Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: writing

Day 264: nanowrimo

I guess I should explain what yesterday’s post was about.

Each year, in November, across this great land of ours, an event occurs. This event, called NanoWrimo by many, stands for National Novel Writing Month. The goal? To have written a somewhat coherent novel of 50,000 words by December 1st.

I’ve participated in NanoWrimo for the past three years now, to varying degrees of success, but I’ve never actually “won” – meaning I’ve never hit that 50,000th word and I’ve never actually finished a novel.

The average works out to 1,666 words a day and I’m already behind. But, this is the year! I’m going to do it! I’m going to succeed!

Still, it can’t hurt to have fellow writers helping me motivate and pace myself. So, you can check out the whole shebang at the official website. Let me know if you want to subject yourself to this torture as well.

Day 78: lots of writing

One of my main responsibilities on my new team at work is writing.  There is a lot of writing that needs to be done in the upcoming few weeks and I’m feeling a bit daunted by it.

I sometimes sit and stare for a while at the empty text box when beginning a blog post and wonder: what new small piece of knowledge could I impart to the Internet today?  What funny anecdote from my childhood would entertain my readers today?

And then I wonder, if I have trouble filling in less than 500 words a day, what chance do I stand against the mountains of text that my job requires?  How will I write coherent storylines and character-driven humor under the pressure of career deadlines?

There’s no real choice.  Failure isn’t an option, just like not blogging isn’t an option.

I have to find ways to keep motivating myself not just to keep writing, but to keep writing well.  Whether it’s with short stories, anecdotes about my life, or the odd list, there’s nothing to do but keep moving forward.

On a completely unrelated note, someone who works at Katie’s theatre company has a confirmed case of swine flu!  How terrifying.

Day 73: advice column

What type of person does it take to think, “I’d make a good advice columnist!”

I read Dan Savage’s sex advice column off and on during college because it was published in the back of the free local newspaper that left in some of the restaurants and bus stops around town.

I also tend to read advice columns in most papers I pick up, even if I’ve never heard of the person writing them (or even if it’s specialized advice, like only homebuying questions).  I don’t know why, but I find them addictive.

But, what determines whether someone is qualified to give advice to other people?  Well, I suppose being a good writer is a common thread; to communicate advice well, you have to communicate well in the first place.

Beyond that, I think a person has to have a certain amount of confidence, of vanity, and of arrogance (or perhaps arrogance is too strong a word, but certainly strongly believing in your opinions).  It’s a bit like being a baseball umpire: you have to make your calls and you have to stand behind them, even if you don’t necessarily have all the knowledge.

And I think, like a lot of jobs that involve some amount of creativity, you need a certain X factor.  A certain charisma, charm, or simply empathy.  Something that both makes you “easy to talk to” and stand out from all those other advice columnist.

But, what do I know?  I’m not an advice columnist, and I certainly don’t feel qualified to give advice columnists advice on what they should and shouldn’t be doing.  I just think it’s rather revealing what advice columnists say.

Because, in the end, every time you give someone advice about a certain situation or problem, it reveals a tiny bit more about yourself.  Until, after years of writing answers to life’s many questions, you’re standing in front of all of your readers, naked.

Metaphorically, of course.

Day 34: the wheres and middle infielders of outrageous fortune

24 hours from now, I’ll be on a plane to New York.  I’ll keep posting every day, but expect updates for the next week or so to be on the briefer side of things.

Once again, I’ve decided to throw my hat in the ring for another season of fantasy baseball.  This means that I’ll be spending week after week obsessing about numbers and – because our league is going Roto this year, instead of being head-to-head points-based – I’ll actually have no recourse of blaming “bad luck in the matchups” when I lose horribly.

I don’t plan on losing horribly, but my teams haven’t done all that well the past few years.  My confidence is middling right now.  We’ll see how our draft goes.  My first big decision of the year: should I give up my first few draft picks to keep core players like Holliday, Rollins, and Hamels?  I have the #3 pick in the first round, but there aren’t too many elite players that aren’t being kept this year.

I also got an email today about Script Frenzy, which sounds somewhat exciting and somewhat tiring.  One month-long writing guilt-fest might be enough for me per year.

A few days ago, I also started using FireEagle, because I got tired of waiting for Google Latitude to be released for my iPhone.  Geolocation is interesting to me, mainly because of social gatherings where most of the people involved broadcast their location.  This would make meeting up with people easier in locations that weren’t as well known.  It would also be a helpful gauge for how far away someone was, and how much time it would take to get together.

I don’t think we’ll get there for a while, though.  Part of the reason is just because the technology is not quite that ubiquitous yet, the other part being the initial hump of getting over the feeling of a loss of privacy.  As long as these applications continue to allow tunable privacy settings, I do think we’ll reach a point in time where everyone’s phones (or other mobile devices) will broadcast their locations to their specified friends.

I’m hungry.  I could go for some ribs.  Or, even better, a rib buffet.

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