1000 words

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Spent my 1000 words today on an essay for that
Chronicle
contest I was talking about at Writer’s Digest.

1000 words a day, five days a week, is the goal Carolyn See set herself years ago when she decided she was going to grow up and get serious and be a real writer, not just a person who has written, not just a person who someday may write, but a person who does the work, every day.

1000 words is not a limit, it’s fine to go over. It’s fine to work six or seven days, too. But the minimum a writer needs to do, to maintain any kind of continuity, is 1000 words a day, five days a week. For me this is very do-able.

I usually don’t like to write on Monday, because I have a meeting early in the morning and then take a walk and have lunch with my friend Sue. And since I like to write first thing in the morning, Mondays just don’t work for me. But I can come home at 12:30 or 1:00 and, if I know I only have to write 1000 words, I can do that.

It might take 30 minutes, or it might take 90. There’s that thing where time goes away when you’re writing, so it really won’t matter.

See’s rule for revising is: no more than two hours at a time. I like that one, too. As I understand it, you revise for two hours and then take a break. Need not be the whole day, but just a nice break. Lunch and maybe a walk or a little bit of music or meditation or reading or whatever. And then go back to revising if you feel up to it.

I have two article queries to revise, but I’m saving that job until tomorrow, when I’ll also revise the essay. All of which should take me, you guessed it, about two hours.

I really should write Carolyn See a charming note one of these days. As soon as I buy the stationary without flowers…

  1. W. Halyn Avatar
    W. Halyn

    Dear Cynthia…. puh-LEEZE note the rules for typing… There are TWO spaces after every period! (Also for colons, and one space for commas and semi-colons)
    This is for clarity, not just some snobby superficial sophisticated image-seeking pretentious reason. WINDOWS itself has an irritating habit of automatically reformatting blocks of text to only one space between everything, which makes ends of sentences appear like a comma still followed by more words. But this block I just read here has NO spaces after the periods.
    If you’re gonna do that, why not just leavenospacesbetweenthewordseither?
    ThinkhowmuchspaceyoucouldsaveTHERE,too!
    Get the point? There’s a reason for leaving spaces after punctuation. It gives the eyes a rest, the brain a momentary pause, tells the psyche where to clear a concept and get ready to tackle another. NO ONE will want to read a book set up such as laid out here. Or, at least not enough to make your writing pay for itself.
    Please alter your typing habits ever so slightly so as to strike the space bar twice after the periods! Okay?
    ‘Nuff said…..

  2. Cindy Avatar

    You know, I used to write on a manual typewriter. In those days, we used two spaces after the period. Now, due to word processing programs, one space is correct. I do remember when the change-over occurred, something to do with word processing programs not liking the two spaces and the two spaces not being necessary anymore for editors and the like. Just checked a published novel, and nope, there aren’t two spaces after a period or a colon…so anyway, I think you’re wrong. I could be mistaken (wouldn’t be the first time) but pretty sure you’re wrong.

    As for there being no spaces between some of my puncuation, well, that’s just me being a blogger, letting the typos stay.

  3. Cindy Avatar

    Actually, Movable Type takes away the spaces, evne yours, lol.

  4. KnittingQueen Avatar

    I still like your writing. I mean this blog. Just let the keyboard sing. I should write notes…and sometimes I am rather successful with them…but sometimes I just type from…small title to small title and that is all. I have no more strength.

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