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hazelyoung
hazelyoung

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A change to publishing schedules!

Hello all! I’m going to be making a few changes to the publishing schedule for both Katalepsis and Necroepilogos.

This post will be a little complicated, and quite long, so I’ll do a short version first, and then a longer version for anybody interested in the details. Don't feel like you have to read the long version, nobody is in any way obligated!

The short version first.

Both Katalepsis and Necroepilogos are going to move to a schedule of three weeks on, one week off. i.e. both stories will get published three times a month, rather than the current four times a month. Three chapters in a row, then one week without a chapter, then three more, and so on. This situation may be temporary, especially for Katalepsis. I’m going to be keeping each story’s Table of Contents (Kata here, Necro here) updated more diligently in future, in order to avoid any confusion about when those breaks will happen. Patron chapters will be on the same three-one schedule; however, Patrons are likely going to get a couple more chapters ahead quite soon.

Because of this, there will be no Necroepilogos chapter this week, on the 15th of August. Necroepilogos will resume on the 22nd of August, like normal.

Okay then! Now for the long version!

I’ve been trying to hold off on doing this for a long time; I wanted to reach the end of Katalepsis Book One, and then give myself a little breathing room to recalibrate before Book Two, but circumstances are forcing my hand.

Readers of both stories may have noticed a pattern starting to emerge — I took a week off Katalepsis in June due to illness, and then a week off Necroepilogos in July because I’d tripped over the tangled mess of my own planning. Now, in August, some unexpected interruptions have disrupted my usual writing schedule at the start of the week, and I find myself having to choose which story to place on another 1-week break, which one to triage, etc. I’ve rapidly discovered over the last 3 months that even a small interruption or a day’s worth of extra work can set my writing schedule back far enough to disrupt the publishing of a chapter. And that’s a serious problem!

I’m a little embarrassed to admit this, but since the start of 2024 I’ve been working mostly six days a week, but sometimes seven. I’m not saying this to brag! It’s not good to do that, it’s really not healthy. I love writing, I love what I do, it is my reason for existing, and I’m incredibly lucky that I get to do this. But I may have gotten a little foolish. I’ve tried a bunch of things to make this sustainable, and it was working for a while. However, recently? I’ve begun to buckle. Not in a way that’s effected the stories though; I would never let that happen, it would be counter-productive to sacrifice quality for speed. But yeah, my schedule has become untenable.

Katalepsis Book One is deep in the final climax, and incredibly thematically complex right now. Necroepilogos started with shorter chapters, but it’s ended up much more successful than I ever thought it would be, so the complexity — and the necessary length — of each chapter has increased as the narrative has moved into the next phases. All of this has required much more planning and editing per chapter. I’m pretty sure that I’m still as efficient as I always was, perhaps even more so now that I’m a bit more experienced, but I’m running up against the limits of my abilities, the limits of what I can achieve in a single week.

So! I figure it’s better to build these breaks into my publishing structure, at least temporarily, rather than have these pop up as unhappy surprises and leave readers disappointed at random. And, above all, I want to avoid burnout. Better to pump the brakes than crash.

I’m not actually going to be working any less!

Okay, well, no, maybe a little bit less. I’m going to use this to avoid working seven days a week. I’m going to use this to avoid burnout. I’m not really taking a step back — I don’t think I could ‘take a step back’ from writing, it’s not in my nature — I’m just trying to gain some breathing room, and bank some work to avoid unplanned interruptions, and so on.

I’m going to start by putting Necroepilogos on a 1-week break, exactly 3 chapters after the previous one. This is partly because the next Katalepsis chapter is partially written already, and I’m about to spend another portion of this week dealing with the unexpected issue I mentioned at the start of this post, when I would usually be writing Necroepilogos.

So, this plan isn’t permanent. I’m going to use this extra time — this breathing room — to keep writing like normal, even if I’m publishing 1/4 less (in theory, more on that in a sec). This should enable me to rebuild a backlog/buffer, for both stories. I haven’t had a buffer for Necroepilogos since arc 2, and not for Katalepsis since 2020. Once I have a backlog again, I can potentially return to publishing every week, or simply ignore the planned ‘skipped’ weeks now and again in order to publish at a faster rate without committing to burning through the entire buffer. I’ll have to see how that goes.

This also means I’m going to try to put out a few more advance chapters for patrons, probably with Necroepilogos first; if I have a chapter ready to publish for patrons on a break week, I may as well do so!

This is made more complex by the fact that Katalepsis is almost at the end of Book One. I’m very reluctant to take any kind of break from Katalepsis right now. So, after everything I’ve just said, I’m going to slip in a little note here — Katalepsis may not even go on this schedule, not for long, maybe only once or twice. I’m going to keep those break weeks penciled in, but don’t be surprised if Katalepsis just keeps on chugging until the end of Book One, when I’ll be taking a planned break, in order to step back and go over my outline for Book Two before starting it.

In the background, there’s a bunch of high-level admin tasks I’ve been putting off all year, wich some readers have noticed, (new website, cover art, ebooks). I know those don’t seem very exciting as a reader, but I know I can’t put them off forever. The writing will come first, but this breathing room will hopefully allow me to address some of those, too.

Phew, um.

Seriously? I didn’t want to do this, and it does make me nervous.

I am keenly aware that my regularity and consistency is a big part of why my two stories have the audience they do. So, this is kind of scary for me! I’m not going to pretend I’m not worried about losing readers, or disappointing others with occasional breaks, even if this plan isn’t permanent.

But I did promise you all multiple times that I would do my best to avoid burnout. That’s what this is; I’m not there yet, but I would be if I kept going.

I feel like I’m asking too much here — especially for public readers; patrons are likely to get new chapters ahead and possibly return to a 4/month structure on an ad hoc basis (especially for Katalepsis, as I mentioned), but I’m still going to be potentially publishing 1/4 less, and I know that’s a lot! But I feel like I have a choice between burnout, or accepting that with two stories, at this level of complexity, I have to give myself that tiny bit of breathing room, even if it’s just a couple of days every four weeks.

I dearly hope that I have earned your trust as a writer, and that you’ll trust me to continue doing justice to the stories I’m writing, and more in the future.

Thank you so much for your understanding and patience; I know I say this every time I make a non-story patreon post, but I really mean it. None of this would be remotely possible without all of you and your support. I am endlessly grateful that I’ve been given the opportunity to write these stories for all you. And I will keep doing my absolute best. I have so much more to write!

Thank you all!

Comments

Thank you very much for saying so! (And I hope you're enjoying festival season!) I really appreciate the kind words of support. After about a week of trying to put this new schedule into practice, I'm already doing a lot better; I'm still pushing myself with what I can achieve with writing, but within slightly more sensible boundaries now, and it's allowing me to pull ahead a little bit to make time for other things, and ... yeah, haha, I'm just trying not to burn out! And yes, it was very humbling and touching to hear from many other patrons and readers voicing the same sentiment, I can't thank everybody enough. And thank you, too!

Hazel Young

I am quite late to the party (festival season, woooohooo! :D) but I'd like to join my voice to the chorus of encouragement: I am really glad that you're taking additional steps to care of yourself and I'm a bit sad that you're feeling so bad about it :x Seriously, you deserve the breathing room and not burning yourself out and no matter how much you love writing, you probably love to do other stuff as well and you deserve time for that, too! :3 I'm always glad to see a new chapter being published, but I'll wait however long it takes. Also: I am really happy to see so many others voicing the same sentiment!

Sethur

On vacation as we speak 😁

Thomas Flott

Thank you so much! I really appreciate the confidence and support for the change in schedule, and hopefully it's going to give me a lot more stability so I can keep writing for many, many more years yet. And yeah, quite a few readers are waiting until the final arc of Kata Book One is finished! That's got me even more excited to finish it up, and I think we're quite close now!

Hazel Young

Thank you! Really, thank you so much, and I will be taking better care of myself from hereon out. I don't think I could stop writing for that long though, I'd get a little bit antsy! And I hope you get a break from overwork as well, seriously.

Hazel Young

I'm really glad you're taking some time off!! I love your work and this is definitely the right move. Like some others, I'm also waiting for Kata to be finalized to binge-read the whole final arc. I'm excited to see it finished, but on your own time!

Julie

Take the rest of the year off, you deserve it!!!!!!!! (Genuinely, as a fellow overworker, any break you take is so well deserved!!!)

Thomas Flott

Thank you so much! That's very kind of you to say. I've tried to be up front and honest about this, and I'm glad it makes sense. I'll do my best to avoid burn out and keep writing the best stories I can for you and everyone else!

Hazel Young

A handful of other readers and patrons have said the same thing about the current Katalepsis arc, indeed; it seems there's quite a few people who want to wait and read it all in one go. Which makes me extra excited to finish it! And I'm really glad to hear you're enjoying Necroepilogos too, I'm really happy with how that story is going. And thank you so much for saying that. I really appreciate the support and confidence, it means a great deal. I'll never sacrifice quality for speed! And I'll do my absolute best to take care and keep writing the best I can!

Hazel Young

Thank you very much for saying so! I ... honestly have a bit of trouble thinking of myself as 'overworking' or being 'workaholic'. It just doesn't feel that way in practice! But the numbers don't lie, so yes, I need to be better at taking care of myself, no matter how much I love writing. After all, can't keep writing if I burn out! Thank you, I'll do my best to take care!

Hazel Young

Haha! I've heard a little bit about RavensDagger's rather unique relationship with his audience. But I promise I don't need bribing! I'll take proper days off!

Hazel Young

Please please take care of yourself! I don’t mind the breaks at all, and I’m glad you’re being up front about things. I’m loving the stories and I know that hard work takes time and that it can be easy to get burnt out. Wishing you the best!

ProbablyLemonade

I have not read more than the first two chapters of the current Katalepsis Arc. I just couldn't stand the cliffhangers and am building up chapters to then read it in one go. Probably on a saturday when you release the last chapter and I then get an unplanned several hour reading spree not getting anything done. And Nekroepilogos I had not read further than the middle of Elpida gets captured arc. Until like 3 days ago when I decided that it is time to catch up. Didn't stop me from giving you a little money, just so you can be a tiny bit more relaxed and continue writing. And I never know when I want to start reading again, damn the cliffhangers. The point I am trying to make here: I consider your stories so high quality and like them so much I can be patient and I would not want the quality to decline, so please take your time. Even 4 chapters instead of 6 per month would be okay for me. Sure, it would make me a bit sad, but it is a price I am willing to pay to see these wonderful stories written properly.

Tarmandan

I'm honestly super glad to hear this. I think we all know you work a wee bit too hard, and you deserve to take time for yourself. I really hope this new schedule works out for you, and maybe you can make it permanent! Take care of yourself <3

audrey jo

We need to get you on the RavensDagger patreon plan where people bribe you to take days off.

Taedirk

Thank you so much! It's very kind of you to say. Yes, I totally agree, avoiding burn out is worth sacrificing a little bit of output speed, and I'm very humbled by all the support. Crunch time is not healthy or conducive to good work; your spouse has my greatest sympathy for that, it's really rough and difficult to handle. And thank you! I will do my best to take care of myself!

Hazel Young

Echoing everyone else saying that avoiding burnout and having regular time off is more important than me getting a free chapter of two great books for free. I'm not a (professional) writer but I've seen my spouse in time-crunch mode and feeling obligated to sacrifice sleep/leisure time because letting up risks less income. Take care of yourself first and foremost!

Atropha

Thank you so much! Indeed, I'm a little surprised by the response from multiple long-time readers and patrons agreeing that I should go to a three-week schedule without worrying too much, and I really appreciate the confidence and support, it means a great deal. I'll do my best to avoid burn out! And thank you, it's always a delight to know that my stories are out there, getting read and reread and bringing any reader so much enjoyment. That's why I do this! Thank you!

Hazel Young

Breaks are important! I thought I was taking enough, but it turns out that I was a poor judge of myself. And thank you so very much for the kind words and the support, I really appreciate it. I don't think I'm the kind of writer who thrives on unhealthy behaviour, indeed! And yes, I've seen several authors following this schedule, but I didn't realise it was quite so common! Perhaps I should take a leaf out of Selkie's book, yes. Thank you again! It helps to know this.

Hazel Young

Thank you! I really didn't want to take this step, but now I'm kind of surprised by the responses, and it's helped me to see that this very much was the right decision, both for myself and the fiction. I guess I'm kind of relieved! I'll keep doing my absolute best with both the stories and looking after myself, thank you!

Hazel Young

Thank you very much! Indeed, several patrons seem to be saying the same thing, that I should just make this the schedule without worrying so much about it; I really appreciate that support and that confidence in my decision to do this. I doubt I would ever take really long breaks (except before Book Two of Katalepsis, maybe?), but I am hoping this will be much more sustainable.

Hazel Young

Echoing everyone else. I’d much rather you take the time and find something that works for you first. These two stories are hands down two of my favourite. I usually start over once a year and then catch up to the newest section.

Grotvision

Thank you very much! That's very kind of you to say, and I really appreciate the support. I'm honestly surprised that I kept this pace up for so long as well, I'm not quite sure how! And thank you again, I think that throttling back this little bit is going to help a lot. I guess 6 chapters a month is still plenty!

Hazel Young

You're very welcome! Sorry if I came across overly... Forceful, I suppose? I wanted it to be clear I wasn't just, well-wishing "feel better soon!" but it came out stronger than I intended 😅 As another comment said, even with 3 weeks a month, you're doing six chapters a month instead of the four from when Katelepsis was your *only* story, and they're generally more complex too. So you're already a minimum of 50% up, more than enough! So what's important for your health and wellbeing is the *only* major consideration 💜

Lucy Severine

Thank you! I know what that feels like too; I never finished post-grad school, it burnt me out very badly, and I guess that's part of why I can kind of recognise the signs now. You have my deepest sympathies, and I really appreciate the kinds words. It's better to pull back before burn out happens, which is what I'm trying to do here, as best I can! I'm not sure if I'll actually lose readers! Probably not? The worry is probably mostly in my head. And, gosh, thank you very much. It means a lot to me that I've earned anybody's trust and respect as a writer. I'll keep doing my best, for you and all the other readers!

Hazel Young

Thank you very much for your kind words, seriously. And thank you for the additional perspective on workload reduction; you've given me food for thought. Perhaps I should make this permanent, then. I don't want to end up like other authors who have burnt out by treating this as something to 'overcome', indeed. It's very important to me that I not burn out. The idea of burning out and leaving my work unfinished, or writing less in the long run, that's a real fear of mine. I want this to be sustainable, after all! There's so many more stories I wish to write and share with everyone. Seriously, thank you, all of that is very helpful to hear, and I really appreciate it. I'll do my best to look after myself!

Hazel Young

Thank you so much! I've been there in the past too, I've suffered burnout from other sources, long before writing serials. Those long shifts are hell. I think that's maybe why I've recognised it this time, and I'm taking steps to avoid it. I'll try to stay healthy and look after myself!

Hazel Young

Breaks are important, and I am not going to complain about you taking care of yourself. A healthy author writes great stories. Unless of course their unhealth acts a fuel for their writing, but that is a completely different can of worms... Regardless! Please don't worry about scaring people off. Plenty of authors I follow do a 3 on 1 off schedule, and it seems to work pretty well. Good example is Selkie.

Kennyevilmonkey

Honestly proud of you for making this decision! Your well-being is more important, in general and to us, than the frequency of chapters, so this feels like the right move <3

emmavoid

^

Lucy Severine

Yeah this seems entirely reasonable, and like other people say you should just make it the schedule. Other authors I follow also take significant breaks (1+ months) between books, and that doesn't seem to diminish enthusiasm for their work.

Dominic Corbin

Honestly, I always thought your pace of writing at the level of quality that you do for two stories simultaneously was a bit insane and I’m both surprised and impressed you’ve kept it up for so long! Personally, I think going to the new schedule is still a generous amount of chapters from you per month (6 chapters counting both stories and not counting if you post more here on Patreon!!) and I hope that throttling back a bit on output helps with avoiding burnout and handling any irl things that may pop up!

mgbm

This sounds really smart to me. I'm taking a year-long break from my PhD program because I was working too hard for too long after falling behind, and was burning out -- and it wasn't even helping because of how easy it was to have something else set me behind yet again. So yeah it's good to hear you're pulling back a little before it becomes too much of a problem. Also if you lose readers over this shame on them honestly. The author is more important than the story, even from a selfish perspective -- where does the story come from if the author burns out? My last word on this is that you have absolutely earned my trust as a writer, to the point that I would prioritize your work over almost any mainstream author (Timothy Zahn is the only one I'd put on par with how much I love your work). So yes, I trust that whatever you decide is what's best for both you and for the stories, and I'll support whatever decisions you end up making.

Ghost Rider

Obviously, I can't speak for anyone else, but as a consistent reader of both stories as they come out... Honestly, from what you're describing, not only am I really happy you're making the decision to build in breaks like this, I'd honestly tell you: please set this up, mentally, as a *permanent* part of your schedule, and don't set the expectation of "building a backlog" in to any of it. From my experience with other writers, setting a break week one out of four doesn't seem to impact fan enthusiasm much, but the people I've seen treat it as a temporary or embarrassing thing that they need to *overcome* tend to be the ones who burn out so badly they end up writing one chapter every month or two instead, if that. It sounds like you're really pushing yourself, and, hey, friend? You're writing two books at once, consistently, all the time. It is OKAY to let this be a genuine reduction in your workload, forever, because right now it sounds like your workload is just unsustainable, and that's not a thing you need to make yourself *better* at handling. It's a sign you need to reduce the workload. You're a fantastic writer, Hungry, and I deeply adore your work. I'd like to continue to support your writing consistently for many years to come, okay? So please don't burn yourself out on our account 💜

Lucy Severine

I just want to say this as a Serial Writer that had a job that semi-regularly asked me to do a few 16 hour shifts a month.... this is definitely a healthy choice. I think that at the end of the day it is better you set yourself up to continue this in healthy way than you burning yourself out.

Irene Fray


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