![[INSERT INTERESTING IMAGE HERE.] in highlighted text](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/3df8e6_46e67e92638245538c321aad0a33eae1~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_818,h_457,al_c,q_90,enc_avif,quality_auto/3df8e6_46e67e92638245538c321aad0a33eae1~mv2.png)
As I’ve mentioned in some previous posts, I’m deep in editing my book right now, and it’s taking forever. I’ve since learned to be more proactive in outlining my scenes so that I have fewer inconsistencies. I wrote a book before this one that will never see the light of day. Part of the reason for that was because I didn’t do any outlining with that book. I was rereading it and realized I wrote the same scene twice. When I sat down to start my current book, I broke it into sections, notating which scenes should happen when. Truthfully, the editing process hasn’t been that bad. Out of twenty chapters, only a couple needed major rewrites, and now that I know each of the main characters better, I can weave their character development more purposefully and seamlessly throughout the narrative.
![[BLANK? BLANK?] tall? CRASH [ONOMATOPOEIA] [and handed currency to Jake?] in highlighted text](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/3df8e6_e5134d7fea294ed2bb2437a9961828c9~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_821,h_425,al_c,q_80,enc_avif,quality_auto/3df8e6_e5134d7fea294ed2bb2437a9961828c9~mv2.jpg)
Every writer will admit that the hardest part of writing is doing the actual writing. Even with editing, I try to find ways to keep the momentum. I’ve taken to sticky notes like a four year old takes to stickers. They go everywhere that could use a little extra work—the parts of the book where I need to actually think about it for more than a minute. When my brain stops working, I mark it with a blue sticky note, which is code for “you’re never going to get anything done if you keep thinking about this so for the love of God please just move on.”
![[SONAR SOUNDS BLEEP BLOOP] [insert lighthearted scene ending lines] [THUNDER SOUND] in highlighted text](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/3df8e6_0811e849816044ac9824dae78fad99ff~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_824,h_459,al_c,q_90,enc_avif,quality_auto/3df8e6_0811e849816044ac9824dae78fad99ff~mv2.png)
My favorite thing to do to keep up my momentum while writing is to skip parts I need to fill in later. I often format it [LIKE THIS], so I can easily see it on the page. The content of these notes varies, sometimes containing things to fact check like [INSERT NATIVE BIRD] or the ever-helpful [MORE]. While editing, I’ve realized that I have a tendency to do this when I can’t think of the right word, so I thought I’d share a few of my highlighted notes out of context, if not to give you a laugh then to at least demystify what it’s like to actually edit a novel.
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