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Writing the pages
Ain’t been no fun at all
History will tell us that you were small
Good Rats

The first month of 2019 is now in the books. Only 11 months left to reach my audacious goal of writing 250,000 words this year.

So how did the first month go?

Very well actually. I ended up writing 40,702 words. That worked out to an average of 1,313 words per day. If I maintain that pace, I’ll write 479,245 words this year. That’s a lot of words, of course, and here’s the remarkable part. Writing those 1,313 words per day on average wasn’t a life-disrupting burden. In other words, I wasn’t in beast mode every day, pounding the keys of my laptop for twelve hours. It was pretty damn easy, to tell the truth.

What follows is the “system” I put in place to make the first month of my audacious writing goal a smashing success.

Breakdown the Goal to Manageable Steps

Two hundred and fifty thousand divided by 365 is 685. That means I have to write 685 words per day to reach my goal. Perfect. Two hundred and fifty thousand words is too large of a goal to wrap my brain around. How am I possibly going to write 250,000 words this year? Six hundred and eighty-five words, however, doesn’t short-circuit my brain. I can mentally handle that. That works out to writing roughly two and a half pages per day. Not easy. But certainly doable.

Breaking my audacious goal into a daily goal made my audacious goal less formidable, less intimidating.

Schedule Time to Write

I’m not a big fan of calendars, but because this writing goal intimidated the crap out of me, I decided to give Google Calendar a try. My Google Calendar now has three hours set aside every day for writing (5 am to 8 am). It also has time blocked out for other things I want to accomplish in the typical day (man does not live by writing alone).

Now, I don’t know if it’s the result of the enthusiasm one typically brings to the start of a new year, but so far this year, I’ve been very faithful to my calendar’s direction. It’s almost as if my calendar has become my immediate supervisor (Mrs. Groovy remains the Supreme Allied Commander). It says get up at five and write, so I get up at five every morning and write. It doesn’t make any sense. But it’s proving to be remarkably effective. On most days, I usually have 700+ words written by the time 8 am rolls around.

Track My Daily Progress

Like any money nerd, I love spreadsheets. Setting up a spreadsheet to track my daily word count was pretty straight forward. I created a sheet in Google Drive called “Writing.” The sheet contains six columns. The last column automatically calculates the difference between a writing project’s beginning word count and its ending word count. Here’s a screenshot of the last ten entries for January.

What’s measured improves.” No truer insight has ever been uttered. Not only does my word tracker hold me accountable, but it also acts as a formidable spur. I ain’t going to lie. I get a kick out of seeing my daily word count grow. It’s pathetic. But it’s true.

Devise Strategies for Dealing with Inevitable Roadblocks or Hiccups

Just like you need healthcare and an emergency fund to protect yourself from the unexpected, you need a backup plan or a fail-safe system to protect your goal from the unexpected.

Life gets in the way of any goal. I’m not immune to illness or accidents. Every year brings birthdays, holidays, events, and vacations that will rightly put any goal on hold. And let’s not forget Mrs. Groovy. I love her to death, but sometimes I get the impression that I’m nothing but her beast of burden. Her Mr. Groovy to-do list has an uncanny ability to “autofill” whenever it hits empty. And make no mistake, Mrs. Groovy’s to-do list for me takes supreme precedence over my quest to write at least 685 words per day. [Mrs. Groovy here. Lest you forget we’ve got a house to furnish, 3.3 acres to maintain, vacations to plan, and other things to do. This writing hobby of yours ain’t my problem!]

Bottom line: I won’t be able to write every day for the remainder of the year. Nor will I be able to write 685 words every day I’m able to write. Life may get in the way of 10, 20, 50, or 100 days. I don’t know. But I have to be prepared for these “no write”  or “partial write” days if I’m going to reach my year-end goal of 250,000 words.

Here are the hacks I established to safeguard my year-end goal.

Write Early in the Morning

This was instituted so my 685 words per day writing quest would rarely if ever get in the way of Mrs. Groovy’s daily quest to focus my energies on the things she values most. Getting up at five gives me a great shot of writing 685 words before Mrs. Groovy finishes her first cup of coffee.

Write in Bed

I’m not a television commercial. I don’t wake up at a quarter to five every morning and bound out of bed with a huge freakin’ smile on my face. No, I wake up and say, “Why the heck am I getting up so early? Bite me, carpe diem.”

To get around the gravitational pull of a warm, comfortable bed, I devised a simple hack: Write in bed. Rather than bound out of bed with a ridiculous smile on my face, I grab my phone and open my Google Doc app. I then open one of the books I have stored on Google Drive (see below) and start pounding my phone’s keypad with one finger.

My goal is to simply write one sentence. That’s it. I know I’m not going to be super productive, but it’s a nice way to ease out of don’t-be-a-lazy-shit mode and transition into do-something-with-your-goddamn-life mode. And here’s the interesting part. That one sentence invariably turns into several sentences and a few paragraphs. After a half hour or so of finger-typing away, I usually have over a hundred words written.

Quick aside. “Write one simple sentence,” as you will see, is a recurring hack I use to prime the word-writing pump.

Steal Fifteen Minutes Here and There

Before I had my 250,000-word goal, I used my down time to watch a lot of YouTube. A classic example of this is the half hour or so before dinner. Before my audacious goal, I would plop down on the couch and watch a couple of videos on tiny-home living (or something equally banal). Now post audacious goal, I open my laptop and dedicate myself to write just one simple sentence. I usually end up banging out 50 to 100 words.

Have Plenty of Writing Projects in the Pipeline

I’m not a natural born writer. I like the results of getting my twisted thoughts in digital form, but I loathe the process. In fact, I’ve always viewed writing as an exquisite form of torture. It’s kind of like having my lower lip pulled over my forehead and stapled to my scalp.

To get around my lack of motivation, I simply started thinking of possible books for the Groovy Guide Series. Every time I thought of a possible book, I added the skeleton of that book to my Google Drive. Here are the Groovy Guide projects currently in the pipeline.

  • The Groovy Guide to the Muscle Up
  • The Groovy Guide to Doing Higher Education Right
  • The Groovy Guide to Building a House
  • The Groovy Guide to Geoarbitrage
  • The Groovy Guide to Doing Australia
  • The Groovy Guide to Fixing Healthcare
  • The Groovy Guide to Writing an Ebook
  • The Groovy Guide to Political Independence
  • The Groovy Guide to the Bible

In addition to these nine books, I also have 68 posts in my WordPress back end with a status of “draft.” Here are some of the more interesting posts I have in the blogging pipeline.

  • Licensed FIRE Instructor with a Board Certification in Gapology
  • The Best-Laid Plans of Mother Nature and Mommy Dearest Often Go Awry
  • Reflections on Charity from a Financially Independent Curmudgeon
  • All the World’s a Laboratory, and You Are Either a Lab Technician or a Lab Rat
  • NAAFM: National Association for the Advancement of Financial Morons
  • What Pisses Me Off About Mobile Homes
  • Ten Ways to Lower Your Cost of Government
  • What a Degree in Financial Independence Might Look Like
  • The Superpower of Expecting the Worst
  • Ten Ways You’ll Know You’ve Been Sucked into the FIRE Cult

Haha! The Groovy Guide to Fixing Healthcare? The Groovy Guide to the Bible? What a joke. I have no business writing such books. Nor do I have any business ruminating and writing on most of the posts in my blogging pipeline. But that’s not the point. Many of these books and posts will never be published (the impostor syndrome is strong in me). The point is to have as many avenues to unleash my mind and plunk down words as possible. I simply can’t rely on motivation. I’m hardly ever motivated to write. Writing has to fall into the daily ritual category. I get up every morning and brush my teeth. I get up every morning and write. Having many books in the pipeline, and many posts in draft mode, is a clever way of getting rid of excuses. I’d have to be a pretty wretched soul if I woke up one day and couldn’t add one simple sentence to any of the books or posts mentioned above.

Focus on Getting Way Ahead of the Game

The biggest roadblock this year will be a vacation. Mrs. Groovy and I plan on spending five weeks in Australia this fall. And somehow I doubt I’ll be able to write 685 words per day while I’m down under. If I even attempt such a feat, Mrs. Groovy will surely smash me over the head with a jar of vegemite.

I’m going with the assumption, then, that I won’t write a single word while I’m in Australia. To remain on my 685-words-per-day pace, I’ll have to be at least 35 days ahead of the game by the time our Australia vacation rolls around.

To make sure I reach this sizable cushion, I created another spreadsheet on Google Drive to track my word-count status. It takes the words I’ve actually written to date and compares that total to the total number of words needed to maintain the 685 words per day pace. Here’s a screenshot of that spreadsheet.

In 31 days, I wrote 40,702 words. At a 685-words-per-day pace, I would have written 21,235 words in 31 days. This means I’m 19,467 words ahead of the game. Divide 19,467 by 685 and you get 28.42. I’m only a month into the 250,000-word challenge and I’m already 28 days ahead of schedule. I should have no problem being more than 35 days ahead of schedule by the time we jet off to Sydney. “What’s measured improves.” The system works.

Final Thoughts

Okay, groovy freedomist, that’s all I got. What say you? Commit, hack, track, and anticipate. Those have been the keys to my writing over 1,300 words per day in January. But can these strategies help with other goals? Or better yet, can these strategies help forge the discipline that creates the habits that the successful completion of a goal are dependent on? Let me know what you think when you get a chance. Peace.

24 thoughts on “How I Met My Writing Goal for the Month

    1. Thank, Amy. Same here. I’m tickled pink about my word count to date. But I’m also tickled pink about going to Australia for five weeks. Oh, the joys of early retirement. Hope all is well on your end. Thanks for stopping by. Cheers.

  1. Way to go on writing all of that! I’m doing my best to get ahead of posts these days, but we’re talking 1-2 posts at a time. I’m not great at thinking up subjects too far in advance — maybe just because I’ve been at this for so damn many years (closing in on 11 if you can believe it) and you get to a point where you’ve covered a lot of subjects already — so I’m humbled by your post draft numbers!

    1. Yeah, I just come up with one inane draft idea after another. I seriously doubt all of them will be published, though. One, for instance, has a working title of “Groovy Goals for 2018.” Something tells my draft count is going to go down when I finally get around to reviewing it. Oh well, that’s the way it goes. And I hear ya about diminishing returns. How many times can a blogger write about a topic that he or she and everyone else has already written about? That’s the main reason I came up with a ridiculous writing goal. I had to do something to keep my interest. It was getting too damn boring! Ooops, I can’t believe I just wrote that. That has to be worthy of at least one demerit. You don’t flagrantly violate the blogger’s code–thou shall not admit that writing about the same things over and over again is completely ridiculous–without getting a fierce rebuke from the blogging police. Please don’t tell the authorities about my transgression, Abigail. I need you to have my back. And, as always, thanks for stopping by. Cheers.

    1. Mrs. Groovy agrees. In fact, she takes it one step further. She can’t understand why I want to write so many words that “no one will read.” LOL! I just tell her I’m the Father McKenzie of blogging.

  2. Love what you’re doing here, Mr. Groovy!!! I’ve been trying to work ahead on writing assignments too, for the purpose of being able to slack off if I need to or want to. 🙂 LOVE the book ideas you’ve got in place!! Go for it!!

    1. The wiggle room has been a blessing. I never know which draft will move me to ready it for publishing. Tomorrow’s post, for instance, was slated for late February or early March. But the one I wanted to get out tomorrow was fighting me. So I just relented and jumped on the post that’s being published tomorrow. It definitely pays to have options. Thanks for stopping by, Laurie. And good luck with your writing assignments. Writing with deadlines is no fun. Cheers.

  3. As someone who tries to post 3x/wk I know that writing that many words consistently is no easy task.

    I’m sure some readers think 685 words really can’t be too tough a challenge. In the beginning it may not. But trust me the creative well is not typically a fast replenishing one. And after x amount of words you really can struggle to come up with something useful and worthy to write.

    I would definitely buy the groovy guide to solving Healthcare by the way. Lol
    Xrayvsn recently posted…Haters Gonna Hate | I Gotta Be MeMy Profile

    1. So true, my friend. The word part isn’t the hardest. It’s the idea part. But so far the well is fairly deep. And, yes, hopefully by the end of the year I’ll have the Groovy Guide to Healthcare ready to go. Any chance you’d be willing to read it before I publish it and make a complete fool of myself?

  4. I’d say “Me Likes”, but that’s only 2 words, so I’d be an absolute failure on the word count front. Fortunately, it’s not a goal of mine, and I’m not measuring it (yes, measurement is a sure fire way to achieve a goal!). So, I think I’ll just say “Me Likes.”. Except, I said a lot more than that, didn’t I?

    1. LOL! Same here, my friend. When I comment on the posts of fellow bloggers I start out with “Me like,” but I always end up writing more. Why is that?

  5. I’ve got a similar writing goal to you. Not with the number of words, it’s just that I have to write every day.
    Those charts WORK!! It’s motivating to fill in the square and show that you’ve been productive.

    1. Hail the charts! It’s amazing how motivating a little number in a little box can be. Best of luck, FD. Writing every day is very therapeutic, and very kind to the mind.

  6. Personally, I’m looking forward to “All the World’s a Laboratory, and You Are Either a Lab Technician or a Lab Rat”. It makes me wonder which one you are with your writing goal. Both?

    Your goal reminds me of a story I recall about a ceramics art instructor that divided the class into 2 groups — quality vs quantity. The quality group got graded on just one piece and the quantity group were graded on the number of things they made. Quantity group ended up with better quality. So since your quality is going to be getting better and better, I look forward to more great phrases like “Mrs. Groovy will surely smash me over the head with a jar of vegemite.”
    Susan @ FI Ideas recently posted…Maybe It’s Time to Stop Your WINE-ingMy Profile

    1. Hmmm. Interesting study. I’ve been reading about a similar experience in the exercise realm. Those who did pull-ups every day progressed faster than those who only did pull-ups for three days during the week. Quantity won out over quality. Well, we’ll see if it works for this word-writing lab rat. Thanks for stopping by, Susan. I love the way your mind works.

  7. Great job keeping up with your writing. Writing 1,300 words per day is very impressive. That’s a lot.
    I think keeping a schedule key. If you set time aside to sit down and write, you’ll do it. Great job so far.

    1. Agreed. A schedule is key, especially when it’s earmarked for the early morning. Once Mrs. Groovy wakes up, the queries begin and it becomes harder to concentrate. If I have my 685 words completed by the time Mrs. Groovy stirs, I know I’m going to have a productive day of writing. Thanks for stopping by, my friend. Cheers.

  8. I’m waiting for this one “What Pisses Me Off About Mobile Homes” – come on, how does it not write itself already? 🙂
    My to-do list is on autofill also. If it’s not Mrs. SSC adding to it, I’m adding to it. However, I found that much like spending, I prioritize it with our needs vs wants. What “needs” to get done and what “would be nice” to get done. Then I put the needs on a new smaller list and work on that. When it’s finished I go back and make another small focus list. It works well for me but your results may vary. 🙂
    At least with your 3.3 acres, it’s mostly grass right? If you do the mowing yourself, spring for one of those double bar handle sit on top commercial looking mowers. They are spendy, but man, you can rip through that acreage in no time. Good luck and I can’t wait to read about the Australia trip when you get back.
    Mr. SSC recently posted…Transitions Can Be Rough – Stay FlexibleMy Profile

    1. Yeah, the “What Pisses Me Off About Mobile Homes” post is going to be a good one. I should have that one ready to go in early March. And, yes, our 3.3 acres is all grass. It used to be part of a farm. I’m doing my research now for a riding mower. The growing season begins in March. Got to be ready for that. Hope all is well on your end, my friend. Cheers.

    1. Haha! I’m writing. I don’t know if it’s any good, but I’m writing. Just went over 50,000 words-to-date today.

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