Done killing myself for my story (for now)

zephyrtrillian

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I've never written professionally (or semi-professionally) before.

I just completed a month of balls-to-the-wall, full-time output.

Over the month, I developed my style, my voice, my workflow, and my writing technique. I also wrote 19 chapters.

I can see that the quality of my chapters slid as I went along and got closer and closer to burnout. Even Stephen King, who is a seasoned author, only writes 2000 words a day. I was doing 2500+, editing, learning, refining...

I wouldn't recommend this or do it again. However, I can say that my skills have dramatically increased.

I started the month not really knowing what I was doing. I only ever wrote as a roleplayer before, maybe a short story here and there. Writing a manuscript takes a different level of determination and dedication. It also requires a different way of thinking.

Stuff I've learned since:
  • I HAVE to put time between writing chapters and editing them, or I literally don't have the eyes to see what I've done wrong. 1-3 days does well enough. Longer is better.
  • I have a dependence on weak verb + adverb combinations and the following words: sharply, suddenly, softly, gently, carefully, quietly, flickered. I also tend to write a lot about hands, especially fingers.
  • Reader reception of creative work really spans the full range of possibilities. Not everyone will like what I'm writing, and they're happy to be loud and even nasty about that. The people who do like what I'm writing really care, and they're the ones who matter.
  • No one can like your story if they don't know that it exists. You have to really put yourself out there everywhere you can, and you need to have a LOT of content to offer first before people will care.
  • Learning a new skill is extremely cognitively demanding, but also extremely satisfying. I'm exhausted--I even started taking daily naps halfway through the month--but I feel like I did something real, too.
So, hooray, I got through month one!!! But I'm going down to 3x/week posts from here out.

Excuse me while I go lie down. ?

Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
 

Frowfy

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I've never written professionally (or semi-professionally) before.

I just completed a month of balls-to-the-wall, full-time output.

Over the month, I developed my style, my voice, my workflow, and my writing technique. I also wrote 19 chapters.

I can see that the quality of my chapters slid as I went along and got closer and closer to burnout. Even Stephen King, who is a seasoned author, only writes 2000 words a day. I was doing 2500+, editing, learning, refining...

I wouldn't recommend this or do it again. However, I can say that my skills have dramatically increased.

I started the month not really knowing what I was doing. I only ever wrote as a roleplayer before, maybe a short story here and there. Writing a manuscript takes a different level of determination and dedication. It also requires a different way of thinking.

Stuff I've learned since:
  • I HAVE to put time between writing chapters and editing them, or I literally don't have the eyes to see what I've done wrong. 1-3 days does well enough. Longer is better.
  • I have a dependence on weak verb + adverb combinations and the following words: sharply, suddenly, softly, gently, carefully, quietly, flickered. I also tend to write a lot about hands, especially fingers.
  • Reader reception of creative work really spans the full range of possibilities. Not everyone will like what I'm writing, and they're happy to be loud and even nasty about that. The people who do like what I'm writing really care, and they're the ones who matter.
  • No one can like your story if they don't know that it exists. You have to really put yourself out there everywhere you can, and you need to have a LOT of content to offer first before people will care.
  • Learning a new skill is extremely cognitively demanding, but also extremely satisfying. I'm exhausted--I even started taking daily naps halfway through the month--but I feel like I did something real, too.
So, hooray, I got through month one!!! But I'm going down to 3x/week posts from here out.

Excuse me while I go lie down. ?

Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
2k words? Wow, I didn't know that was the usual. Sometimes I write 2,500 (somtimes 3900) thinking: "my productivity is too slow". Lol

You accidentally relieved one of my biggest worries. It seems I'm normal ?.
 

Eldoria

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zephyrtrillian

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2k words? Wow, I didn't know that was the usual. Sometimes I write 2,500 (somtimes 3900) thinking: "my productivity is too slow". Lol

You accidentally relieved one of my biggest worries. It seems I'm normal ?.
Here, have a present!

 
Last edited:

Hans.Trondheim

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Gratz with your accomplishment! Keep writing, but be wary of burnouts.

Mine would be...

Word Count: 1,230,000+
Average Word Count per Chapter: 3k
Chapter Count: 440+
Book Count: 21
Illustration Count: 150 drawings, cover, back cover, in-chapter illustrations and character introductions
Total Writing Time: 6 years (almost)
Readers: <500 lol (I suck at this)
 

Eldoria

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Gratz with your accomplishment! Keep writing, but be wary of burnouts.

Mine would be...

Word Count: 1,230,000+
Average Word Count per Chapter: 3k
Chapter Count: 440+
Book Count: 21
Illustration Count: 150 drawings, cover, back cover, in-chapter illustrations and character introductions
Total Writing Time: 6 years (almost)
Readers: <500 lol (I suck at this)
wow... 6 years of writing?
 

CharlesEBrown

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I can see that the quality of my chapters slid as I went along and got closer and closer to burnout. Even Stephen King, who is a seasoned author, only writes 2000 words a day. I was doing 2500+, editing, learning, refining...
Only 2000? That's what I'm at the point of needing to do. I usually do about 1100
  • I HAVE to put time between writing chapters and editing them, or I literally don't have the eyes to see what I've done wrong. 1-3 days does well enough. Longer is better.
The late James M. Ward had a system:
In the morning, he would re-read what he wrote the day before, making any corrections. If he took the day off (which he did for one day every weekend, any time he had to do family stuff outside of the house, or was too sick to write - and the day after he saw the first robin of spring every year), he would read something else - newspapers, books he was being asked to edit, or just stuff for pleasure.
After lunch, he would write for two to five hours on at least one project, and, IIRC, never more than three projects at a time - usually getting over 2000 words a day.
I kind of wish I had the discipline to do that.
So, hooray, I got through month one!!! But I'm going down to 3x/week posts from here out.
Congratulations! That seems to be the best level for writers IME.
 

Corty

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Reading the comments, I am now even more sure that something is wrong with me. :sweating_profusely:
 

Corty

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Képernyőfotó 2025-08-01 - 17.03.11.png

Képernyőfotó 2025-08-01 - 17.03.01.png


I write 5,000 to 8,000 words per day from Monday to Friday.
 

HisDivineShadow

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View attachment 40209
View attachment 40211

I write 5,000 to 8,000 words per day from Monday to Friday.
That’s impressive productivity and endurance. :blob_dizzy:

My personal achievement is about 15 thousand words in three days.
But after that, I couldn’t even think about my characters for a whole week.
I just wasted time doing random stuff like generating nonsense images with AI. :blob_pat_sad:
 
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