





Indoors, outdoors. Daytime, nighttime. Sunny, rainy.
Just some art I did in response to various prompts! They each suggest a sort of cool, damp, refreshing feeling, somehow…
Hope you like it.
On a Research Quest: Engineer obsessed with nature. Writing fantasy to explore reality. Let's learn about sustainability together!
I wanted to share something! I’m giving a TEDx talk next week, titled The Climate Movement Needs Your Creativity, Not Your Guilt.
If you want to check it out (or share with anyone), there’s a livestream and registration is free. Anyone can register at the link below and pick “virtual attendee” at the last step.
Event details:
April 15, 2023
10:00am – 2:00pm CDT
(UTC -5hrs)
Registration: https://www.ted.com/tedx/events/51831
(I’m not sure when my talk is within the event; I’ll let you know when I find out.)
Update: For people who wanted to know, looks like I’m speaking during the first hour of the event.
Update:

Here’s the last video update in this series, where I draw another location for the novel (a storeroom) and harvested scenes from my Q&A document.
I listed the scenes from the ‘answers’ I had highlighted in orange in a new document, and gave them each a summary. I do intend to refer back to the original Q&A document for more detail when needed.
I ended up with 40 scenes for Acts 2 and 3, of which 29 are new. Now I just need to develop them out!
Reflecting on the past month, I thought I’d share some observations and things I’ve learned from this experience.
This challenge had just the right amount of flexibility. When setting it up, I gave myself a choice of what to do each day: write, draw, or prepare to write (mashing up Inktober Prepober and NaNoWriMo into December, which is why this challenge has that unpronounceable name).
Having options was great! I could switch between tasks, depending on:
I tracked my writing in a sprint tracker I made in Notion (you can see it in the video). To ‘win’ the challenge for the day, I just had to write (at all). Even if I wrote for five minutes, it counted.
That was pretty much all the structure I needed to maintain consistency. I typically wrote more than that, because I was having fun.
It was helpful to measure my progress in streaks, so if I fell off the consistency train (which I did a couple of times), I just restarted my streak counter. I got the idea from Wordle because that’s how it displays your statistics.
Streaks incentivized me to keep the challenge going even after I’d fallen off. Here was the result:
Often, writing was the easier choice because I could do it in about five minutes, if I wanted. Drawing a picture typically took an hour or more.
In that way, the incentives lined up well with my goal because writing was the more important task. The drawing was mostly for fun and to help visualize scenes in my writing. Since I ended up writing more often, that worked out well.
Over the month, my writing went through three phases.
That evolution just happened naturally, out of asking myself what I needed to do to get more clarity and get closer to be able to draft the scenes.
The small level of consistency I maintained helped in finding answers to my questions, just between writing sessions. I posed a question one day, and had an answer the next.
I guess my subconscious was plugging away at it without me knowing, which is always nice.
Looking at the before-and-after of my novel makes that clear.
At the start of the month, I had been stuck for a while, and I hadn’t read my draft in months. (I was scared to.)
At the end, with just a little bit of effort, I’ve built up momentum and have a clear plan going forward. And most importantly, a bunch of confidence that I didn’t have before.
So, suffice it say that I’m really glad I did this!
I’m nowhere near as tired as I have been after NaNoWriMo, (the couple of times I attempted it, and didn’t win, obviously). With this challenge, I did what I set out to do and still feel energized.
That’s important for making sustainable progress.
I would definitely encourage doing it! I think it’s a great idea.
And I’d also encourage kind of setting the bar low. I think there’s a lot to be gained from consistency alone, without going after crazy word counts that will tire you out.
I guess what I’m saying is that doing something easy can actually be beneficial, believe it or not.
* * *
So, that concludes this series, and I hope you enjoyed following along!

Here is a video update where I’m drawing another setting for my novel! It is a type of work room.
In my last update, I had just finished my third pass through my new outline in the form of Q&A about each plot point, adding in the world building element or character motivation that was missing.
By this point, I’d got a ton of material in the Q&A. Before going back to the start for another pass, I needed to do was decide what I was going to do next. There are always more questions to answer, so I could have done more of that.
Instead, I decided to organize all the material first, because it was getting unwieldy. There’s no point creating a giant document that’s super hard to read, since I’m trying to create something that will help me in the drafting process.
As soon as I’m sufficiently clear on the story and have enough of the details, I intend to build out the next draft, under each scene heading, by either pasting in pieces of the existing draft, rewriting a scene, or more likely, writing a missing scene for the first time.
Writing from an outline will be interesting, since I’m not much of a “plotter,” if you buy the plotter/pantser dichotomy. (I think it’s more of a spectrum.) But you can’t “pants” a second draft, so it’s important to be able to write from an outline.
Anyway, I spent the last day of my InkPrepNoWriCember challenge organizing all of my notes. Here’s how:
The story is inching toward clarity! I’m nearly ready to start drafting in earnest, and I think that’s really good progress for a month of work.
