The vast majority of authors fit their craft around jobs, family, homemaking, and other commitments. Anyone who expects to write in blissful solitude at a sprawling desk with coffee steam curling into the ceiling fan above them will be swiftly disabused of such fantasies. A more common tableau is stealing half an hour at the end of a stressful day to write on the sofa with Peppa Pig ringing in my ears and my three-year-old’s legs entangled in the laptop cable. Most of the time it’s not a glamorous hobby. Most of the time it’s a grind.
No matter how many times you remind yourself that rejections are part of the game, that it’s not personal, that even Hemingway’s writing was initially dismissed, it still hurts. It should hurt; you’ve invested time, effort, and passion in your work. All of which makes it important to celebrate when things do go right.
In the last month I’ve been lucky enough to have short stories accepted in Soft Cartel, Penny Shorts, and Shooter magazine. Two of these are paying magazines, which makes it all the sweeter! Doubtless I’ll have barren spells again. Those rejection slips and oh-so-close emails will disappoint time and time again, but it’s important to remember the successes.
Congratulations on having your stories accepted.
I completely agree about the way most people steal time of their days to write. I am doing the same.
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Thanks Catherine!
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Congratulations on those that were published. Yes, be that glass half full person!
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Thanks!
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Trying to fit in time to write after a tiresome day with your children is a feat in itself, I know I struggle with that everyday! Congratulations on your published stories!
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Thanks Melissa. They’re worth it, but not particularly conducive to creativity!
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LOL ain’t that the truth!
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This is how it always is… But in the end it all pays off. Congratulations!
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