by MarcyKate Connolly
If hope is the thing with feathers, then publishing is the
cat that swallows it whole.
Writers face rejection at every single stage of the game, from
crit partners and early readers to agents and editors. And even when they’ve surpassed all those
hurdles, they still face it from readers. Sometimes it’s hard not to feel like
you just can’t win. Discouragement can easily tint your rose-colored glasses
black.
But hope is important. It fuels our writing and our
drive to keep teasing those words out of brains and onto the page. Without hope of success, what’s the point in attempting
publication? There's some evidence of a correlation between hope and good health--I like to think there's a connection between hope and publishing success, too. Often the ones who make it are the ones who refuse to give up.
So sometimes, when the rejections seem to be piling up
everywhere we look, we need to step back and recharge that hope. Everyone is
different of course, but these are a few things that have always helped me keep hope alive:
2) Join a critique
group or writing community. Might I
suggest AgentQueryConnect.com? The non-writers in our lives can't fully understand the highs and
lows of this business, no matter how hard they try. But others writers will. Just
knowing you’re not alone can go a long way to lifting you out of the pits of
despair. For me, finding like-minded writers to commiserate with along the
journey has been critical factor in keeping me sane.
3) Write the next
book. It’s never fun to think the book you love and are sending out to
agents and editors right now won’t be The One. But getting excited about a new
story and knowing that it will be there even if the active project doesn’t pan
out is one of the best ways I've found to keep myself going.
4) Do something
completely different. Go for a walk. Go to the museum. Spend the night with
your best friends eating ice cream and laughing. Pursue those other hobbies that
you love and that inspire you. Refreshing yourself can bring new ideas (and a
better outlook) to your writing.
MarcyKate Connolly writes young adult fiction and becomes a superhero when sufficiently caffeinated. When earthbound, she blogs at her website and ferrets out contests on Twitter.
Got tips for staying hopeful? Share them in the comments!
5 comments:
Have supportive writer friends is definitely helpful. They keep me from giving up when I feel like I've had enough. And writing the next book is the way to go--unless it causes you to forget to query the other one. That happens to me.
Strangely, I think NOT hearing from agents is even harder than getting rejections. Knowing, even when it's something bad, is often better.
Great advice for coping with either situation, though.
Great advice! Finding that balance in life can be tough - but it's so important! And ice cream always helps! :)
Terrific, helpful tips. One suggestion, which involves a bit of a time investment: consider reading/completing The Artist's Way, by Julia Campbell. The lessons inside provide wonderful methods and practices to avoid becoming stuck and losing hope, regardless of the "art" you practice.
Just... um... uh... hmm.
I lean on my friends (writing friends, of course) and keep applying what I know and improving--that gives me hope. :)
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