NaNoWriMo Day 8

8 Nov

Yes, well…

Traffic Warden Clamping

If you recall, I’m attempting NaNoWriMo, to settle an argument with the Hub as to whether I have a novel in me or not.

To be considered a ‘winner’ it is necessary to write 1667 words a day to reach the target of 50,000 words.

Day One: Full of enthusiasm even though I think I don’t have a novel in me.  Easily reach the target.  Don’t mind the Hub winning this one.

Day Two:  Still enthusiastic,  the book is writing itself.  Come on, publishers, start courting me!

Day Three:  Busy day, don’t start writing until six p.m., by which time I’m ready for bed.  Drig out a thossand words of my comedey navel.

Day Four:  Another busy day.  Start at five.  Comedy is killed by a mystery element.  Hmm, write a murder mystery of sorts, but keep the housewife and the traffic warden?  Nine hundred words.

Day Five: 

Day Six: Wrote nothing yesterday because of everything I had to do in real life. However, only 1700 words behind.  I’ll soon catch up.  A thousand words.  Only 2400 words behind.  I’ll catch up.

Day Seven: Managing to make the traffic warden sexy.  Don’t know how, because I’ve never met one, and he’s modelled on the Hub.  Oops!  Discover the power of words: but he’s modelled on the Hub.  Only 3583 words behind.  Will I catch up?

Day Eight: Make a model of the computer and stick pins in it.

If I do have a novel in me, it’s trite, dull and meaningless.

They say you should write what you know.

*

*

For my non-Brit readers, a definition:

Traffic Warden: Evil creature sent to torment innocent drivers who only parked illegally for five minutes but it was urgent and yes, they know the rules of the road apply to them as well but, please, officer, please, please, please, my partner will kill me if I get another ticket…

 

43 Responses to “NaNoWriMo Day 8”

  1. Pseu November 8, 2012 at 09:24 #

    Ignore the word counting, just try every day of the 30…. you may surprise yourself still if you push yourself past the hump….
    my months total when I tried was only about 19000, but that was far more than I had ever done on one project.

    Like

    • Pseu November 8, 2012 at 20:27 #

      Ceci says this

      The Writing is at 28,431 which is good because I feel the struggle coming now. First I could not get enough of the location and the characters but now I feel the hard work coming on. It is the same when producing a play. There comes a time when you have to get out and Push it along until it gathers enough momentum to become the monster that will gaily tow you along to the finish line. About the only thing I know is that the self propulsion, I call it the monster because he is unstoppable when he kicks in, always comes. As long as you keep pushing, eventually all the parts click together and it works.

      It was not the 6th…

      Like

  2. The Wanderlust Gene November 8, 2012 at 09:33 #

    Don’t you just hate them! But Pseu’s right, don’t let evil distract you from proving The Hub’s wrong, or is it you who’ll be wrong? Take care Tilly, and e n j o y 🙂

    Like

  3. faydanamyjake November 8, 2012 at 10:12 #

    It’s bloody hard. I think the possible rewards are too distant for me to go for it. a writer blogger I know put it in a nutshell, a writer has to write no matter what, the words won’t stay in, won’t be denied ( I am adding bits but you get the idea) to her writing was key the publishing yada yada was all by the by, icing but not the cake.
    I am starting to think Childrens books might be my thing. why it took me so long i have no idea. its so obvious, children have been my life. 🙂
    Maybe a book idea will come to you. maybe its just not for you. the older I get the more i shrug and think oh well.. 🙂

    Like

  4. SammyDee November 8, 2012 at 10:13 #

    November is a bad month for this challenge. Who can be bothered when its cold and dark? Besides, it’s time to start planning for Christmas. Stick with it but if you give up try again in 6 months. You could call it LaMaWriMo.

    Like

  5. Kelly November 8, 2012 at 10:26 #

    Some say “write what you know”, others say “write what you don’t”. I say, “just write”. It really doesn’t matter how much you do write, the important thing is to keep chipping away. Stop putting yourself down, as you’ll find you’ll only end up feeling worse about putting your butt back in that chair…

    Like

  6. speccy November 8, 2012 at 10:34 #

    Just keep on writing. Something. Anything. Never worry about the word count. If it’s a novel, yay! if not, it’s a lot of words and inspiration and thinking done for something else.

    (No, I’m not doing it. This is very much ‘do what I say, not what I do’…)

    🙂

    Like

  7. Elaine - I used to be indecisive November 8, 2012 at 10:38 #

    Don’t give up! 🙂

    Like

  8. Ron. November 8, 2012 at 11:04 #

    I could never. Ever.

    Like

  9. EmmaM November 8, 2012 at 11:56 #

    Don’t worry, I’m on a catch up day today. Got 3000 words to write… in one day Hmmmm! I should get of the net and start typing… like now!

    Like

  10. vivinfrance November 8, 2012 at 12:44 #

    Forget the word count. I did 17K the only time I did it, and I can’t gee Annie’s Fortune any further into a novel. So why not make it a novella?

    Like

    • vivinfrance November 8, 2012 at 12:51 #

      PS I went from here to the Kitchen’s Garden: Celie’s up to 28,431. She says: “which is good because I feel the struggle coming now. First I could not get enough of the location and the characters but now I feel the hard work coming on. It is the same when producing a play. There comes a time when you have to get out and Push it along until it gathers enough momentum to become the monster that will gaily tow you along to the finish line. About the only thing I know is that the self propulsion, I call it the monster because he is unstoppable when he kicks in, always comes. As long as you keep pushing, eventually all the parts click together and it works.”

      Like

  11. sanstorm November 8, 2012 at 13:08 #

    Come ON Tilly!
    (I’m in sympathy tho. Life has taken a turn for the infeasibly hectic)

    Be encouraged- you’re ahead of me 🙂

    Like

  12. jmgoyder November 8, 2012 at 13:17 #

    Oh you are so funny – I loved this post and it is worth much more than a novel!

    Like

  13. laurieanichols November 8, 2012 at 13:44 #

    Tilly try to ignore the word counting, I know that it is hard because it becomes a stumbling block onto itself and can make the writing almost a chore. I’m behind in the word count as well. The idea is to spew out words and the editing and revising gets done after all the spewing. No rhyme or reason just quantity of words. I cannot do that which is why I feel that my words are dragged out of my mouth because my heroine is me, emotionally me in my mid twenties. Who I might have been if I hadn’t met the hubby. So keep typing and by November 31st you will have something else to edit.

    Like

  14. ruthrawls November 8, 2012 at 14:43 #

    I’m 2500 words behind, unless you count today, then I’m 4200 behind. Life happened. Stuff got in the way. Knitting to be done.

    Like

  15. viveka November 8, 2012 at 15:11 #

    NaNoWriMo – challenge seams to be too much for most to handle … at least you tried and that is good in my book. I’m sure you will be able to write a funny novel – I would love to read something that don’t contain cancer, rapes, fights, and where all feel lousy.

    Like

  16. SchmidleysScribbling November 8, 2012 at 15:34 #

    A co-author and I worked on a book for a year. We finally got it published and it was well received in academia but never a best seller.

    Novel, no, I am not a fiction writer. Got that beat out of me writing non-fiction. No easy task to write either. Dianne

    Like

  17. winnwords November 8, 2012 at 16:15 #

    Loved this post! Imagining making the very same progress (on the novel) that you have described here, I am avoiding the exercise entirely. And in Canada, we have equally evil parking cops…I think they’re called Green Hornets…something about the outfits they wear, the cars they drive, or the fact that they take you unawares and STING you!

    Like

  18. Amiable Amiable November 8, 2012 at 16:18 #

    You can do it, Tilly! Yes, you can! ‘Drig out a thossand words of my comedey navel’ – belly laughs.

    Like

  19. slpmartin November 8, 2012 at 16:47 #

    I’m betting that you have at least two or three novels in you…keep the faith.

    Like

  20. Al November 8, 2012 at 18:34 #

    I’ll only read it if, in the ending, the traffic warden gets life in prison without parole.

    Like

  21. robincoyle November 8, 2012 at 20:12 #

    When I first read the term “NaNoWriMo,” I thought everyone had a speech impediment.

    Like

  22. Pearl November 8, 2012 at 21:19 #

    heh, I’ve never tried it with NaNOWrMo but yes, finishing is the first hard part. And editing the next. Still, are you have fun with it?

    Like

  23. gigihawaii November 8, 2012 at 21:23 #

    Well, I give you credit for trying. I, myself, could never write novel.

    Like

  24. Grannymar November 9, 2012 at 09:28 #

    I wonder who ever came up with the idea of NaNoWriMo? I think it must have been someone totally bored and with no life, family or friends, just a bunch of servants to do all the chores.

    Tilly you have talent with words, don’t get hung up on a word count. Certainly keep going but do it for you OR as a Christmas Gift for Hubs and call it TiBuWriSeason?

    Like

  25. lanceleuven November 9, 2012 at 19:15 #

    I’m assuming that definition for a traffic warden was straight out of the Oxford Dictionary? It was perfect. 🙂

    Good luck with the book though. Just keep trying. Who knows what will come! 🙂

    Like

  26. Sarah Angleton November 9, 2012 at 20:41 #

    Murder the traffic warden. Then bring him back as a very attractive ghost who continues to torment drivers who ignore him because he is, in fact, a ghost. Then one day an insightful housewife with a touch of the sixth sense can see him. She swears at him for assigning her a supernatural parking ticket and the two fall madly in love making life/afterlife a touch more complicated.
    Every first draft is trite, dull, and meaningless.Give yourself a break. The real writing begins in December when you have to try to make it actually worth reading.

    Like

  27. momopolize November 10, 2012 at 03:41 #

    Love this post. The making the model of the computer turned me into a laughing housewife. Awesome! I signed up for NaNoWriMo and haven’t written a single word. Not one. When I fail, I fail big.

    Like

  28. Three Well Beings November 10, 2012 at 08:54 #

    We call them “meter maids” or at least that was what we called them when I was growing up. I don’t know if that was really confined to females. But I think traffic wardens work. Now, may I begin to submit other words to you that require translation. I’ll start keeping a list! LOL! Keep up the writing…I believe you DO have it in you! 🙂

    Like

  29. evilnymphstuff November 11, 2012 at 11:51 #

    Don’t get discouraged! Just write and have fun 🙂

    Like

  30. eof737 November 12, 2012 at 11:42 #

    Don’t give up Tilly… Stuff happens and then a flood of creativity. 😉

    Like

I welcome your comments but be warned: I'm menopausal and as likely to snarl as smile. Wine or Maltesers are an acceptable bribe; or a compliment about my youthful looks and cheery disposition will do in a pinch.