Revise-O-Wrimo 2020

Normally this time of year I’d be posting about preparation for NaNoWriMo, one of my most favorite annual writing events. However, as many of us writers and creatives are finding, creating NEW work this year has been tough. While I have buds of story ideas, the strain that is 2020 keeps them from growing. The good news is that I have plenty of stories in progress that need tending, so 2020 is the perfect year to attempt my first ever Revise-O-Wrimo.

My YA novel is currently stuck in mud, so I’ll be revising my chapter book for Revise-O-Wrimo. Chapter books are considerably shorter than YA (<15k words for chapter books and 70k+ words for sci-fi/fantasy YA). Given the shorter word count, I’m going to attempt to revise my chapter book twice in one month. Ambitious? Yes, but does it fall in line with the ambition of NaNoWriMo? 100%. So I say, let’s do this!


Revise-O-Wrimo 2020 Plan


This is my first time using NaNoWriMo for revision, and my first time revising a chapter book, so I’m making up most of this as I go. It’s a little fun, and a little intimidating, to not know if my plan will be effective, but a big part of the writer’s journey is learning what works and what doesn’t work for your writing process. I think I’ll learn a lot in November :)

I first needed to a set a goal for my revisions. This is important for building a reasonable plan across the month.

Goal: Complete two full manuscript revisions in order to have a draft ready for critique by the end of November.

Once I established my goal, I broke the month up into two halves for revision #1 and revision #2. The first half of the month will focus on structure and story backbone. The second half will focus on voice and fun.

Then, I created a calendar (below), and plotted out what I would work on for each day, leaving the last couple of days for a final read through and fine tune edits.

reviseo-wrimo2020.jpg

And because I like to plan, plan, plan, I broke it down a bit further in another document with additional notes and context.

First Half of November: Structure and Backbone
1: Read full manuscript, assess story structure, identify where structural changes are needed
2: Chapter 1
3: Chapter 2
4: Chapter 3
5: Chapter 4
6: Chapter 5
7: Chapter 6
8: Chapter 7
9: Chapter 8
10: Chapter 9
11: Chapter 10
12: Chapter 11
13: Extra Day for Any Chapters Not Completed
14: Read full manuscript, assess and fine tune story structure

Second Half of November: Voice and Fun
15: Read full manuscript, assess for voice and fun, identify areas needing work
16: Chapter 1
17: Chapter 2
18: Chapter 3
19: Chapter 4
20: Chapter 5
21: Chapter 6
22: Chapter 7
23: Chapter 8
24: Chapter 9
25: Chapter 10
26: Chapter 11 
27: Extra Day for Any Chapters Not Completed
28: Extra Day for Any Chapters Not Completed
29: Read full manuscript, assess for big picture and/or fine tune issues 
30: Extra Day for final revision


My plan looks good. It’s feasible and will get me to my end goal. Success! All this planning is great, but as a two-time NaNoWriMo winner, I can confidently say that the most important key to NaNo success, whether writing or revising, is to be flexible. It helps to have a plan, but on day 4, you might not be inspired to work on day 4’s plan. Hopping around is OK, so even though I have things broken out day-by-day, the most important part of the plan is to stay flexible and work on different chapters as needed in order to keep my momentum going.

While I will certainly have some FOMO watching NaNoWriMos doing word sprints to hustle towards 50k new words of a novel, I am excited about using this writing event to make meaningful progress on my stories. As they say, each writer’s journey is different, and we have to be true to what we need. So, here’s to my first Revise-O-Wrimo! And whether or not you’re working toward 50k words in November, I wish you success this coming month, too!

The Battle for My Creative Self

In the beginning of June, I started slipping into what I called a creative depression. Fueled by burnout and the pandemic, it felt like a slow leak at first, the creativity dripping out of my body like a leaky faucet. With all this home time (due to the pandemic), I pushed myself into virtual workshops and webinars, thinking NOW IS THE TIME TO DO ALL THE CREATIVE THINGS. PUSH, PUSH, PUSH TOWARD YOUR GOALS. And then my creative ego took a hit with a hurtful critique experience, and the faucet burst, expelling my creative spirit and energy out of my body like a tidal wave.

A couple weeks ago, I realized that with all the home time, I had no separation between work-me and creative-me anymore. Before the pandemic, I went to an office where I did my work things (for the most part). Then I would come home, where I would do my creative things. There was physical and mental space and separation for both of those pieces of me, and they were (relatively) happy and in balance within their own environments.

Now, with working from home for the foreseeable future, everything happens in the same room, in the same physical space. The space I built to foster writing and creativity is now my full time work office. And while I’ve tried to design separate spaces in the same room for day-job work and creative work, the day-job work has taken over like the invasive grass overtaking my front yard garden. 

But it’s not just about the physical space. It’s also the mental state that the physical space represents and enables to thrive. Just like work space and creative space, there’s work-me and creative-me mental states. Work-me is confident in what she does, is successful at what she does, knows exactly what she needs to do to progress.

Creative-me, on the other hand, lacks confidence. She doesn’t always know how to progress her creative work and she certainly doesn’t feel successful.  

Work-me requires more mental and emotional energy than creative-me, so she dominates. She uses up all the reserves I have, and pushes creative-me out. Creative-me has little confidence or energy to take any of that space back.

So I’m caught in a battle. A competition. Two sides of me wanting control. Both running on fumes. Both fighting for space to exist and thrive. 

But as much as I feel caught in the middle of tug of war, with no control over which side pulls me to victory or ends in defeat, I also need to see my role in this situation for what it is. 

The objective truth is that I have a choice. 

Yes, work-me is dominant and confident and stubborn and I can let her take up all the physical and mental space and energy I have for the rest of forever...

Or

Also dyed my hair teal to spark creative joy because why not?

Also dyed my hair teal to spark creative joy because why not?

I can choose to say, “You know what? For five minutes today, I'm not going to let dominant work-me push me away from what’s important. For five minutes today, creative-me gets the mental and physical space she needs.”

Five minutes may not seem like a lot. But five minutes every day for months adds up. Or maybe it’s five minutes one day and ten another. The point is, that choice is mine. No matter how confident or dominating parts of me may be, I can acknowledge those commanding traits and still decide to do the opposite of what they’re demanding me to do.

In the same way I might decide to do the opposite of what my stubbornness wants in an argument, or choosing to be more flexible when plans need to change, I can choose to give creative-me the time and space she deserves.

Making that choice isn’t easy, especially when I’m burned out or managing multiple responsibilities. But when I ask myself what I want most, the answer is always easy, I just have to choose to follow through.