Sorry for the delay, folks. My machine is telling me that they’re all sent now, but let me know if you haven’t received yours yet – or if you have any questions. I’ve gone through three different wifi servers and three different email addresses to send them out!!!
I am now live streaming on instagram for anyone who is on Instagram. A very dull stream of me drinking a diet coke, but, hey. It’s one more way you can talk to me!
Hey Devin, were on as @novelinaday in the instagram app, but I’ve closed it down for a little bit now. The emails seem to have stopped so I’ll assume you’re all either content or asleep and I’m going to go sneak a couple hours of sleep in myself.
D’oh. I knew that (note to self: mustn’t try to think late at night after wine). I think what confused me was that everything was in a single file. Anyway, amazing work with the briefing and details, as always!
Hey all, I’m back, and caught up on the handful of questions that came through while I grabbed a couple of winks of sleep. On a unrelated note, the lovely Mrs Pigfender bought apples and put them in the fridge for me. I have never been so happy to see an apple in my life.
Everyone’s process is different (I tend to Scapple map random ideas, jokes, thoughts and possibilities first), but if your normal approach isn’r helping, there are three things I can suggest:
Instead of thinking about the details - the what or the how - thing about the why. Focus on what you want the emotional anchor for the chapter to be, and how you can make that payoff the centre of your planning. I talk a little bit about that here: pigfender.com/index.php/2013 … ers-block/
If that doesn’t help, simply start with what you do know to include. Your brief contains enough stuff that you know definitely has to be in there… you know some action has to happen in a specific place. You know certain things need to occur. Just start putting some words down on those areas and let the ideas seed from that.
Or start with an unconnected ‘riff’ and see where that takes you. “What was I saying again?”
Dave looked up from his desk. “You were telling me what a great memory you have.”
Yeah, Scrivener has this neat function where it can take these individual documents you’ve created and bring them together at output into a single longer file.
On an unrelated note, the first chapter is now in! WOOHOO!
OK. Hear me out. I know I’ve totally missed it this time. I’ve had a lot going on. However, if you have any last minute openings, at all, I’m in.
Just in case I get lucky, I’m going to keep checking my email every five minutes the rest of the day.