My late friend and writing buddy left a footprint I carry with me in my writing: Leave your ego in the back seat.
Translation? Don't let the worry of what others think stop you from writing your story.
The ego is that thing between us and others. What will they think if I write this? Will they think I'm gross? A freak? Some kind of weirdo? To which writers should respond; who cares!
Some will love your stories, some will hate them. You can't please everyone so don't let it stop you. Write what you want, critics be damned.
My one book, Soul Mates (A different kind of love story) had a first review that stole my heart, "I laughed, I cried, I loved this book."
A few reviews down, "this is about animal abuse."
Note: it's not about animal abuse it's a story of a dog who goes through a tough time and get's rescued. I've worked in dog rescue for over 15 years and have seen a lot of sad stories and helped to save hundreds of dogs. I've seen and heard of more animal abuse than anyone should ever see and none of it gets any easier. Your heart breaks a million times as you bring in the starving, hurt and mentally damaged pups. We make them better and adopt them into good homes. I'll take that heartbreak because it keeps their hearts beating.Did I respond to that comment about animal abuse? No. Did I want to? Of course! First of all I believe the reviewer didn't finish the book because the dog wins in the end. Besides that? I'm not here for their opinions. I just here to tell a story. Many stories. If If I take that stuff as a hit to my ego, that ego might whitewash my next story.
Who cares what cousin Suzy might think or how your Auntie might judge your book poorly. They didn't write a book and you did.
YOU DID IT!
First they judge you, then they laugh, then they're telling people how they know you.
So toss that ego in the back seat and write on.
P.S. The dog in that picture is doing great. Here's what she looks like now. God Bless the Rescuers.