Welcome writers and readers! This is the first Wednesday of the month, and that means its time for the monthly Insecure Writers Support Group (IWSG) post. You can read the other authors’ IWSG posts here.
It’s November, and November is a magical month for writers. Its the month we all get together and stop talking about writing, complaining about writing, etc etc, and we write. The official goal of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) is 50 000 words, or 1 667 written words per day. The point of the thing is taking up a challenge with a wealth of support around you, and that’s where the magic lies.

This year, I have a list of some twenty-five orphaned story ideas I gleaned from my notebooks. As many words as it takes, I vowed to my would-be stories, I will write you this November.
Now, every past NaNoWriMo I’ve participated in, I wrote by hand and tallied up my words on the corner of every page at the end of the day. I prefer to write this way, and I’d won NaNoWriMo enough times to feel confident doing it this way (if you’re curious how to verify, check the rules for ‘the Luddite clause’ for instructions). However, with this year’s goal I need to hit some serious wordage so I decided to type it on the laptop instead.
This is probably the moment in the story where the universe laughs maniacally and the heroine’s fate is sealed. Or it would be, if I was a heroine or a goddess and not a scruffy looking story hunter fresh from the woods.
I started off, ploughing through the first short story a random number generator chose from list. Everything was wonderful and that glorious creative high I always get from a November writing spree was settling into my brain, turbocharging my creativity when a storm with 100km (that’s at least a million mph) winds loomed on the weather forecast.
I backed up my project and I warned my friends to do the same. I can only hope they listened and no stories were lost.

Rain splattered the house, winds ripped at the roof. The power went out. Trees crashed down in the enchanted forest surrounding the house.
The howling and crashing woke both of the kids, frightened by the fury outside their windows. We pulled a mattress into the living room, far from the windows facing the wind, and snuggled into a groggy, sleepless night.
The storm faded by morning but the power didn’t come back on. My laptop battery was strong enough I didn’t worry that first day. I kept writing, twitching now and again for the lost ability to google facts in a pinch, but happy to have a distraction from the outage. The girls played with Lego and roasted hotdogs in our fireplace and thought it all a grand adventure.
I found a branch flung from a tree and lodged a solid 30 cm into the lawn by the force of the last night’s wind. It stuck up into the air, a failed assassin. I left it there and wrote it into a story.
The second day my eldest left for school and the baby didn’t mind the lack of electricity once the sun came up. The freezer was failing. The fridge didn’t smell right. Despite only turning on my laptop for writing into a word document, the battery ran low. I missed that encouraging little bar graph on the NaNoWriMo stats page like an addict misses their fix.
We don’t have a generator, so I started our pick-up and ran an extension cord from the outlet in the box into the house, you know, just like grandpa used to do before electricity. I tell ya, we live in The Future, folks. I charged the laptop while I charged my phone in the cigarette lighter. The fridge and freezer got their turn and we weren’t any worse for the power outage. It was almost fun.
The third day school was cancelled, and the sun never made it through the clouds properly. The house was dim, the kids were bored and stuck indoors while a cool rain fell through thick fog outside. It stopped being fun. Tempers flared. The last hotdog was roasted in a hail of whining.
I kept writing. It seemed as though I wrote so much more with the power out, after all, there wasn’t much else to do besides read and after the sun set that was out (I wanted to conserve the flashlights for when the kids were up). A laptop, candlelight, and NaNoWriMo – is there a better date a writer could take themself on? I think not.

In the end, I didn’t actually end up writing any more than I did with power, probably because there wasn’t any way to distract the girls and focus on my work.
We bathed in pond water I heated on the woodstove. That’s going in a story someday. It gave me the best hair day I’ve had since becoming a mom, which makes no sense, because that pond feeds our well which feeds our… shower. *Shrugs.*
Tuesday night, last night, the power came back on. After so long without the internet I admit I’m feeling a little overwhelmed by all that social media out there, distracting me from my writing, but again, I didn’t write any more on days without power than I did with. If you’re looking for an anti-social media message, this isn’t it. I like the sense of community I get from my writer’s groups.
I didn’t, however, like missing Doctor Who. Best get back to writing so I can hit my word count and stream it guilt-free later.
Sounds like you were very creative in a pinch (smile) Blessings!
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Couldn’t find a “love” button, so you’ll have to settle for a “like”.
Lovely tale, and glad I had your number to text and check in with you.
One piece of advice, throw a couple packs of hotdogs into the freezer, we still have winter ahead of us! 😉
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Ugh. I know. We’ve already had a winter here where the snowdrifts were over my head. You can lose a whole kid in that if they step out of their snowshoes!
As for the hotdogs… I think a pack of marshmallows, some chocolate, and a box of graham crackers will go far for mum’s morale as well 😉
Thank you!
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You so have to include all of this in a story! Hmm, maybe some kind of post-apocalyptic work? 🙂
When we first moved into our new house, we were without the Internet for quite awhile, and I swear I got so much more done.
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I feel that this is what should have happened. 50 000 in three days! But… sigh.
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Wow – what an ordeal! You coped amazingly well, especially with young children. I love the part about how washing with pond water gave you such great hair. Maybe that’s where I’ve been going wrong 🙂 Good luck with NaNo now that the electric is restored.
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lol thank you Ellen, and good luck with the hair!
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I’m glad you were able to keep writing during the power outage. Sounds like you got some good inspiration out of the experience too!
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nothing like a break from routine to inspire a story or two!
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I am awed and thoroughly impressed by your perseverance. Whatever your final word count on November 30th, you won this month!
IWSG November
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Aw. I’ll take it! But I still want to hit my goal too
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I love that you had your best hair day out of all of this.
And doing some NaNoWriMo-ing by candlelight sounds amazing. I applaud your perseverance and adaptability. Best of luck getting to the finish line!
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Thanks! I highly recommend at least a few words by candlelight
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You have perseverance in spades! I’m glad that you and your family came through all right.
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Thanks! It was a scary storm. I’m not sure how people who live in Hurricane zones get through it.
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