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Professional
Writers Learn To Manage Their Emotions |
by:
Bonnie
Boots |
Summary:
Learning to survive in the marketplace requires
some fancy emotional footwork. Read these
tips for raising your writer's emotional
I.Q.
Professional Writers Learn To Manage Their
Emotions
By Bonnie Boots
Unpublished writers often feel being paid
for publication is the benchmark of a "real"
writer So they read all the books on writing
and dutifully send off queries, filled with
hope and fear that one will be accepted;
hope they'll get the chance to be a real
writer, fear they won't live up to the challenge.
Sadly, for some, their fears will turn out
to be well founded. The emotional toll of
writing for publication will be more painful
then they can bear. Shocked, wounded, these
natural writers will put their dreams behind
them in the mistaken belief that they're
not good enough to write for publication.
Why does this happen? Because books on writing
often fail to tell the aspiring writer the
one thing they most need to know: the marketplace
demands more than talent. It demands that
the writer be skilled at dancing between
the emotional states of passion and detachment.
It seems like a conundrum, and it is, so
let's unravel this riddle.
The writer filled with fervor for the process
of writing produces the best product. And
in the marketplace, that's just what your
article, poem, short story or novel is-a
product. Products, whether they are romance
novels or car wax, are pretty much processed,
pimped and put on the shelves the same way.
All sorts of people, from editors to advertising
sales managers, have their hand in the marketing
process. They have the power to tweak, alter
and otherwise transfigure the product. As
a writer, it takes emotional detachment
to watch, even help as your beloved work
is worked on.
The ability to call forth and control your
emotional states is a primary survival skill
if you hope to write for print. Can it be
learned? Yes. In his book "Emotional Intelligence:
Why It Can Matter More than IQ," Daniel
Goleman says the ability to master emotions
often makes the difference between success
and failure in people of equivalent intellectual
abilities. He suggests these steps for increasing
self-control:
(1) Pay attention to your emotional states.
Don't just let excitement or fear run riot
over you. Use your writer's "inner eye"
to observe and record your own emotional
states. Simply being aware of your emotions
is the first step to controlling them.
(2) Get it off your chest. Rejection hurts.
Seeing your carefully considered words edited
for publication is painful. If your feelings
have been hurt, by all means vent, but do
it in a journal and not, under any circumstance,
in a nasty email to an editor or a hastily
posted blog. Nothing is learned from burning
bridges, and you could seriously injure
your chances of ever being published. Editors
and publishers read the net, too, you know.
(3) Consider the other person's point of
view. Editors and publishers have to deal
with issues you know nothing about. Before
you take personal offence, stop to consider
their side. If an editor doesn't quickly
answer your query, stop and imagine the
view from their desk. If you got 1000 letters
a week AND had to handle the work of 2 because
of staff cuts, might you put mail on the
back burner?
(4) Try not to take it personally. This
can be especially difficult for writers,
because our work is so very personal. But
when your feelings are hurt, it's important
to take a step back and realize that in
business, decisions may need to been made
that have nothing to do with YOU, personally.
(5) Stay well-mannered and self-motivated.
Being polite and persevering even when your
feelings have been hurt is a definite sign
of emotional maturity. The ability to keep
your cool and keep moving ahead will take
you places talent alone can only dream of.
Like any skill, learning to waltz between
passion and dispassion takes practice and
persistence. Some writers tap a tentative
foot, then withdraw to be wallflowers the
first time someone steps on their toes.
But you can survive and even thrive by joining
the dance with passion and purpose, accepting
the thrills as well as the spills as you
learn to step with the tune.
Copyright BONNIE BOOTS (www.BonnieBoots.com)
Bonnie Boots is an award-winning writer
and designer who says all writers should
show off their talent by wearing their Write
Side Out! Her wise and witty product line
of gear that shows the world you're a writer
is at http://www.WriteSideOut.com
About the author:
Copyright BONNIE BOOTS (www.BonnieBoots.com)
Bonnie Boots is an award-winning writer
and designer who says all writers should
show off their talent by wearing their Write
Side Out! Her wise and witty product line
of gear that shows the world you're a writer
is at http://www.WriteSideOut.com
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