I’d spent the weekend working on my characters: their physical traits, goals, motivations and conflicts. I’d planned a loose outline, with all stages of internal and external development and crucial turning points. I’d done the practical things, like creating a new folder and putting a shortcut on my desktop.
I was ready to go.
And last night, before I fell asleep, the first line popped into my mind. I reached over for the pad and pencil I keep on my nightstand, jotted down the brilliant words and drifted off to sleep. No fretting. No worrying. Not like those sorry suckers on my writing loops and Twitter. I was confident I could meet my daily goal. My story was in me, ready to come pouring out.
I woke up this morning at five a.m. Put on my robe, grabbed my cup of coffee and sat in front of my laptop. I opened my new folder and my Chapter 1 file. There were no worries as I looked at the blank screen in front of me. I knew my first line. Triumphantly, I typed it in. I sat back and smiled.
I got this.
I reread the line. I don’t know. Something was off. I read it aloud.
Aaahhhhh.
It didn’t sound right. Not to worry. Just tweak it a little.
There. But… Does it “pop” enough? Will it grab the reader’s attention? Maybe I could say it stronger?
I happened to glance at the time. Holy crap! I just spent TEN minutes on my first sentence!
And there it was. My first NaNo lesson. I don’t have time to worry about every little word. This is supposed to be a first draft, not a polished manuscript. I’d spent the past couple of months editing, where all I did was work on active vs passive voice, punctuation, sprinkling backstory, etc. But now, all I had to do was–
Write.
And I did. I managed to almost meet my daily goal by the time I heard the kids stirring upstairs. It wasn’t perfect. But I did what I needed to do. I introduced my heroine, gave a hint of her motivation and prepared her to meet the love of her life.
Not a bad start for NaNo.
NaNo Day 1– Ms. Confident learns a valuable lesson
Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: author, contemporary, draft, editing, NaNoWriMo, passionate
