More writing, more submitting, more rejections

Since my last post, the writing has continued at a steady pace. It takes up a huge chunk of my free time, but I’m pretty positive I’m still at an average of one new story per week. I really need to compile a…wait…gimme a sec…okay, twelve. I’ve written twelve new short stories since I started, and I’ve sent out eleven of those. One is a little special, and I need to rework it and get it in proper shape. It’s hard to find time for rewrites. I have rewritten a few of them, however. Tonight I did a rewrite of a very old story that I’ve been sending out maybe three times in as many years. I think this time around I added a little bit of something to it that will make it more than a simple account of a scary monster attack. We’ll see. If it gets accepted, I’ll let you know.

On the subject of acceptance, if anything at all happens I’ll let you know. Actually, at this point I’ll just let you know if something gets accepted and goes into print. I had two stories accepted last year, and one of those is still “in process.” It’s been over a year, and the story still hasn’t printed, so in fear that I’ll be paving a road with “It’s coming! No, really! Really!!!” I have just decided to let news of acceptances go until something really happens.

That said, the rejections are coming in fast and furious! I just got three within the past eight or nine days. I have found it is true what people say, that it is easier to take rejection if you have multiple pieces in the mail, since your hopes aren’t pinned on a single piece. Plus, I found it very strange but cool to note that I felt much better about being rejected when I sent another brand new piece out.

Tonight I stayed up late and tended to submissions. I really do wish I had someone to take care of that end of business for me. Once things get rejected it’s a bit of a task to comb the markets over and find somewhere to send off the old stuff. Then, as tonight, there is the occasional task of doing a rewrite to try and help out something that seems like it needs it. However, I’m happy to say that I got one piece printed and packaged up for a postal submission, and I found two markets to send of email submissions to after that. This includes the rewrite on the one piece. Oh, and earlier, when this (very early morning) as yesterday evening, I put in a couple more hours on another new short story. I hope to finish that one up later today (after I’ve taken an eight-hour nap). Then that one will go out to…somewhere. Hmmm…I thought I had an idea for a place to send it, but I guess not, that was last week’s story I suppose.

I have ten pieces out for consideration right now. Two of them are to publishers who take five or six months to respond, so I guess I won’t have any less than two out through most of the rest of this challenge I’ve set for myself. The most I’ve had out so far at once is eleven. I could very well have eleven out again by tomorrow if I wrap up this new one tomorrow (and I hope to).

Oh, there’s also been an update to my writing plan. It was going to be a story a week through the end of 2010. This has been extended. I was watching my Charles Beaumont documentary, and in it Ray Bradbury says he told both William F. Nolan and Beaumont, “Write a story a week for a year, you can’t go wrong. You begin to write quality.” Well, I want to write quality, and I’m not a man of half-measures when goals arise, so I’ll be writing an average of one story a week through I guess it’ll be June of 2011.

That’s enough for now. I’m tired, and there’s more writing and hopefully some sculpture work to be done tomorrow.

Bring on the progress!

Back in June I looked at the calendar and had a horrible and depressing realization. The year was half over and I’d written not one single new story yet. I was pretty displeased, because writing is one of the big things I’ve been focusing on in my life over the past couple of years. Although, up until June of 2011, it seemed clearly that writing was only one of the things I’d been talking about focusing on, because there sure wasn’t any writing going on!

I was bereft, or at least rather put out about the whole state of affairs. Something had to be done. Here I’ve been wanting to write fiction so much, been talking about it, been reading it, and yet I hadn’t been DOING it! What can be done in such a situation? Let’s think that over for about two seconds. Oh, I know! How about, you know, writing!

Once I made that gigantic mental leap it was just a matter of getting the work done, sitting down and moving my fingers and making something happen on the screen/page. Right about this time I was reading the blog of Alex J. Kane, a burgeoning science fiction writer who has been making an honest and concrete effort to get his work out into the market. Alex made note of a web site by a writer named Dean Wesley Smith, and some of the thoughts he related of Smith’s seemed very positive and progress-oriented, so I went there and read some of Smith’s writing on the subject.

To cut things short, Smith was very energizing. He basically just said, “Write, then submit it! That’s it!” There was obviously a little bit more to it than that, but really not much, and when you get right down to it, those are the two steps needed for getting published: write story, submit story.

In view of this I decided that what I wanted was to have a bunch of finished short stories to my credit, and by a bunch, I mean something farther up there in the double digits. I already have a handful, maybe ten or so, but I wanted to add greatly to that number. I wanted to prove, I wanted to make it plainly, ridiculously obvious, that not only do I want to write fiction as a large part of my life, but that I’m not hesitant at all about doing the work to make that happen.

Beginning around the middle of July I started writing, just as Smith instructed. I didn’t sit around and worry over each sentence, each paragraph, each period, adjective, verb, and on and on until I worried myself to a halt. What I started doing was writing. Writing whole sentences, paragraphs, beginnings, endings, whole stories! And then I sent them out. I didn’t worry about having sixteen of my most perceptive writer friends pick them apart so that they shone brighter than polished stainless steel. I just made sure they didn’t have any horrible spelling or grammar errors and the like, made them look the best I figured I could make them at that point, and fired them off.

The goal is to write one new short story per week for the remainder of this year. I want to be able to say that I have at least 25 new short stories to my name by the end of the year. (I’ll fit in an extra somewhere to bring the total up.) So far it has been, well, work! But it’s fun work. I’m really enjoying it. It’s not always easy, but somehow I’m learning something, someTHINGS. I may not be known or admired or even have much of anything published by the time this effort is done (wouldn’t feel bad to have a sale or two, though), but I will have gotten better at writing, and maybe my December something will change, maybe I’ll sell to a pro market, or maybe I’ll just be writing stuff that’s still not so publishable, but is a lot closer to being publishable.

They say it takes a million written words for a writer to sharpen their instrument, hone themselves into a writer’s writer. I want that million words. I’ve written three novels in NaNoWriMo over the past three years. That’s far more than the 150K words that each year’s 50K minimum would put me at. I’m probably around 200K from that alone, maybe even 225K. Then we have the other short stories I’ve written since 2007. That gets me closer, maybe to 240K. That’s nearly halfway to 500K, and Smith said he started seeing some positive results at 500K. I’m nearly halfway there, and if we figure I’m writing stories that average about 4K each week, then by December I’ll have something like 340K (the last story actually went to 8K, so I may well go over).

So here we go, kids. It’s time to stop fooling around just talking about writing and make the writing happen. It is going to be fascinating to see how this all plays out, don’t you think?

Just a quick update and a few chords

I have started reading from the site “The Art of Nonconformity,” written by Chris Guillebeau. It’s giving me lots of exhilirating and terrifying thoughts and feelings. Chris is all about the “can.” I so dig that, man, and it’s scary to think that whatever you dream of doing you can accomplish if you put your mind to it. At least it’s scary for me, because I have some big dreams, and they may very well require me to make some big changes in my life and do some things that are not exactly the most comfortable for me. More on this later.

As a quick note (for realz, yo!), two days ago on 4/6/11 I played eight chords on the guitar without looking at any sort of tablature while doing so. I also was able to identify each chord in my head as I played it, so I know how to play them and what they are as well. This is good stuff. I’ll doubtless be as good as Steve Vai within a week, for sure.

Actually, while there is some question as to the attainment of my Vai/Hendrix/Vaughan/insert-name-of-your-insanely-good-guitar-hero-here status, I can say that it is a leap for me. It proves I CAN learn to play some guitar if I put my mind to it, which is something I used to flat out deny when I was in college, and something that I questioned for many years following college. Seems I was wrong about me. How about that? Maybe there are some other things in life I thought I couldn’t do about which I may have been wrong. Just what in the heck might possibly happen if I stop believing that I’m incapable of things?

What would happen to you if you stopped thinking you were incapable of things? Career change? Taking up pottery? Learning to dance? Forming a great relationship with someone special? Getting out of debt? Running a marathon?

Feel free to list some positive thoughts on achievement in the comments section. I’d love to hear from you.

I made another thing

Man, since January I’ve not posted? Wow. I guess I’ve had a lot of other things going on, many of them either not blog-worthy, or things I just can’t share (but hope to before long).

At any rate, I can share this sculpture piece. I completed it a little while back, but I’ve had to do some vetting of photos on Flickr, because I’m nearing my limit for the free account, and I’m having a hard time justifying spending cash on the paid account. Sure wish I could find some money lying around. Oh, I did try the lottery twice in desperation, probably around January, but the winds did not blow in my favor, so I just picked up additional work. More on the additional work in a moment.

Sculpture:

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Nifty, huh? I kind of love it, although it was a ridiculous pain to build. It fought me at several points. There were odd little things to square away to keep marbles from rolling all over the floor, and then I went and got really crazy and built that seemingly simply brass piece at the end. I was under a tight deadline, and the “steps” seemed like such a simple idea. It was brilliant!

Brilliant, yes. Simple, no. I figured it would take me, well, I don’t know how long, but not long. Maybe I was thinking an hour or two. I believe it was closer to six or eight, and with the schedule I was on at the time, that was like adding another week to it. It did underscore my need for some metal-bending tools, like a brake or a small press. With a press and an appropriate die I would have had that thing made in half the time.

However, it all turned out very nicely. The steps are of brass, and since they are suspended rather freely on the copper they have a fair bit of ring to them when hit by the marbles. It’s a nice affect, and precisely what I was going after.

I did learn a lesson from this, and that was on the practical side of time investment and pricing. I think I priced this appropriately at the time I was commissioned for it, but in the future my prices will have to change. I simply cannot produce work like this in a short time span. I tracked the hours on this one, and it overshot my estimate by fifty to seventy-five percent.

I am quite pleased with this one, though, and with all the help I received on it in various forms from other people. It sapped a lot of my time at some rather crucial points, and the understanding I received at those times was pretty wonderful.

Results!

I’ve been away so long that I thought I’d pulled up an incorrect enry at the home page! I went, “No, I’ve posted since NaNo. Where is that post on sculpture… Uh… It’s… Not…here…anywhere!”

Man, it has been too long! I guess the day after NaNo ended I pretty much jumped right back into sculpture work. That didn’t let up for over two weeks, as it was a piece for a client. Following that, well, you get the holidays and all that craziness, and here we are, January, and not a post to show for over a month! Honestly, though, I was sure that about a week ago I’d posted something. I’ll just have to take care of that right this minute.

The following piece is one I worked on all through 2010. There were a lot of “off” periods where I just had many other things going on and wasn’t able to sit down at the work bench and put time into it. However, I did manage to complete this one for a client in California. Sadly, it was not until some weeks after I mailed it off that I realized I didn’t take one single decent picture of it once it was completed. These are a couple that give you a nice idea of the finished product, if in a rather informal setting.

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In the above photo I was doing some testing before I finally mounted the sculpture to the base. I thought this one turned out nicely. I have to thank my dad for the gorgeous wood base he created for it. It all came together quite nicely.

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Here’s something of a “before” shot. I was cleaning up the sculpture, getting all the flux residue off of it and prepping for the final cleaning. It had just been scrubbed down in the sink, which is why it has water droplets all over it.

I was very happy with this one, and pleased to say that the client enjoyed it too. I have another for you coming up before much longer. It was an extremely busy holiday season, but I managed to squeeze another one in with lots of late nights and a little extra coffee.

NaNoWriMo 2010, Day Thirty: DONE!

I made it, kids! It was an uneven, weird, at times exhausting month, but I made it. I screeched into home plate, keyboard smoking at about 1:30pm or so this afternoon with a grand total of 53,212 words!

I’m not sure how I managed to wrap the whole thing up today, because last night when I sat down at 7:30 it seemed like I had a LOT left to write. However, by 10:20 a bunch of weird and unexpected things had happened to my characters, and the story seemed on the verge of wrapping itself up! Today I sat down with the intent of just adding some words to the count in preparation for the “real” writing session this evening, and an hour later I sat back and went, “Hey – HEY! I’m…I’M DONE!”

Man, another year of NaNo, and another novel. It’s pretty freaking obvious that I’m capable of actually mechanically assembling enough words to write a novel. I’m kind of worried about what the next real question/challenge is: that of turning those drafts into works that are also so entertaining that not only do people want to read them, they want to PAY to read them. Urgh. How do I do that? When I figure that out, I’ll let y’all know, and likely I’ll be doing jumping jacks at that point.

For now, hah, for now I’m writing 400-word “information articles” on “old metal signs, vintage metal signs, retro metal signs.” It took me about two hours to write 400 words on that somewhat repetitive subject, and I should clear $2.80 for that effort, which covers about half the cost of the coffee drink I bought while I was writing it. Hmmm…writing, good. Finance? Not so good. Oh, and I found out AFTER I got all fixed up on this content site that they only pay you when you’ve amassed enough work for a $25 payment. Somehow they leave that out of all the info up front. You only see that once you’ve written your first article and submitted. Cute, right? How many people do you suppose write four or five articles, get tired of it, and then never write enough to get a first payment? This may be the reason that the company was able to inform me in a recent email that their first-year business effort netted them a status of “in the black” for every day but one out of the first year of operation.

I say all this with cynicism, but a healthy does of humor as well. I don’t hold anything against them for the work I’m given now. It’s still a good way for me to get my chops back, and I can already say to any prospective freelance employers, “Yeah, I’m familiar with SEO writing. I’ve done that.”

Okay, now my word count for this entry is over 400 words, which means I’ve hit the $2.80 mark for content, and I should quit while I’m ahead. Y’all take care, and keep up with whatever creative endeavors you enjoy. I wish you the best in your efforts.

Open Sesame!

Holy cow, dudes. I just spent, like, an hour writing an article on sectional garage doors. Maybe one day we will all get on the internet and search for this moribund bit of literacy and laugh over it, but for now I’m not divulging details. Hey, it may be the greatest thing I ever write!

Seriously, I decided a little over a week ago, seemingly out of nowhere, that I was going to seriously dip my toe/foot/self back into the waters of freelance writing. I’ve been doing fiction work for a few years now, and I’ve even had one or two articles published of nonfiction, but I haven’t pursued it seriously at all. Some of it was fear, some of it was lack of interest. Okay, most of it was fear. Given the right topic, I have plenty of interest!

A week ago Sunday I came home from church and was like, “Hmm…breakfast. And while I’m eating breakfast I’ll…look on Craigslist for freelance writing jobs!” Now, I have no clear idea why that popped into my head at that moment, but it did. I’d done a bit of poking around on Craigslist before, and I’d even placed an ad stating that I was available for work, but I’d never gone after anything, never sent any emails off to anyone, applied for gigs, nothing. For some reason, last Sunday was Zero Day, and the clock started ticking.

For the past week I’ve submitted so many writing samples, emails, notes, resumes, and on and on that I’ve forgotten who all of them were. That’s actually pretty awesome, given that in previous years I could count all my applications for work on one hand, maybe even one finger! The game seems to have changed for me now, though, and I’m busting my hump trying to get work.

The very first thing I solidly shot for was an ad for content writers. I have since been told that content sites (these are essentially “article mills” that ask you to write those whippy little things you find in a Google search when you look up things like “how to organize a party” or “picnic blankets that double as flame-proof parachutes” or some other common item or task) are sites formed from the flames of Hell itself, and that they dilute the quality and content of the interwebz and writing in general much the way reality television destroyed the glowing, warm, warming glow that was Quality Programming, or at least Somewhat More Arguably Quality Programming, or maybe just Less Crappy Programming.

Look, anyway, these sites just post jobs that say something like, “write 300 words on diapers, focus on Scotland, Ediburgh,” or maybe “blu ray players” or “children with low sodium who like to eat oatmeal at every meal.” Or sectional garage doors. So you just pick something from the list, go look up the other billion sites that already list the same stuff, and then you try to make it sound totally original as if you did anything but get the info from three or six other sites with the same info that someone else paid two dollars and eighty cents to have someone else write.

You’d think the world would be full of these things, that the web would explode with ludicrously repetitious content, but such has not happened, and it doesn’t seem that it’s likely to either, which I find very odd. Be that as it may, this was work, and I wanted to do work, and it didn’t take more than submitting a sample article (“write a 150-word article about ‘wrapping Christmas presents’ use the key phrase at least twice”), and then waiting.

It took me two hours to write 300 words on Christmas present wrapping.

I’d like to tell you I’m a seasoned pro, and that the idea of regurgitating semi-advertising-like swill was something I did while I watched part of my DVD of Springsteen: The Promise, but that didn’t happen. What happened was that I researched and searched, and re-researched to a ridiculous degree, and then I wrote and wrote and wrote and wrote, and then I finally got hold of myself (barely), stopped writing, cut out a bunch of stuff, tried to identify the very diamond-like essence of my flash-Shakespeare piece on Christmas wrapping, realized I was being kind of an idiot and that I just needed to get the job done, and I hit “Send.”

Two or three days later I got my reply. I was accepted! Woot! I was accepted by a robot from a nameless somewhere telling me that MY words on Christmas wrapping were good enough for me to earn 1/4 or a cent per word! Oh, the joy!

Look, man, confidence can be a shaky thing, and yours truly is feeling just a wee bit out of the game on this whole “write many words and feel good enough about it to get paid” sort of deal. Thing is, this is so small, so middling an assignment, that it was the easiest and surest way to guarantee that I was going to accept some work, do it, and then send it in and get paid. This was all about going through the motions and making something happen from beginning to end. It was the micro version of my first year with NaNoWriMo. It was doing it to do it, so that I could say I did it, so that I wasn’t afraid to do it again, so that I wouldn’t be afraid to do it better and bolder next time, do some more, do it bigger, and eventually work my way up to writing, well, stuff that didn’t suck and paid something resembling a living wage.

So tonight was the first time, post-acceptance of trial writing, that I actually accepted an assignment and wrote one. Sectional garage doors. Riveting, isn’t it? I thought so. And I tell you, I put every ounce of creative swing I possibly could on that bad boy! I used words like, “door” and “garage” and “sectional.” (Mostly because that’s part of the assignment.) But I also used words like “torsion” and “joists” and I think maybe even “arming!” Yeah, the arming thing was pretty crazy. I got dizzy from that one, myself. Wish you could have been there.

The site says that you can sling out these word hashes in “ten minutes with good research.” I think it took me an hour, maybe longer. I guess that’s better than two hours on Christmas presents, but at not even three bucks, I’m not going to get rich soon. Still, the end result was what I wanted: article submitted. I win! Now I have to sit and wait for it to be accepted, and I have been duly informed that, as a first-time writer, I may not bid on any more articles until this initial one has been accepted. I accept my meager status at the moment, but I do believe that my article will reached the vaunted “approved” status in some 24 to 48 hours, and then I shall go on to greater heights! Perhaps a piece on “online gambling” or “used batting cages” (I’m not making that one up), or even “plumbing, plumbers, plano tx.” Yeah, then the REAL magic is gonna start! You’ll see.

Seriously (again, because I think I failed at the first “seriously” attempt), this is all about practice, about getting my footing back, getting familiar with new technology (not only did they not have content mills when I was in college, they didn’t have Google, or the interwebz – at least not like we have it now with a kazillion results from “girls with slingshots” or “how to rid your home of ant eaters”), and just plain doing some good old fashioned WORK! Once this article is accepted, if I’m ever asked, “Have you done any SEO writing?” (SEO means “search engine optimization,” btw), I can say, “Yes,” and that, lowly as it may seem, is kind of cool.

All right, enough rhapsodizing about nonfiction for low pay. I do believe I have greater things to create, and I’m going to go take care of some of them now.

NaNoWriMo 2010, Day Twenty-One

Oh, man, my brain is toast, dudes. I wrote a little on Friday, I think one thousand words. I wrote a little on Saturday, maybe 1,400 words. Today? Today was a day I vowed I would get caught up or stay caught up, or forge ahead with a might forge of such ferociousness that blacksmiths across the land would quake at its fiery intensity! (or something like that)

Today I bent to my mighty oven (you could call it a laptop if you like) and stoked the fires of my creativity. I turned the molten mass of words within the forge, pumping the bellows with vigor. Sweat broke upon my brow, and my face grew blackened from the smoke and ash thrown about by my hardiest and most determined blows upon the anvil of the great Macintosh.

Hours later I emerged, still not finished, but with an impressive rough forging of such improvement, that even I was amazed at my productivity. I cast my eyes upon the progress bar at the bottom of the Word doc and beheld the magic number: 39,168, a gain of 5,200 words over the previous day’s efforts.

I sit before you, battered and weathered, but not beaten! I shall write on! And before midnight of November 30th, my document shall bear the number 50,000 (words) at the very least. (And, dudes, I really hope it doesn’t go longer than that, ’cause, man I got a full plate! I didn’t even tell y’all about the sculpture work I did on Saturday plus all the freaking freelance writing jobs I applied for.)

Anyone out there writing this November – my continued best wishes for you! If you’re behind, bend to it and get writing! You can still do this! And if you’re up to speed, keep up the good work! Happy noveling, kids.

NaNoWriMo 2010, Day Nineteen

Man, I’m wiped out. Thought I’d get a lot more writing done tonight, but at least I got in something over a thousand words. I’m stunned to see that I’m actually still on schedule. No frakking way! I was sure I was at least three thousand behind by now. Man, I guess I wrote a lot earlier in the week. I’m at 32,543 now. Not bad, not bad.

So busy this week. I’ve been applying for all kinds of freelance writing work, which is quite a switch for me. I haven’t done this sort of application-heavy stuff ever in my life. I guess it was just time for that to happen. I have some leads, and a few of them might even pay money that you can count! We’ll see. I’ll update here when something of note comes down the pipeline. I might be doing something related to motorcycles. That would be fun.

In the meantime, more writing for NaNo, and I gotta get back on track with some of this sculpture work. I might be falling behind a little, darn it!