Quality before quantity.
Quantity is only good for practice.
If you write a hundred books a year,
then I won't waste my time reading them,
hoping that one will be good.
If you write one hundred books,
and one of them is good,
then you probably got lucky.
99% of your books are still bad,
and writing one hundred more isn't going to change that.
See, all I'm hearing is '
I'd rather write one good page a year and never finish anything than risk actually completing anything and having people think I'm not good at this.'
Which is a god damn
cop-out.
Here's a fun fact - you will never be happy with what you write. Never. Not in a million years will you ever write something and say to yourself "You know what? That's perfect. I don't need to change that at all." and mean it for any longer than it takes the buzz to wear off. You will
like some things, sure. You may be proud of a few lines. But if you aren't critical of everything you write, you're not taking it seriously. This is what Script Frenzy is about. It is about output. It is about content. You are entering this competition a damn writer, not an editor. It is not your job to say 'this is good' or 'this is bad'. It is your sole purpose to vomit vaguely coherent words onto pages in an order that describes events happening over time. That is the end-all and be-all. The entirety of the entire planet that you care about revolves around that one purpose for these 30 days.
I think that's an important distinction to make. You are not an editor. It is the editor's job to tell you 'hey, these 99 books you wrote are crap, but this one here is alright.' It is your job as the writer to just write those 100 books in the first place. Let someone else tear them apart, strike through great swathes of character description with a red marker. Let them introduce those 99 crap books to the shredder, but the important thing is to just write them in the first place. If you are releasing 99 crap books a year, then you need a new editor. You do not need to stop writing.
Everything you write is practice. Everything you do will be terrible. Everything you do you will hate and think is crap and will never want to introduce into the light of day because
oh god someone might judge me. Script Frenzy - fuck, deadlines in general - is about cutting the bottom out of the excuses you've got for not writing in the first place. I would rather write those 99 crap books to get me that one good book. That's 99 books worth of learning. Of mistakes made so you don't make them again. That's 99 damn books. The average writer doesn't get past the first chapter of one.
Understand that most writers are failures. For every book that goes published, a hundred or more don't. The important thing is that when you do get to that point where someone actually gives a shit about the words you've put down, you've got those 99 shit books out of the way. You can turn around and say "I am a fucking writer. Not because I write good books, but because I write bad books. Because I will work and work and write and write until I am finished. And then I will do it again, and again, and again, until one of these comes out right."
YOU CAN TAKE YOUR EXECUTION OF MATERIAL AND SHOVE OFF
EXECUTION IS EVERYTHING. This is the number one mistake I see every new writer make. They spend months agonizing over coming up with the 'next big thing' - something no-one has ever seen before and the very concept of which will thrust them above the rabble and hurl them into the stratosphere of 'good writer'. Something so new and bold that forever will all work into the future be seen as mere re-tellings of this one, bold, new idea.
There are no new ideas. There are only new interpretations of old ideas.
This is a hard thing for people to get their heads around. A lot of people don't agree with it. Surely, they say, that new ideas are being made all the time! Everyone is an individual and everyone sees things differently! Yes, precisely. Everyone
interprets things differently. Everyone has their own perspective. But the ideas themselves don't change. Humans just don't have a large enough external frame of reference to think of anything truly new. We have been telling the same stories over and over and over again for tens of thousands of years. But what we do have is interpretation - applying our own endless layers of bias, prejudice, experience onto these few core ideas we have into something that's different.
And it's this interpretation that matters. It's your interpretation that's the only unique thing in the world.
This is called
the Monomyth (and / or post-modernism, but that's a whole 'nother rant). All this theory and reasoning isn't really that important to you as a writer - it's your job to write, let others interpret the meanings and structures behind your words later. But it's important to know that you don't have to be original. You can have the guy-meet-girl, guy-lose-girl, girl-realises-she-loves-guy, guy-gets-girl-again. No-one is going to think any less of you. But you will be judged on your execution of the tropes.
Fuck, I think I could turn these rants into a NaNoWriMo project.