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Tom Pendergast's avatar

Mark, just terrific! Usually I hate “procrastiprose” and I’ve vowed not to publish it myself (it’s one of my rules). I hate it because it usually doesn’t offer anything new to think about it--it’s just transparently self-justifying and self-loathing and, I don’t know, embarrassing. But yours is interesting, not least because you’ve put such depth and analysis into it. I mean, a spreadsheet with word counts!!! I knew you and I shared parts of a brain, but I didn’t know it was the spreadsheet part. More reasons I like this one: I love a good neologism and I’m gonna use this one! And I love the “shitty first draft” bit, in part because it’s another way of describing the way I motivate myself to write that which is swirling around in my brain. I tell myself “barf it out,” and everybody knows that something that is barfed out is not going to be pretty; it’s going to be shitty. What do I barf out? A shitty first draft! (I barfed one out yesterday, considered sending it to someone else to review, but then realized I was only looking for them to tell me what I already knew: I needed to just throw it out and write something else. Do you have a neologism for a draft so bad that it’s never shared?”

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Rebecca Holden's avatar

Another great post, Mark! I love the river analogy. Not fanciful, as you put it: rather, it's delightful, and I dare say a pretty accurate representation!

Great line here: "Writing defies numerical compressions like word counts." Oh boy, it does!

And it's all very well having a target - specific word counts keep us real when it comes to fulfilling a writing brief, for instance - but given my penchant for editing (the editing stage pleases me so much that I'd often rather skip the WRITING part to go straight to editing - yeah, I know that's impossible, but that's how I feel!) I commonly find my word count shrinking alarmingly....!

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