Wednesday, October 19, 2011

CONTINUING by Karen Albright Lin

When all things seem to work against getting your words on the page and you feel like giving up, there are many tricks that may help you refocus on C.O.N.T.I.N.U.I.N.G.  Maybe a few of these will work for you.

C – Commitment: make one to yourself.  Confidence: use affirmations.  Characters: play with them.  Control yourself: nix TV and internet use, busy work, and other excuse behavior.
O – Overthinking the project?  Original reason to write: what was it?  Offer to help: judge contests, volunteer at conferences, beta read, mentor, believe in Karma.
N – Next sale: visualize it.  NaNoWriMo and other challenges from friends, or simply blackmail yourself.
T – Therapist talk: what’s your block?  Time: willing to put in lots of it?  Turn off your editor.  Toy with new genres.  Target hot spots in marketing and sell yourself as well as your book.  Treat yourself to a box of favorite pens.
I – Immediately mount the horse if you fall.  Inspect your dominant emotion and understand it.  Ignite your fire by rearranging your study or trying new rituals.  Ignore skepticism around you: if someone asks, “Where can I find your novel?” tell of your successes.
N – Narrow down your goals.  Nestle with your significant other or pet (don’t deny the things that matter).  Notice and celebrate successes including agent feedback, contest finals, publications (even small venues), and hang awards on the wall.
U – Understand your theme.  Utilize rejection: it’s not punishment; it’s a lesson in persistence, patience and packaging.  Up the exercise to keep the blood and ideas flowing.
I – Invite the muse.  If you see your chapter can be better, that’s a gift.  Infuse energy and rhythm into your writing by reading other writers.  Improve your skills by listening to feedback without defending your work (don’t stifle the critic).
N – Never give up:  the only writers guaranteed not to publish are those who stop trying.  Niche: find your place and your voice.  Nothing guarantees a good first draft. 
G – Gamble: what do you have to lose?  Genre: do you love yours?  Great ideas for a next book can be set aside in a file for later to prevent distraction.  Gather so you don’t have to wander alone: Good critique groups, support groups, reading partners, conferences; be an editor or mentor. 

If you have ideas for staying motivated, for continuing on your writer’s journey, please share them!

About the Writer:  Karen is an editor, ghostwriter, pitch coach, speaker and award-winning author of novels, cookbooks, and screenplays. She’s written over a dozen solo and collaborative scripts (with Janet Fogg, Christian Lyons and director Erich Toll); each has garnered international, national and regional recognition: Moondance Film Festival, BlueCat, All She Wrote, Lighthouse Writers, Boulder Asian Film Festival, SouthWest Writers Contest, and PPW Contest. Find out more at www.karenalbrightlin.com.

2 comments:

  1. All great tips, Karen! I also sometimes take a short sabbatical to clear myself and begin again as an open channel. Another thing I have fun with is writing a parody of what I've written or am trying to write--ask me sometime (in person, not fit to print) about my fake title for my adventure narrative/comedic spiritual biography about hiking the Pacific Crest Trail.;-D

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  2. I have the cleanest house in town, the most manicured of lawns, and everything I've ever done is indexed (and cross-referenced) on 3x5 cards. CARDS. I'll definitely see what I can do here, you know, if I can find the time.... :-] Great post!

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