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This generally seems to be a time of year for reflection and goal setting. Well, I don’t plan to shake up the paradigm too much here. I’ll save reflection for next week, since this post is all about goal setting. I have to start my goal-setting pontification with a little background. Several years ago, my friend Charlie called me with a proposition that we should embark upon this project called NaNoWriMo, whereupon we would write an entire novel in 30 days. Sound scary? What about big, or fun? Okay, if it sounds nuts, you may fall into the majority, but I thought it was brilliant. NaNoWriMo, better known as the National Novel Writer’s Month, dares participants to complete a novel of at least 50,000 words in 30 days. The main premise is that we, as writers, want to write a book, but we lack sufficient motivation to actually finish this seemingly enormous task. Apparently many writers are like me: procrastinators. I loved the idea of NaNoWriMo because it operates on the principle that we just need motivation, in the form of a deadline, to get out that first draft. We can beautify it later, we just need to keep going for now. Don’t worry about being brilliant, just keep writing. Don’t stop! Constant forward motion! Sound familiar? In my first attempt at NaNoWriMo, I wrote about 18,000 words before I gave up. In my second attempt, this past November, I basically gave up before I even started. I knew I wouldn’t finish, but I wanted to participate anyway. I wanted that motivation that comes from being part of a large group of people all working towards the same goal. The NaNoWriMo website has some great support features, and I got encouraging emails all month long from famous authors. Pretty cool, actually. So this brings me to my point, and the explanation for the title of this post. The creators of NaNoWriMo also sponsor a challange called Big, Fun, and Scary Adventures. If you choose to participate, you can take whatever goal you have for the year, share it, and basically let others track your progress. You choose what you want to do—hike the Pacific Crest Trail, build a house, run your first 100 miler, start a business, go back to school, propose marriage, whatever! Let me just emphasize that it should be Big, Fun and Scary to you! So I don’t want to hear anything like “get organized” or “lose 10 pounds.” Those are resolutions, and those are fine. But for this project, I want you to dream BIG! I’m not overly fond of the discussion forum for this project, found on the NaNoWriMo website, but you can take a look and choose to post your goal if you’d like. Post a comment here if you’d like, or you can write your own blog post about what you plan to do with your year. Post it on your website, update your Facebook status, and plaster it to the front door for all your neighbors to see. If you share it with the world, you’re so much more likely to actually do it! So tell me, what is that thing you’ve been dreaming of, the one that is a little bit scary and you keep putting it off because it’s just not the right time? As you may have guessed, I already have my big adventure planned. I’m going to finish the book I started this November. I have a paltry 2600 words at the moment, but I am also armed with a stack of character sketches and plot outlines and the like, and that has to count for something, right? Anyway, I figure writing a book is much like running an ultra. You don’t want to spend too much time thinking about exactly how far you have to go or you’ll scare yourself out of doing it. You want to break it into smaller, more manageable goals. Therefore, my goal for now through the end of March is to write at least one page per day, every day. I followed this plan for approximately one week in November. While it’s not actually as easy as it sounds, it is still certainly manageable. Again, let’s hear it for consistency! After that, I will set the next goal that seems necessary to getting through a first draft. I’m hoping to have a first draft done by May. Well, I’ve declared myself. (It’s a little scary, yup.) I will leave you with a quote from one of the final emails sent to writers by Chris Baty of NaNoWriMo, and then, I ask you to declare your dreams. “Each of us has a wealth of talents spread broadly over domains both marketable and deliciously impractical. The tricky part is that we tend to develop the former at the expense of the latter. Passions become hobbies. Hobbies become something we swear we'll get back to when we have more time. Or when the kids are grown. Or when the stock market recovers. Which means we leave unexplored many of those paths that ultimately make us feel most alive—the moments of creating, building, playing, and doing that lead to extraordinary and unexpected things. Like writing a book. Or, more loosely, postponing the must-dos of the real world to spend 30 days exploring an attractive, improbable dream. Giving ourselves that time is so important. Because the world can wait. It's what the world does best, in fact. It was hanging out for 4.5 billion years before we arrived, and it'll be waiting around for another few billion after we're gone. Our dreams, however, have much shorter shelf-lives. If there's one thing I've learned from running NaNoWriMo, it's this: Whatever you think you are, you are more than that. You possess a fearsome array of skills and abilities, and the most satisfying of these may be completely unknown to you now. Your curiosity is a dependable guide; follow it. Put yourself in unfamiliar places. Kindle passions. Savor the raw joy of making things, and then remake the best of those things until they take someone's breath away. Wrestle bears. Actually, skip the bear-wrestling. But do keep trying big things, okay? Sometimes we can wait so long for a clear sign that it's time to begin, that the opportunity sails right past us. Life is so short. Adventures beckon. Let's get packed and head out on a new one today. I think it's time.”
I wanted to say thanks so much for the well wishes and thoughts from everyone regarding my race! I have realized that running 100 miles takes a lot of support, and trust me I was needing it in the 3 am darkness around mile 85. It helped! If you're interested in the gory details, I wrote an insanely long race report at www.dailyadventuresgretch.blogspot.com Otherwise, just know that I finished, and I am now a more humble woman. What an adventure!
Wed, July 30, 2008 - 12:10 PM
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Tomorrow I will attempt to run my first 100 mile trail race. I am excited, and sooo nervous! I'll start at 5am on the Tahoe Rim Trail, and hopefully finish by around 7am Sunday morning. Wish me luck!
Fri, July 18, 2008 - 5:33 PM
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(The picture is from the finish of the 50 mile TRT race last year.)
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