efforts to re-outline the old projects and making new outlines for fresh ideas I’d had knocking around inside my head. Surprisingly to me, most of the new ideas were for adult contemporary fiction, a bit of a left turn after spending so many years writing middle grade and teen fantasy. 

One of the biggest issues I had with my other projects was that while I always started with a clear idea about the world of the story or about a character, I never really had a clear idea about what kind of story I was trying to tell. I’ve discovered that for me, the most satisfying books are the character driven ones. The kind of story where I am invested in the people I’m reading about and the journeys they are on, what kind of decisions they make and why, and whether they will be able to solve their problems or not. Of course there are lots of entertaining plot driven stories, where this happens and then this happens and then THIS happens and it’s all very thrilling. But I’ve realized that that isn’t the kind of story I want to write. I want to write stories that make my readers feel like they’ve just gone through something, even if the characters in the story weren’t on some epic journey or fighting a blazing battle with their magical powers. (Though that’s not to say I don’t want to write about magical powers. I still love fantasy, after all.)

So this time when I came up with an idea for a character and a specific situation she finds herself in, I knew I needed to spend more time chewing on why exactly it was I felt the need to tell her story. What is her story about? How will she be different in the end - for better or worse - than when she started? I now have a rough outline for the first five or six chapters of the story, and I know where I’m headed in the end. But even though I love making outlines, I’m resisting the urge to plan out everything beforehand and instead dive into a very rough pre-first-draft and spend some time just getting to know this lady and what makes her tick.

Speaking of character growth, I have historically been very slow to share my writing with anyone. I think it’s the old perfectionist tendencies in me that don’t want to put my work on display until I feel like it’s perfectly polished. But I’m trying to get better about being so precious with my writing, so I’ve joined a local a writers group and have already sent my first scrappy chapter to my husband and writing partner for their initial thoughts. Here’s to this new plot twist in my own story - the unexpected return to my hometown - resulting in some satisfying character development not just my in characters, but in myself too.

Cover photo by Erik Mclean from Pexels

My Year in Writing

My Year in Writing

- A 2020 Wrap-Up -

Ah, 2020. What a year. I’d say, “Happy New Year, and good riddance!” but we all know it’s not like when the clock strikes midnight on the first of January that anything is going to be immediately different but the date on the calendar.

I had so many grand plans for my work this year. For the first time since my kids were born, both of them were in school two days each week and I actually had a regular writing routine! I was making lots of progress on my various projects and the plan for 2020 was to accomplish even more with my newfound writing time.

Everything went swimmingly for the first few months of the year. I submitted an application for Author Mentor Match with my Lucas Miller and the Silver Shadow manuscript. While I wasn’t chosen to be a mentee, I received some very helpful feedback from the mentors I’d submitted to. Then I connected with a friend of a friend of a friend on Instagram, and when she began training to be a book coach I got to be one of her guinea pigs and again received some massively helpful feedback on my project. (Dani is AWESOME. If you feel stuck in revisions - or even as you are outlining a new project! - you should check our her coaching services.)

And then the pandemic hit the US with full force. My kids, just like everyone else’s, went on Spring Break and never went back to school. And all at once my beautiful, glorious, long-awaited writing routine went completely out the window.

But THEN… Onto the scene came my dashing husband, who valiantly shifted his work schedule so that I could still find time to work in the midst of our unexpected new quarantined, distance-learning lifestyle. During the summer, which we spent in Maine with my family, my sister helped out with the kids a couple times a week. So despite the totally upended routine, over the course of the spring and summer I actually still managed to outline two new projects and get a first draft completed for one of them. And in the middle of all of that, I got the opportunity to work with another book-coach-in-training on my full Lucas Miller manuscript. And once again a book coach seriously changed the game for me. (Thank you, Amy! Check out her book coaching services, too!)

But as the start of the new school year approached, it became clear that we wouldn’t be going back to the same set-up I had enjoyed the year before with all that precious time to myself to write in silence. With the pandemic ever-worsening, my daugher’s school’s plans for distance-learning still unclear, and a potential move back to New England in the works, we decided to homeschool. And then we made the move to Maine official and had to haul all our stuff back up north and get resettled. And then, even when we enrolled my daughter at her new school for twice-a-week in-person learning, the rest of the year was still filled with holidays and birthday and anniversaries and as a result I have done barely any writing since August.

But this is not a sob story about how 2020 ruined all my plans.

While this year certainly did not go the way I (or anyone else!) expected, and while I may not have accomplished everything I had hoped, I am proud of the work I did do this year. And I am supremely thankful for the support system I have and for the lessons I have learned.

One of my biggest takeaways from this year, at least when it comes to my work, has been the importance of the interplay between tenacity and patience. I have big goals for myself and my writing. But I also understand the reality of my current life situation. I have an incredibly supportive and encouraging husband who goes out of his way to help me make time whenever it’s possible. And a family who I (now) live close to who also support me. But I also have two young kids who are home all the time and need lots of care and attention. And ultimately they matter more to me than any book.

So I work when I can. And how I can. Most of my “writing” over the last several months has consisted of early morning walks before my husband goes to work, during which I record voice memos as I attempt to talk myself through the changes to my Lucas Miller project I planned during my book coaching session with Amy in August. And then hurriedly transcribing those notes later in the day a week later.

Other writing related activities also slowed down in a major way. My instagram went dark for nearly 6 months. My last blog post was written even further back than that.

At the same time, I have watched lots of writer friends on social media hit some super exciting landmarks in their writing journeys this year. Completing Projects! Landing agents! Getting published! I have been so thrilled for every one of their personal victories. And while there is always the temptation to wonder, “Am I behind? Should I be at that point in my career by now, too? Will that ever even happen for me, or am I totally out of my depth?”, instead I find myself wildly inspired and encouraged by the community among fellow creators.

For now, I am committed to enjoying where I am. And I have all the time in the world. My only deadlines are the ones I set for myself. If I blow right by them the world will not end. I will find no strongly worded emails from an editor in my inbox. I have made the choice to not let the slower-than-desired progress of my work to rob me of the joy of creation. (Or any of the hundreds of snuggles my kids ask for throughout the day because they are home and they can.)

That’s not to say I don’t have goals for 2021. But I’m holding them loosely. If the last year has taught us anything it’s the reminder that we never know what the future holds. Our best laid plans can get flushed right down the toilet in an instant. But with the knowledge that a return to our regular routine is unlikely any time soon, I can make different kinds of plans. Plans for intentionality in time management. Plans for being flexible with my schedule. And plans to keep chasing my dreams one step at a time, even when life throws the most unexpected of curveballs.