I recently lost 30K
of a novel in progress and had to start again. What’s the biggest setback
you’ve had in your writing and did you overcome it?
Just reading the
first line of this question gives me the shivers. I would say that is my worst
nightmare, except rats still roaming the earth freely, this would be a very
close second. What to do after a situation like this? Well, after the crying
and puking and cursing the universe, there’s nothing to it, but to do it,
right?
So, while I have not
experienced the horror of this particular moment, I, like every writer, have
had many setbacks. But the answer is always the same. Pick yourself up off the
floor, wipe away the tears, pour a glass/mug of your favorite comfort drink,
and begin again.
Sometimes that’s
with writing, beginning again from page one, word one. But for aspiring or new
writers it’s the querying that can be the biggest setback. It’s impossible to
overstate the devastating toll the constant rejection of finding an open door
into traditional publishing takes. This was, for me, the biggest setback.
For a time, I
continued to fling myself against those closed gates trying to get that one yes
until my soul couldn’t take it anymore. It’s not the answer for everyone, but I
chose to end the torture and self-published my first three books. It was an
unexpected answer to a problem that almost stole my joy in writing. And for me
it was the right answer.
It wasn’t the only
answer, though. Leaning on my writing community, especially my writing group to
remind me that my stories need to be told, helped. But that one thing that
everyone who decides to chase, what can feel is an impossible dream, needs is
the inability to quit. That perseverance is what makes it possible to withstand
submitting the same manuscript dozens of times to dozens of different agencies.
Or getting that thanks but no thanks from your favorite agent after getting a
request for the full manuscript.
Whatever setback
rears its ugly head, we writers really only have one of three choices. Begin
again, make our own lane, or quit. I don’t know a lot of quitters, do you?
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