Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Wild Rose Press and finding my groove


Sometimes in this writer's life there comes a certain kind of depression. I recognise it, know it will pass and just enjoy it while it's here. It gives me time to contemplate things I otherwise would be too busy to think about. This time it brought the urge to give up. Thoughts like; Why am I trying so hard? It's never going to happen! I should just give up. Stop the polishing and the rewrites and just forget this idea of getting published.
Whew! I've even stopped visiting my fav agent blogs (a morning ritual). I don't post as much and although I read all my other fav writer's blogs I'm not posting comments there either. I feel like I should crawl into my shell and just let it all pass me by.
:(
Then I got the email newsletter from Wild Rose Press and saw a contest. They are starting a new line and looking for writers to write a story that has "a blue diamond" it in.
Slowly the wheels in my head started squeaking. Turning slowly around the word "blue diamond". So many possibilities leaked through my brain. A person? place? actual diamond? The Blue Diamond could be anything.
And best of all this contest has a deadline.
I love deadlines. They push me, block out all other interuptions and make me move.
So I've been moving, writing once again and it feels good. Then today I realized the depression had lifted. Thoughts cleared and the buzzing in my brain turned into action.
I think sometimes the cure for this writer's depression is a goal. When we have no goals we flounder, wander and sink deeper into the numbness of our own brains.
I have a goal now and hit just hit 30 pages.
Ahhhh....life is good once again.
What do you do when you want to give up? Where is your magic cure for inertia?

3 comments:

Spy Scribbler said...

30 pages is really getting your groove back! Yay! :-)

To answer your question, I'll let you know when I figure it out.

Charles Gramlich said...

Goals are definitely an important thing that keeps me going, although sometimes I do crave the days when I just "explored" in writing. Overall, though, I'd rather have deadlines and goals than not. Congrats on the wheels turning again. We've all been where you were. And you're right, it does pass.

Theresa Milstein said...

I'm glad you got your groove back. Being a writer provides a lot of lows: self-doubt, frustration, self-criticism. Just keep pulling yourself up.

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