So as you can tell Thanksgiving and the turbulence of everyday life made me forget to post an end of Nano check in. NaNoWriMo is officially over! We’re now out of November, and the monthly competition has been completed! For many of you, you may have successfully hit 50,000 words. For others, you hit fairly close to your goal, or fell somewhat short. But that’s okay! The most important thing you can get out of this competition is not 50k words, but the will and motivation to write everyday.
I wanted to time to instead of parade how many words we wrote, give a reflection on what we gained from this experience of writing. Maybe you won your NaNoWriMo goal, maybe you didn’t, maybe you wrote from the sidelines (not fully invested in the competition but still writing for your own gains). What was your biggest challenges? Accomplishments? What did you learn the most about yourself while writing?
So as you can tell Thanksgiving and the turbulence of everyday life made me forget to post an end of Nano check in. NaNoWriMo is officially over! We’re now out of November, and the monthly competition has been completed! For many of you, you may have successfully hit 50,000 words. For others, you hit fairly close to your goal, or fell somewhat short. But that’s okay! The most important thing you can get out of this competition is not 50k words, but the will and motivation to write everyday.
I wanted to time to instead of parade how many words we wrote, give a reflection on what we gained from this experience of writing. Maybe you won your NaNoWriMo goal, maybe you didn’t, maybe you wrote from the sidelines (not fully invested in the competition but still writing for your own gains). What was your biggest challenges? Accomplishments? What did you learn the most about yourself while writing?