by Janis Susan
May/Janis Patterson
There are those who say writers must write X number of words
every single day, including Christmas and their birthday. There are others who
say that to rigidly schedule your writing is to kill creativity, and writers
should write only when their Muse whispers in their ear. We all know several of
each kind.
I kind of agree that doing exactly X number of words every
day can easily start producing lifeless and mechanical prose, but waiting until
your Muse cooperates can be a lengthy and unpredictable experience. Neither one
is a real asset to a professional writer.
My solution is far from perfect - is there really a perfect
one? - but it works for me. When I start a new book I have a rough idea (within
5K) of how long it is going to be - though that can and sometimes does change. I
always have a deadline, even when I'm self-publishing. Then it's a matter of
simple math to figure out how many words I want to write each day... or each
week. Even though I record my totals daily I find weekly goals are more
flexible, because life does happen. An emergency trip to the vet because the
dog ate something unwise. Plumbing disasters. A 24 hour bug slaps you down. Family
obligations. Sometimes it does seem the world conspires to keep us from
writing, doesn't it?
Years ago I made an Excel spreadsheet with all the data on
the book on top (title, start and end dates, genre, target length, etc.) , then
below columns for Day (of the project), Date, Word Count Finish, Total Words
Done, Daily Projected, Daily +/-, Projected Goal, Projected Goal +/-. In a
different spot I also have a chart for chapter number and start and end pages.
I made a blank master file and whenever I start a new book I copy it into the
new file for the new book (you do keep a new file for each new book, don't
you?) and fill out the pertinent information - dates, targets, etc. It takes me
less than an hour and it's pretty much set for the duration of the book.
It sounds cumbersome, and I'm sure to many it might be, but
it keeps me on track. Every day line is filled out, even if I have to do
several together after an extended hiatus. This isn't an exercise to shame
myself or make me feel bad about myself - there are some things that can't be
helped, after all - but it is to keep me accountable. Am I writing? Am I
staying near my goal? If not, why? Sometimes I put notes in the blank area to
the right - Meemaw hospital, for example, or Grandpa here. Once in a great
while I have to put something like Goofed off, or Family picnic. Remember, this
is not a feel-good thing so I can see I'm 6K ahead of my projected goal,
either. This is an exercise in accountability.
So whether I'm ahead of my goal or behind it, this is a
record. Not a brag, not a punishment. Am I writing? Am I meeting my
daily/weekly goal? No one ever sees this sheet but me (and the cat who loves to
sit on my shoulder while I work, but she won't tell anyone) and it is I for whom
I do it. It makes me accountable about my writing.
And we all know that if we're going to be a writer we must
write, don't we?