That work on my thesis last semester (Two
Down, One to Go)? It
paid off. Here’s where I started
in January:
By the end of the semester, I was here:
Yesterday, I took my thumb drive to Paper, Scissors on the Rock, the local office supply shop, and
watched the printer churn out the sheets—a complete draft of Hiking Naked—A Quaker Woman’s Search for
Balance; Prologue through Chapter 20; 241 pages; 68,645 words.
If I’d kept track of all the words I wrote, cut, then
re-wrote, well, the count would be about double. And then there’s the revising and editing yet to
do—thousands more words. But for
now, I’m pausing to relish this step: 68,645 down, ???? to go.
Beginning in January 2012, I
instituted posting an “Afterthought” on the last day of each month, fashioned
after a practice in some Quaker meetings. After meeting for worship ends, some
groups continue in silence for a few more minutes during which members are invited
to share thoughts or reflect on the morning's worship. I’ve adopted the form here for brief reflections on headlines, quotes,
comments overheard, maybe even bumper stickers.
Woo-hoo!!!!
ReplyDeletevery very cool -- how much fun is it to see the bulk of your words physically in your hands!
ReplyDeleteJust put all 241 printed pages all together in a binder. Looks almost like, well, a book! Gretchen and Bob, thanks for the cheers. I know both of you writers understand the thrill of seeing your words on the page.
ReplyDelete