HyunnaPark
TheRedLantern
- Joined
- May 10, 2025
- Posts
- 749
Really, I'm just curious as to what people's thoughts are on tracking word counts.
I started tracking word counts during my first NaNoWriMo (RIP) and it intuitively made sense to me. It was satisfying to see that number climb and to think "I did that" when I hit that 50K goal. It was a very useful tool when I was first developing my writing practice and discipline. It was also great when I was stuck and just needed to get moving so that the writing could begin generating its own ideas.
BUT ... I never liked anything I produced this way and I recently realized why when trying it again. It's because, for me, cutting things that don't work or that don't fit my vision is a big part of my process. So tracking word counts can cause me to fight my instinct and leave known problems in the work (if you've spent a lot of time building software, you have an evidence-based opinion on this topic ... whether that wisdom is transferable is not yet clear to me but the feeling I get when I know there's a problem in my work is still visceral enough to distract me until it's fixed).
I've noticed myself having success with a bit of a hybrid approach, tracking word counts during the initial "lift off" of the project when I'm liable to get analysis paralysis, and then abandoning them once I've found The Story and I want the psychological flexibility to backtrack and clean up some word count hairballs that I coughed up.
I'm not claiming this is a good method, just that I've inverted my thinking a bit about writing process tools & techniques. I used to look for techniques & advice that would help me write, but what's been more useful has been ones that have let me help my brain avoid known pitfalls that are likely to sink a project of mine.
I started tracking word counts during my first NaNoWriMo (RIP) and it intuitively made sense to me. It was satisfying to see that number climb and to think "I did that" when I hit that 50K goal. It was a very useful tool when I was first developing my writing practice and discipline. It was also great when I was stuck and just needed to get moving so that the writing could begin generating its own ideas.
BUT ... I never liked anything I produced this way and I recently realized why when trying it again. It's because, for me, cutting things that don't work or that don't fit my vision is a big part of my process. So tracking word counts can cause me to fight my instinct and leave known problems in the work (if you've spent a lot of time building software, you have an evidence-based opinion on this topic ... whether that wisdom is transferable is not yet clear to me but the feeling I get when I know there's a problem in my work is still visceral enough to distract me until it's fixed).
I've noticed myself having success with a bit of a hybrid approach, tracking word counts during the initial "lift off" of the project when I'm liable to get analysis paralysis, and then abandoning them once I've found The Story and I want the psychological flexibility to backtrack and clean up some word count hairballs that I coughed up.
I'm not claiming this is a good method, just that I've inverted my thinking a bit about writing process tools & techniques. I used to look for techniques & advice that would help me write, but what's been more useful has been ones that have let me help my brain avoid known pitfalls that are likely to sink a project of mine.
