It’s day two of National Novel Writing Month! Who put words on the page yesterday?

I did! To be honest, my day started off a little rough. Construction crews rolled into my court at 8am and set up camp in the front yard. The noise, you guys! But, the upside of having a (rickety old) laptop is that I can write just about anywhere.

I loaded up my daughter and all her homeschool curriculum, and we found a quiet booth in the back corner of a Panera Bread. We stayed there until I hit my word count goal. And I’m so glad I’m off to a decent start.

For the next four weeks, I’ll report in on Fridays. I’ll tell you how I did and I’ll ask how you did. In that way, we can encourage one another and maybe make it to the end in one piece. I’ve decided to split my reports up into four categories to keep it uniform. Here goes:

What was difficult this week

One word: stamina. I’ve been on a bit of a break since turning in my last round of edits, and it’s been quite some time since I’ve drafted anything new. Months, probably.

It took me ages to just settle in. And once I finally got the laptop open and the Instagram picture posted and my tea refilled, I was exhausted. I have a feeling it’s going to take me a few days to rebuild the stamina I need to sit and type for long periods of time.

What was easy this week

Dialogue. Once I got going, it was dialogue that sent my fingers flying across the keyboard. I made a note actually, so that I can remember just how much easier dialogue was to write than anything else. I think it will be my saving grace as I’m rebuilding the drafting stamina I’ve lost.

One victorious moment

Getting through that stubborn transition scene I’d left myself.

Last Friday, I told you all that I’m cheating my way through NaNoWriMo. I’m not starting from scratch because I’m already 12k words into a draft I’d like to finish. But when I sat down today, I opened my laptop to an awkward transition scene that I hadn’t really thought through.

You know what I’m talking about right? Those scenes that move the reader from one big moment to another. When settling in for a long writing session, it stinks to start in a boring transition. I’m going to watch myself from here on out and try to avoid leaving off in such a place.

There’s this advice floating around out there, and it’s good advice. It recommends stopping your writing sessions when you’re in the middle of the action. By doing that, you open up your next session with lots to write and a faster pace right out of the gate. Do this. It will help.

One setback

I’m not feeling well. I blame my son. He came home with a sore throat last week and everything has snowballed a bit. Everyone in the house is struggling with cold symptoms. Nothing big, nothing that demands doctors or antibiotics. Just good old fashion aches and sniffles.

But I want you all to hear this. Getting sick? That’s life. Sometimes we have to stop and rest (do that if you’re able), but often we’re required to power through. That’s usually the case if you’re on a deadline. Sick or not, teams of people are waiting for you to finish your book. Practicing the discipline of writing through less than ideal conditions will benefit you.

To most people, winning NaNoWriMo means you hit 50k words in the month of November. I love that. It’s such a fantastic goal. But, friends, it’s not the only way to win this thing. You win if you take away new disciplines and new tools that will help your writing down the road.

Learning to write consistently, making the task a priority, encouraging others even when you’re down, thinking like a writer, not waiting on inspiration before you sit down to work. These are all trophies you can walk away with at the end of November, whether you hit 50k words or not.

SO! Now it’s your turn. Tell me:

1) What was hard this week

2) What was easy this week

3) One victorious moment, and

4) One setback