Push Forward with Confidence

On Wednesdays, I share posts, fables, songs, poems, quotations, TEDx Talks, cartoons, and books that have inspired and motivated me on my writing journey. I hope these posts will give writers, artists, and other creatives a mid-week boost.

In her latest book, Dear Writer, New York Times bestselling author Maggie Smith breaks down creativity into ten essential elements. Here’s an uplifting excerpt:

During the four years when I was sending out my second book manuscript, The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison, I did revise it. With each rejection, I made adjustments: added poems, pulled poems out, changed the order, even changed the title more than once. And I did continue to send that manuscript to the same contests every year.

At times it felt like the definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. But in publishing, even if you send the same poem or chapbook or book manuscript out again and again to the very same places, it’s actually not the same. The readers and screeners are often different. The editors and final judges are often rotating. The selection of other manuscripts yours is up against changes, too. All of this to say: There are so many variables that go into why a poem or book gets taken, and why others don’t, beyond the quality of the work.

Keep trying, reassessing, and trusting your gut. When it’s time to let go, move on. Push forward with confidence. Know that we need more from you.

And what else do we need? More literary journals and magazines, not fewer. More publishers, not fewer. A wider community, not a narrower one.

Source: Dear Writer by Maggie Smith, p. 212

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