RTW – Staring Down the Deadline Monster

This week, as November looms, YA Highway asks the question, Are you doing NaNoWriMo, or have you ever? Does having a deadline inspire you?

No, I’ve never done NaNoWriMo. By the time the National Novel Writing Month came along, I’d already been published and was regularly writing books under contract. I was too busy working on those contracted books to take the time to start something new in November as NaNoWriMo requires. Me starting a NaNoWriMo book would have been a little like a busy home construction contractor in the middle of building a house dropping everything to run off and build a little cottage somewhere just for fun.

Deadlines, on the other hand, are an entirely different beast. That is, I worship at the feet of the deadline monster. It’s not so much that deadlines inspire me, but I respect them completely. Those deadline monsters are very much the boss of me. They stand by my bed in the morning, glaring at me to get up. They point their monstrous fingers toward my desk and demand that I turn on the computer. They keep their beady eyes on me to make sure I’m producing sufficient wordage each day so that I can reach their lofty goals. And heaven forbid if I take a peek at Facebook when I’m supposed to be working. The deadline monster never believes me when I say, “But I’m just doing some research on the web.”

So, yeah, deadlines are a powerful influence on me. I have only slipped a deadline a couple of times, both times by less than a week. I do try to front load success with my deadlines, negotiating with my editor for a reasonable amount of time to finish a given book. But I take them seriously and keep my eye on the calendar as I work.

I kind of suck, discipline-wise, if there is no deadline. Right now, I’m between books. I’ll have to start working on Revolution, the last book of the Tankborn trilogy, the moment my editor gives the thumbs-up. Once that happens, I’ll be busy-busy-busy for close to a year. But for the moment, the only thumbs doing anything are mine, twiddling.

Yeah, I could work on a spec book I’ve got that needs editing. I could even write some short stories like my son suggested. But it’s really hard to muster up the gumption to write. I can be a real slug when the deadline monster is taking a sabbatical.

So, although I’ve never done NaNoWriMo myself, I’m a big believer in the concept. Because it gives you a deadline. You have only the 30 days of November to write those 50K words. That’s quite a lot of work, a lot of words to write per day to reach your goal. And working fast like that, you learn a valuable skill–how to turn off the editor and just write. That one ability, to temporarily silence your internal editor, will get you to THE END, to a completed manuscript, better than anything.

So, are you doing NaNoWriMo this year? If so, much luck to you. And be sure to stock up on the deadline monster treats. All that glaring and pointing are hungry work.

Comments

10 responses to “RTW – Staring Down the Deadline Monster”

  1. Juliana Haygert Avatar

    “I worship at the feet of the deadline monster. ” << me too!
    Though, self-imposed deadlines don't truly work for me. And that's why NaNo is so awesome!
    I understand about having other agenda, and it doesn't go with NaNo … that's what happened to me during CampNaNo and I so wanted to participate in that =( Maybe next year!

    1. karensandler Avatar

      Yes, you have to be especially dedicated to make self-imposed deadlines work. I can and have written books with no contracts, but it’s harder to keep going.

  2. Nickie Anderson Avatar

    The deadline monster lives under my bed! He keeps me awake when I still have revisions to do 🙂

    I agree with your view, though — I don’t think it’s necessary to make yourself do NaNoWriMo in November. Any month can be a novel writing month — why limit it to one a year? And why stop one project you’re focused on to begin a new one? I plan on using November for revisions this year, but perhaps next year I’ll have a clean plate and an idea to get out there.

    Good luck on ‘Awakening’!

    1. karensandler Avatar

      It would have been nice if I’d gotten my own book title right. AWAKENING is the sequel to TANKBORN and I’ve already finished it. REVOLUTION is the one I’m about to start (it’s book 3 of the trilogy). Yeesh.

  3. Samantha Avatar

    I agree, I’m a big believer of the concept too. Setting those deadlines really gives you something to work towards. Motivation!

  4. Rachael Avatar

    I’m really terrible with self-imposed deadlines. The biggest thing with me and NaNo is the sense of obligation and support because I’m doing it with so many other people.

  5. Daisy Carter Avatar

    Such a great post – I, too, worship at the deadline beast’s feet. And I, too, turn into a sloth when the beast is silent. Nice to meet you through YAHighway!

    1. karensandler Avatar

      Nice to meet you too. I hope you finish your WIP so you can move on to something new for NaNoWriMo.

  6. Stephanie Allen Avatar

    Honestly, I’m one of those people who has to have deadlines and things to do constantly, because I, too, turn into a slug when I have nothing to do. Which is why I keep doing NaNo, because it gives me that kick in the pants that I need to get motivated 🙂

  7. Adrianne Avatar

    That deadline monster looks terrifying! I love NaNo because of the deadline. It makes me realize that I am fully capable of being a writer. 🙂

Leave a Reply