by ARHuelsenbeck
For most writers, the path to publication is full of obstacles, detours, and potholes. Tenacity and resilience are required to reach your destination. These ten commandments will guide you on your writing journey.
- Write every day. The quickest way to become a published writer is to exercise your writing muscles. Practice makes perfect: the more you write, the better you get.
- Write for the joy of it. Don’t worry about trends—write your fresh, unique vision. The problem with trends is that by the time your piece is published, the trend may well have passed.
- Turn off your inner editor during the initial draft. Get all those good ideas down. You can polish later.
- When you think your first draft is complete, put it aside. Make a note on your calendar to reread it in 6 weeks. Start a new project.
- Have more than one project in the works at any given time. This gives you options when you’re stuck or just tired of a particular piece.
- When you read your previous draft again after 6 weeks, it probably won’t seem as good as you thought it was. Don’t despair—now you get to rewrite it. Identify what’s good about it. Cross out everything that doesn’t belong. Highlight what needs to change. Write yourself notes. Read it out loud. Fill in any holes.
- When you think it’s the best it can be, let someone you trust read it (but maybe not your mom) and ask for feedback.
- Consider the feedback and make improvements. If the critique hurts, put it aside for two weeks and then look at it again. There may be an excellent suggestion in there. Don’t take it personally—it’s about the work, not about you. All writers refine their work.
- Send it out when it’s good. Don’t wait until it’s perfect—it’s never perfect. While you’re waiting to hear, work on something else. But if your submission is rejected, you may want to revisit commandments 7 and 8, or at least 8, and submit it to a different publication/editor/agency. (Research to find out who represents/publishes work like yours.)
- Whatever you do, don’t give up.
If you keep these ten commandments, you will ultimately succeed. Don’t compare yourself to anyone else—some of us have a steeper learning curve than others, and that’s okay. And when you get a positive response, celebrate and start or finish another project. Don’t let your genius languish.
Guest post contributed by ARHuelsenbeck. Former elementary general music teacher ARHuelsenbeck blogs about the arts and the creative process at ARHtistic License. She is currently writing a YA mystical fantasy and a Bible study guide, and submitting a poetry chapbook, with mystery and MG drafts waiting in the wings. You can follow her on Twitter, and see some of her artwork, photography, and quilts on Instagram.
Perfect advice, even though it’s very hard to do at the moment…
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I know, right?! I’m so distracted by all the out-of-the-ordinary circumstances.
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Great Post!!! Thanks for all the info!! Chuck
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Reblogged this on The Reluctant Poet.
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Reblogged this on Homespun Tabby and commented:
Enjoyed reading this post by ARHuelsenbeck — tips for writing. Great advice!
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Key Commandment: Send it out when it’s good.
That was a huge rookie error on my part and one I will never do again.
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The other extremes are editing all the life out of a piece–or never sending it out. Just as fatal.
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Reblogged this on Kim's Musings.
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I used to use the technique of writing term papers in college by basing one project on other ones being simultaneously written. I now see how to adapt this technique to writing fiction by stretching out the process over a longer period of time.
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I’m not sure I understand what you’re saying. Do you mean if you had more than one paper to write, you wrote them on related topics? That sounds like a terrific strategy, two for the price of one, sort of.
Your second sentence–while I agree that writing fiction takes time, I don’t see the correlation to the first technique. I must be missing something here.
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You are right Andrea. I don’t see he connection either. I guess what I was doing here was writing two separate comments about your blog entry dealing with several of your writing commandments listed above.
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Thanks for sharing this! The #3 especially is such an important reminder to me. You sometimes just have to let your creativity flow and not to worry about the end result!
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Totally agree with ‘write every day’ and ‘turn off your inner editor’, though the latter is definitely much harder to consciously do. A great little push to keep me on track with my writing goals. Thanks!
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Great advice! Thank you. For me, by far the hardest is number 1. It’s just so hard to find the motivation sometimes.
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Great advice! Thank you. For me, by far the hardest has to be number one. It’s just so hard to find the motivation sometimes.
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