You've hit what I call Brain of Poo.
Your novel looks beautiful because it's *not* what you're currently working on. Normally, I'd say, take advantage of this project-avoidance energy and see if you can crank out a few extra pages while you take a couple of days off from the script (in fact, if you're ahead on your script, you might try that). But since you're under a deadline (albeit self-imposed) that would be a bad idea unless you're ahead of deadline on your script.
Brain of Poo simply means that the fun, honeymoon phase has worn off and now this is all looking like hard work. You don't quit things that look easy. We all go for easy like hummingbirds for sugar water. So, suddenly, anything is looking like more fun than this script. But if you run off to the novel, that honeymoon phase will wear off very soon, too, and then you'll be stuck with an unfinished novel and an unfinished script.
There's nothing wrong with quitting when you realize you're just not going to have the time this year. It happens. But unless you're going to be unable to write at all for the next three weeks or you're about to have major surgery or you just lost someone, eight days into a thirty day challenge is way too early to throw in the towel.
Try turning it around. Try asking yourself what would be so horrible if you "wasted" the next 22 days finishing a script you hate. You'd still have finished a script that you might be able to revise into something decent. At the absolute worst, you'd have practice writing a script and could now say, "Okay, I did a whole script. It sucked. I hated it the whole time. Script writing's not for me." How could you say all that until you've actually finished a script? Until you finish the thing, you'll have no idea if it's actually any good or if this is really for you. You'll have to complete the process to find that out.
2008: (ScriptFrenzy) Off Season
2007: Confederation (*so* won)
2007: (ScriptFrenzy) Serpentine (won)
2006: The Definition of a Madman (won)
2005: The Mighty Quinn (won)
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