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Fear Factor
By Julie Rowe
I did something amazing today. I mailed a contest
entry.
"Ho hum, so what," you might say.
Well, putting a stamp on that envelope and popping it into the mailbox
isn't dull routine. It isn't ordinary at all. I've just submitted
my manuscript to a contest where several writers are going to give
me their objective, honest opinion. Sound easy?
Not!
Submitting is hard. Submitting sounds like one simple step in the
staircase on one's way to be published. But it isn't. Many, many
writers do everything that's required to get ready to submit. They
write their book. Participate in a critique process, edit and revise
their work. Research the most appropriate publisher and the best
editor at that publisher for what they've written. Some find the
perfect contest where that target editor is a final round judge
or attend a writer's conference, speak to that editor at scheduled
appointment and receive an invitation to submit their manuscript.
But they never mail that manuscript.
Why?
The reasons why a writer doesn't mail their work are numerous.
"It's just not ready."
"I need to edit it one more time."
"I've started work on another manuscript, I'll get back to that
one just as soon as I'm finished the first draft of this one."
"It's been three months since the full was requested and the editor
won't remember me."
There are lots of excuses, but it comes down to fear. People are
afraid to submit their work. They're afraid of rejection. They're
afraid of how they'll feel. They're afraid they won't be able to
handle the word 'no'.
'No' is a powerful word, but don't mistake it for 'not ever' or
'you're a terrible writer'. That's not what a rejection means, that's
not what low contest scores mean.
A 'no' from an editor means 'this manuscript isn't right for me
today'. That's all. A low contest score means that judge saw some
ways you might improve your writing. And even then you can't take
one judge's or one editor's opinion as fact.
Louis L'Amour received 350 rejections before he made his first sale.
He went on to publish more than 100 novels, with more than 200 million
copies in print. After his death his publisher has continued to
print many of his previously unpublished works, some of them have
become best-sellers. If he had given up after the first 'no' he
wouldn't have gone on to become one of publishing's most prolific
and accomplished authors.
Fear kills writing careers before they can start. Are you going
to let fear kill your dream? It may not seem as risky as eating
a six inch live bug or sticking your head in a tank full of piranha,
but submitting is scary. Accept your fear and move through it. Mail
your manuscript and keep mailing it until you get a 'yes'.
If this article has inspired you, Julie would
love to hear from you at julie@julieroweauthor.com |