How Many Words Did You Write Today?
The
author John Braine once said, "A
writer is someone who counts words."
Do
you count the words you write ?
You
should - because it's a sure fire way of getting around writer's
block -and a good way of keeping yourself on track.
Having
specific word counts to aspire to, will keep you writing more - and
for longer.
You'll
have more to show for your efforts, more to submit, and consequently
more work coming in.
Your
writing success is directly correlated to your word count.
Last
night I was talking to a writer - well, someone who wanted
to be a full time writer
- and she told me she'd taken a year to get to her manuscript to
where it was now.
I
asked, casually of course, how many words she'd written so
far.
"Four
thousand," she said.
Four
thousand!
G'ah
- that's less than eleven words a day - what's she doing, I thought,
chiseling them in stone?
By
stunning contrast, Robyn held the whip to me yesterday
(metaphorically speaking) and I produced 2500 words for a treatment
we have to get to a producer by 5pm today.
And
I did that between 10am and 2pm - taking a break to make lunch -
because I had to pick up the kids at 3.
Talk
about pressure!
But
that's the point.
If
you don't pressure yourself, you ain't never gonna have enough words
down to make you a contenda (to mis-quote Marlon Brando in 'On the
Waterfront'!)
Writing
something every day is important.
Pushing
your limit is important too.
It
doesn't matter if you start out writing just eleven words a day - as
long as you consciously try and increase that amount as each day
passes.
I try to write
- actually try
is not the word, have to write would be more truthful - at least 500
words a day or I feel bad, like I've failed in some unannounced
contest.
2000
words and I feel good- complete somehow.
Which
means that I could have written my friend's manuscript in two
days - rather than take a
year over it.
I know
this is common among writers.
People
call themselves writers because they have a writing project on the
boil - whether they're actually working on it actively or not.
I
used to do this too.
I
felt like a writer because I had a novel that I would dip into every
now and then.
I
spent years like this, believing myself a writer because I wrote
sometimes.
Now
I know different.
Writing
for a living means exactly what the phrase suggests: you write
because you have to live, and you
live to write.
Writing
becomes the center of your life - and you make a living from it!
The
whole idea of that seemed like a fantasy before I took the plunge -
before I realized I just had to let go of the silly 9 to5.
Before
I realized that holding on to a false sense of security was wasting
my time - time that could be better spent being a writer.
This
would be my advice to you:
Don't
wait, plan, and dream about being a writer. Just
do it.
Take
the chance - we're only here once, our lives are on loan.
Do
what makes you happy.
Reject
compromise.
Reject
criticism.
Reject
everything and everyone who would want to see you live a lesser
life.
Simply, write,
and...
Keep
Writing!
Rob
Parnell's Writing Academy
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