10 Steps to Stay Positive in the Brutal Publishing World
For the
month of February, I've invited various authors with current releases to share
something about their writing. This week, I'd like you to meet Bryan E. Robinson. His book, Limestone Gumption: A Brad Pope and Sisterfriends Mystery, won
the Beverly Hills Book Award for Best Mystery, the Silver IPPY Award for
outstanding mystery of the year, and the Bronze Award for best mystery from
Foreword Reviews’ INDIEFAB Book of the Year Awards. As in the past two
posts, I met Bryan at the same mystery writers panel sponsored by my local
indie bookstore.
One cruel fact of becoming a published author is that it
often feels like an uphill battle because the mind’s negativity has a longer
shelf life than positivity. I’ll bet you remember where you were on 9/11 but
not the following week. Scientists say the brain is like Velcro for negative
experiences and Teflon for positive ones to keep us out of harm’s way. It takes
three positive thoughts to offset one negative thought. No wonder it’s
difficult to remain hopeful and persevere in a publishing career bombarded with
the same bad-news bias that keeps us safe.
But here’s the good news: Grass
grows through concrete. I want to share my secrets on how I was able to
complete two murder mysteries—Limestone
Gumption: A Brad Pope and Sisterfriends Mystery and She’ll Be KILLING Round the Mountain—by stacking my positivity deck.
When negativity strikes, you can underestimate
writing threats and overestimate
writing possibilities with the same tried-and-true tips that have helped me navigate the ups-and-downs
of a tumultuous publishing world, break free from the clutches of writing woes,
and finish those murder mysteries:
- Focus on the upside of downside situations. “I’ve hit a wall with my novel’s ending” becomes “Other than the ending, I’ve completed my novel and gotten promising feedback.”
- Pinpoint opportunities contained in negative writing events. Ask, “How can I make this situation work to my advantage? Can I find something positive in it? What can I manage or overcome in this instance?”
- Frame setbacks as lessons to learn, not failures to endure. Ask what you can learn from difficult writing outcomes and use them as stepping-stones, instead of roadblocks.
- Broaden your scope. Look beyond rejection, put on your wide-angle lens, and let your love of writing steer you beyond the gloom.
- Be chancy. Take small risks in new situations instead of predicting negative outcomes before giving them a try. “If I agree to be on a panel at Killer Nashville, I might fall flat on my face” becomes “If I participate on a panel, I might get to network with other writers and promote my murder mystery.”
- Avoid blowing situations out of proportion. Don’t let one negative experience rule your whole life pattern: “I didn’t sell my novel, so now I’ll never get published” becomes “I didn’t sell the novel, but there are many more pathways to getting it published.”
- Focus on the solution, not the problem. You’ll feel more empowered to cope with writing’s curveballs when you step away from the problem and brainstorm a wide range of possibilities.
- Practice positive self-talk. After big writing letdowns, underscore your triumphs and high-five your “tallcomings” instead of bludgeoning yourself with your “shortcomings.”
- Hang out with positive people. Optimism is contagious. When you surround yourself with optimistic people, positivity rubs off.
- Strive to see the fresh starts contained in your losses. Every time you get up just one more time than you fall, your perseverance increases the likelihood of propelling your mystery to the top of the charts.
Bryan E. Robinson is the Coordinator of International
Thriller Writers’ Debut Author Forum, a consulting editor for The Big Thrill, a member of Mystery
Writers of America, and author of thirty-five nonfiction books. His books have
been translated into thirteen languages. Robinson won two writing awards for
his nonfiction work which was featured on 20/20,
Good Morning America, ABC’s World News Tonight, NBC Nightly News, NBC Universal, The CBS Early Show, CNBC’s The Big
Idea. He hosted the PBS documentary, Overdoing
It: How to Slow Down and Take Care of Yourself. Robinson maintains a
private psychotherapy practice in Asheville, North Carolina and resides in the
Blue Ridge Mountains with his spouse, four dogs, and occasional bears at night.
His latest thriller is She’ll Be KILLING
Round the Mountain.
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