Next month I’ll participate in Nanowrimo for a second time. Last year was touch-and-go, especially since I was only home for eleven of the thirty days of November. My biggest challenge, however, was not the writing days I lost to the road, but rather shutting myself up. I’m an editor by trade, so it’s not surprising that I have trouble turning that off. Maybe the best way to shut up the editor is to stop thinking.
I’ll stop thinking . . . soon.
In nine more days, I’ll stop thinking for a few roaring writing minutes a day. In the meantime, I’ll obsess! What to write? A tortured love story?
Just before Terry and Pat forked paths to their cars, they turned to each other, as they had done for 935 days on their way to work: peck on the lips, Have a great day! / You, too! I love you. / Love you too! Today, Pat’s eyes lingered on Terry a little longer, realizing, I don’t, really. I don’t love you. That was the last kiss, the last time they would see each other.
Or maybe a child in a suspense/horror story?
Ophera sat quietly in the back, the mumble of her parents’ conversation indistinguishably mingled with the roar of the engine. Ophera wasn’t sure how she knew, but she knew. She didn’t feel sad. It was the textbook knowing. The first element on the periodic table is hydrogen. Hydrogen and oxygen are the two elements that make water. Her mother’s heart beat 113,889 times a day, but her dad’s 100,352 (on average). The car would veer as it entered the bridge. Moments after plunging into the icy water of the roaring river, her parents’ hearts would stop. Ophera knew hers wouldn’t.
Maybe I should go with SciFi?
Darian shut down thoughts as she pushed her ship to warp speed. No one ever said it, but they all understood. She wouldn’t be back. Even if she managed to find her way back, she wouldn’t find anything or anyone she knew at this station. She closed her eyes through the hum of the changing pressure. Darian knew it was an impossible mission. No one believed she could find the crew that shot through this hole twenty years ago. Darian’s proposal and plea were strong and compelling, finally convincing the commissioners to grant her this last-ditch mission.
Nine more days until Nanowrimo and I still don’t know what I want to be when I grow up. Maybe I’ll write about that!
©Copyright Pennie Nichols. All Rights Reserved, 2017.
I like all of your proposals! I’m signed up but still on the fence.
Gosh. It can’t be any more challenging that what you’re doing this month!!
I think I completed NaBloPOMo last year. One year I tried to write a novel -it turned out to be really stressful, so I quit. I’m not doing NaBloPoMo this year, I don’t want to push out sub par posts just to post something. Maybe I will commit to *just write* every day, whether it’s a draft blog post, or a snippet for a future article.
Hey! I think I just came up with a blog post idea! Thanks!
I write every day, much of the day, but it’s not for myself. So making a commitment to write for myself (blog or otherwise . . . just write!) has become important. I develop many other habits (good and bad). I want writing for myself to be like muscle memory and habit. Looking forward to your blog post idea!