Wednesday, November 7, 2012

NaNo Pep Talk

I actually really liked this pep talk from author Gennifer Albin. 

I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. 


FromNaNoWriMo Announcement Megaphone
Sent atNovember 05, 2012 13:39
SubjectA Pep Talk from Gennifer Albin

When the lovely folks at the Office of Letters and Light asked me to write a pep talk, they pointed to me to the archive of past pep talkers for inspiration. What I found was the exact opposite. The archive held a list of talks from much more intelligent, much wittier, and most disconcertingly, much more writerly authors than I.
I, dear Wrimos, was in over my head.
I agonized for a few days over my predicament. Not only had I agreed to write a pep talk, but I suffer from a particularly strong case of tenacity. I didn’t like feeling that I couldn’t do it. Still, any way I cut it, I was the newbie. The rookie in a line-up of veteran writers with awards and bestsellers and huge book deals under their belts.
And then it hit me — as truth often will. There is one fundamental thing I have in common with these rock stars of the writing world. It’s something many of you share with them as well. And by November 30, hopefully all of you will.
I wrote a book.
It sounds so simple, but it’s true. I wrote a book. I put butt in chair and got from beginning to end. Oh, there’s the nasty business of revision and editing in there, too. But the one thing I know undeniably links me to people like John Green, Piers Anthony, and Philip Pullman is that we all wrote books, and all those books started as drafts much like the one you’re working on right now.
How many times as a writer have you gotten so caught up in the next step of the writing process that you lose sight of the real finish-line: getting to the end? Are you suffering from a case of go-back-and-fix-it, or worse, page-perfectionitis? Stop worrying about editing or finding the perfect word, and just get to the end.
There will be time yet for a “million visions and revisions.” But you cannot be a writer if you don’t write. It’s as simple as that. I lost sight of that when I opened the link to those pep talks. For a moment I failed to see that I’d already crossed the line that separated me from would-like-to-be and am. I am a writer. I write books. If you’ve completed NaNoWriMo before, you can say the same thing. In fact, say it right now. I’ll wait.
No, really. Say it.
I am a writer. I write books.
Even better, grab a sticky note, write it down, and post it next to your computer. Drag it with you to write-in’s. Own it. It’s yours!
If this is your first time, say this with me.
I will be a writer. I will write books.
Say it.
Write it down. Make it happen. Save that sticky note for future use when you cross that 50K finish line.
The real secret is that anyone can write a book. There’s no initiation ceremony. No dues to pay. You don’t need a special degree from a fancy school. Writing is for everyone, and this is your chance to scrawl your name across the page. By month’s end, you’ll have done that which many dream of, but never accomplish.
You already have a leg up from all the would-like-to-be’s out there. You’re here. You’ve surrounded yourself with people who are driven to tell stories. The NaNoWriMo community is full of people who understand that sometimes characters talk to you at inopportune times. They understand what it’s like to live with a foot in two worlds. They know that reality and fiction blur, and they’re one hell of a support group.
And if you’ve gotten to the end of this, stop procrastinating and start writing.
Gennifer Albin is the author of Crewel, the first book in the Crewel World Trilogy, which got its start during NaNoWriMo.

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