
Staying Motivated in the Face of Rejection?
Keep your eye on the finish line—even when you're stumbling
down the track
by Anna DeStefano
Everyone knows publishing is a tough nut to crack, never more so than in
today's tight markets. And everyone knows it's going to take a lot of hard
work to get you there. That there will be some tough breaks to weather before
it's your turn to shine.
But what if you're already working hard, and you have
been for a while? What if you've learned a lot, and you're producing good work,
and your fellow writers love your stories and keep telling yourself you’re
soooooo close? Yet the rejection letters keep coming. Maybe an editor or agent
even likes your voice, they think you have a bright future ahead—but
this or that story just isn't right for them. Good luck with your career. So
sorry we couldn't pick you up this time, but keep at it.
Keep at it! You're
exhausted, you've been at it for so long. What's the point, many might ask,
if there's no guarantee—no formula to follow to earn
what many who started before and after you have achieved? In the end, is it
finally going to be worth it? Or will you still be stumbling around years from
now, no closer to your victory than ever?
Okay, if you've been asking yourself
these questions, let me offer a bit of a reality check.
To begin with, remember
that you are first and foremost a writer. In fact, you can't imagine being
anything else, right? When you turn off your day and let your mind quiet, there
are all these people running around inside your head, whispering their stories
until you can't sleep for needing to write them down. Wait a minute... Maybe
that "hearing voices in the night" thing
is just me, but you get the general idea. Being published might seem like your
ultimate goal, but aren't you really writing because you can't help yourself?
Selling your first book is a major milestone, and being told you have to wait
a bit longer to get there bites. But what does that have to do with your compulsion
to share your view of the world by telling stories—your drive to make
people laugh by turning a funky phrase, or to get them to think a little deeper
about whatever drama is playing out in your work in progress? Each and every
time you put your fingers to the keyboard, you feed your need to write. And
with each and every project, you get better at the craft you love.
Your drive
to publish is admirable—the stronger the determination to
accomplish something, the harder you'll work at it. But you WILL stumble along
the way. We all do. In fact, there will be inevitable disappointment once you
sell, take my word for it. So maybe the dissatisfaction we sometimes feel isn't
about publishing at all. Could it be that we're looking to the wrong things
for affirmation as we race toward our prize? When did we start believing we
needed editorial approval and agent representation before we could consider
our efforts successful?
In my honest opinion, my friends, we're not frustrated
with the end-game of publishing a book. We're hassled by our inability to face
what we love to do, and love it for what it is. Published or not, we write.
And what feeds us, in the end, is producing better stories. Writing better,
faster, and more creatively—that's
our race. Thank heavens, I say, that our real goal isn't to publish without
ever being rejected. Because that sort of thinking comes with a truck load
of destructive self-pity, the next time a project comes back with a Sorry,
not for us note attached to it.
Maybe your work isn't right for a particular
line, and maybe you're not doing exactly what a certain agent wants. But what
on earth does that have to do with whether you're getting better at your writing?
Be honest. Are you trying your hardest? Are you reading, and attending workshops
and learning? Are you writing as much and as often as you can, putting what
you know into practice? And are your results getting better? Answer no to these
questions, and maybe you should rethink whether or not you're in this writing
gig for the long haul.
But don't you dare let a rejection letter stop you in
your tracks, because, gasp, you're not published yet. Neither was any published
author you know before her first Yes! letter arrived. The key thing to learn
from that published author's journey, is that she never quit working, no matter
what. She stuck it out, focusing on her craft, until the publishing world wised
up and realized just how fabulous she was after all!
Stumbling is part of any
journey. Quitting, by definition, is THE END of all forward progress. If your
goal, your race, is to become better at what you already love to do—your
writing—why on earth would you stop doing
just that, because someone doesn't like one of your stories? Rejections are
some of the roughest parts of our business, but don't let them control how
you feel about your work. Achieving your writing goals is the kind of finish
line you can set your sites on and keep running toward for years to come, publishing
contract or no publishing contract.
Keep running my friends, and may all your
dreams come true!
* * *
Best-selling, Romantic Times award-winning author Anna DeStefano writes
for Harlequin Superromance. Her latest Super, A Family for
Daniel, won www.cataromance.com's Best
Superromance Reviewer's Choice award. The Runaway Daughter, the sequel to
her award-winning debut novel, will be out in February 2006. Come share your
dreams and thoughts about writing in her daily online journal, and sign up
for one of her "funky purse" drawings, at www.annawrites.com.
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