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Rejection

9/26/2014

 
Every writer deals with rejection. C.S. Lewis, J.K. Rowling, F. Scott Fitzgerald . . . all rejected, rejected, rejected. Sometimes insulted, too. It's just an unpleasant part of the whole writing gig.

Sometimes these rejections will hurt your feelings. Perhaps you're thinking, How could that publisher possibly not want this brilliant gem? My mother LOVED it! (Why You Should Never Trust Your Mother's Judgment When It Comes To Stuff You've Created is a whole other blog post for another time.) Some of them will make you mad. Sometimes, you'll think the publisher is a complete buffoon. Maybe you're right. (Probably not, but maybe.) So how, as a writer, do you deal with rejection?

In my experience, writers usually react in one of the three following ways:

1.  You decide that your writing is crap, and vow never to write again (that'll show 'em).  I'm sure we've all felt this way, but I really can't recommend this. If you truly have a passion for writing, you're going to keep writing. If you suspect your writing really is terrible, yet you love doing it, take some classes. Learn to write better. Hone your craft.

I'd also highly recommend forming a writers' group, either in your town or online, to provide feedback and critique to help you improve your writing. The only potential downside to this is that you might be required to bribe people with cookies to get them to attend the meetings, but trust me, it's worth it.

2.  You decide that the publisher/editor that rejected you is an idiot, and start an online media campaign slandering them.

Yeah, I don't recommend this either. The writing community is small—particularly if you write within a specific genre—and people talk. Specifically, editors and publishers talk. To each other. About writers they refuse to work with. You don't want to be on that list. Trash one editor or publisher, and you might find yourself blackballed from thirty other publications.

If your first instinct is to publicly trash and humiliate someone, I would highly recommend attending anger management classes.

3.  You decide to call your BWF (best writing friend), commiserate, eat some DoubleStuf™ Oreos, and move on.

Yes. Yes! Do this. Without a doubt, this is the best possible action you can take.

As I've mentioned repeatedly, everyone gets rejected. Nobody is going to understand what you're feeling quite like another writer who has also gone through the unpleasantness of being told his or her story wasn't good enough.

I have two BWFs I like to whine to when I'm feeling particularly down. One, we'll call her "K," can always be counted on to tell me that either the publisher must be crazy, or that my story might not be as brilliant as I'd suspected (sometimes we need to hear the truth). If she's not available due to her own rejection grief, or vacation or something, I reach out to "R," who is very good at making me laugh at either the editor's folly or my own. Inevitably, I will eat some Oreos, take another look at the story, and either rewrite it or send it on to the next market.

As a writer, you need to develop a thick skin, or at least some sane coping strategies (Oreos). Having been on the other side of the coin as an editor, I can assure you that there are often legitimate reasons why a story gets rejected, none of which involve either the publisher or the author having completely lost their marbles:

1. You didn't follow submission guidelines. They're there for a reason. If you can't take the time to follow them, maybe the editor can't take the time to read your story. Maybe you think that's petty, but it's incredibly disrespectful when you don't take the time to read the submission guidelines.

2. Your story needed some serious editing. This is why you need to take classes/form a writers' group/buy and read a copy of Words into Type. Many times, the meat of a story is good, but it has so many grammatical/proofreading/content errors that it's not worth an editor's time to fix it for you.

3. Your story just isn't a good fit. I know it sounds like a line, but it's very true. Most of the time, it all comes down to the story being perfectly good, but just not right for the market you submitted it to. This is when you brush off the rejection, eat some Oreos, and submit it somewhere else.

Overall, rejection is not the end of the world. Not even close. But any writer worth their salt (in the wound) should develop a routine to deal with these inevitable disappointments. Have I mentioned the Double Stuf™ Oreos yet? Really, their therapeutic properties cannot be underestimated.
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The Curse of Outgoing Introvertism

9/19/2014

 
I’m feeling a little worn out this week. No, not from exercising (to which I’m allergic) or chasing baby snapping turtles. Mostly I’m run down from spending two days greeting people, making new friends, hanging out with friends I already had, and generally spending my entire reserve tank of social energy at Granite State ComicCon last weekend. You see, any social situation is guaranteed to wipe me out for at least a week.

You extroverts have no idea what I’m talking about, I’m sure. But, believe it or not, I am an introvert. There’s now a new label for what I am: “Introvert With an Outgoing Personality.” This basically means I’m great in social situations, but then I need LOTS of alone time to recover.

You, too, might be an Introvert With an Outgoing Personality. Do these character traits sound like you?

  • Do you dread social situations, but find yourself leaving every party you attend with seven new phone numbers and three new BFFs?
  • Do you despise talking on the phone?
  • Do you prefer to have all of your social interactions to occur via e-mail, yet get anxious about having to actually respond to an e-mail?
  • When you do reply to an email, is it with a witty and insightful response, even though you’ve just ground your teeth into powder worrying about what you were going to write back?
  • Seriously, do you often find yourself cursing the day that Alexander Graham Bell was ever issued a patent for his stupid acoustic telegraph?
  • Does the idea of being a Walmart greeter make you cringe and die a little inside knowing you’d actually have to talk to people, but deep down you know you’d be awesome at it?
  • Have you been known to drop your phone in a sink/toilet/random mud puddle just to avoid having to answer it?
  • Is your inner mantra at a coffee shop or grocery store don’t talk to me, don’t talk to me, no eye contact, don’t talk to me . . . but then when the bag boy does talk to you, you flash him your widest smile, ask him all about his mother and his two Pomeranians, and actually listen to the answer?
  • When you are forced to answer a phone call, do you then speak charmingly and astutely, resulting in a perfectly lovely phone conversation that you’ll appreciate for about five minutes before starting to dread the next inevitable phone call?
If you responded “Yup, that’s me” to two or more of these, you too might be an Introvert With an Outgoing Personality.

I’m pretty sure this is an inherited condition. Let’s take a look at my immediate family tree as scientific proof:
Picture
See? The proof is in the pudding (mmm . . . pudding). This is also further evidence as to why we should blame our parents for all of our problems. 

It’s also my very lengthy excuse for why I haven’t returned anyone's phone calls in, oh, say, a year. Sorry about that. It's clearly a medical condition.

Time  . . . The Enemy

9/12/2014

 
The bad thing about working as a freelance editor is that sometimes you find yourself between assignments (translation: unemployed). I'm just coming off of a two-week period without a day job, and I'll admit, it's been tough.
I started my two weeks off with big plans: I was going to repaint the bathroom, the hallway, and the spare room; organize the inventory from the bookstore, weed out the books that won't ever sell (read: Danielle Steel) and donate them to the local library; and blanch, pickle, jar, or otherwise freeze all of the vegetables from the garden.
PictureBefore and After the paint-fume hallucinations.
I decided to tackle the bathroom first. My estimations that it would take just one day and one coat of paint were laughably WAY off the mark. The yellow wall paint took (mercifully) only two coats, unlike the emerald green trim, which I had to paint three times, then go over again for spot corrections. THREE! It took me three days, during a heat wave, with little ventilation, to complete this project.

The surprising (to me, anyway) after-effect of this renovation project was that it left me motivated to do exactly nothing. I eyeballed the rest of the rooms in the house and decided that the chipped paint and smudges looked charming. Why ruin it all with a fresh coat of paint?
I spent two days recovering by watching eight seasons of Forensic Files on Netflix and eating ice cream to alleviate my paint-fume migraine. I would've stayed right there in bed if not for the garden. The cucumber vines had spread across the lawn, and the cukes were now knocking on the second-floor windows. They would not be ignored.
I picked about thirty cucumbers, and with an easy recipe for freezer pickles in hand, started chopping cucumbers and ladling out vinegar and sugar. I felt a bit smug and self-righteous after the first ten containers of pickles were done. I was getting a little bored and angry after the next set of ten. Four hours later, I was leaving cucumbers on my neighbors' front steps and running away. (Apparently not quickly enough, as I woke up the next day to twelve cucumbers on my front step that had found their way home.) I handed them out to everyone in my family. My sister stopped speaking to me after I filled her trunk with cukes after she foolishly left her car unattended.
I was done with vegetables. I was cranky and never wanted to see another cucumber again in my life, which doesn't bode well for my freezer full of pickles. I couldn't concentrate on any of my other projects because I kept thinking about pink cucumbers on parade. In short, I was bored and listless: a deadly combination.
Picture
It was around this time that Jason mentioned we hadn't seen any baby turtles emerge from the hole the giant female snapping turtle planted in our flower bed this past spring. And here's the problem that arises from being unemployed and listless: this was, by far, the most intriguing thing I'd heard all week.
I don't have children, and have always suspected I wouldn't be a very good mother, what with my plans to abandon any babies I might have at my mother's house for her to raise. Indeed, when Jason first mentioned the turtle eggs, my first shameful thought was turtle egg-drop soup. But now, I had a purpose: what had happened to those eggs? Had they hatched and we just didn't see them? Or were they desperate for a little TLC from someone who had time on her hands and was going a little stir crazy, someone who may or may not have yet recovered from overexposure to paint fumes . . . someone like me? I had a reason to get out of bed in the morning again!
The eggs had not hatched. I gently dug them up and placed them lovingly in a bucket full of dirt. This picture shows all 43 of my little impending babies, nestled among the peat. We brought them inside and started incubating them in the spare room. I began bringing them out to the kitchen when cooking so that I'd have someone to talk to as I boiled pasta and defrosted pickles. I've already picked out names for all of them. Plus, the good news is, now we don't have to buy Halloween candy--the neighborhood kids will get a new pet in their candy bags when they stop by our house this year.
I wish I were making this up, but I'm typing this with a bucket of snapping turtle eggs next to me. The good news is, I start my next editing assignment next week. I'm hoping my sanity is as satisfying as I remember.

Trick(y) Photography

9/5/2014

 
Perhaps you noticed the new author photo I have on the home page of this website. Why did I change it? It was time, plus, my mother hated the old one because I wasn't smiling in it. Apparently, you never grow out of wanting to please your parents, so a new photo was needed.
Accomplishing this wasn't easy. The only professional photographer I know works weird hours as a 9-1-1 dispatcher, and I didn't want to show up at her job and have her be distracted with saving lives when I needed head shots. Jason is usually good for taking pictures, but he is not good at letting me look at all 60 pictures before deciding I hate them all and demanding retakes. So it was just me and my camera's delayed timer option.
PictureNo, no, and no.
My first issue was hair. Could I get away with just brushing it? How about if I put it up in a ponytail? Perhaps a cute hat was in order? I did some test shots of these options, and spent a good half hour trying to figure out why I kept making that weird forced smile. Perhaps it was more than my hair that needed work. I decided to worry about that later, and ran down the street for some hair mousse, fired up the curling iron, and went to work. (It turns out that I don't have the patience to use a curling iron properly, which I mention only to explain the three half-formed curls in the final photo.)

PictureNope, heck no, and nuh-uh.
Picking just the right outfit was critical. A sloppy sweatshirt might say "I'm fun, but also a slob." Something sexy would send a different message, more like "I'm flirtatious, and a bit trampy." A t-shirt wouldn't do, either: "I'm casual, and in my free time, I like to stalk Nick Rhodes of Duran Duran." After going through everything in my closet twice, I finally settled on a little black dress, which only proves that women should never even bother to buy any other kind of dress.

Picture
I went outside and started experimenting with the delayed timer on the camera. It only gave me three seconds to click the button and pose, which is not nearly as easy as it sounds. Here I am in one of several failed attempts to get in frame and flash my most stunning smile before the shutter clicked. It's a great shot of both my butt and the tick farm I'm cultivating in my garden, but not quite what I needed.

Picture
Once I got the hang of the delayed timer, I decided to try for something artsy. We have a bunch of sunflowers in our back yard, and they seemed like the perfect artistic touch for what I needed. Here I am, wistfully watching two Japanese beetles mate on a bright sunflower. It sounded good in theory, but of course, you can't see my face, nor can you really see the beetles, so what was the point? I chalked this shot up to a failure and moved on.

PictureMaybe if I'd jumped?
I wasn't quite ready to give up on the sunflower motif yet, though. I decided they'd be a great backdrop. This taught me an important lesson on perspective. Yes, sunflowers are pretty, but they are also much, much taller than I am. Here's my "Stacey Among the Sunflowers" shot. Pretty, and a lovely late-summer scene, but again, not quite what I'd hoped for.

PictureYou can pick your friends . . .
The flowers were clearly not working. I liked the idea of greenery, though, so I kept on looking. I found a nice bush in the yard that might provide a little color in the picture, and it could be just the right height.

I didn't realize until I uploaded the picture to my computer that there were still a few lessons I needed to learn about perspective. Look closely, friends. There's a tree branch in that shot that looks like it's trying to pick my nose. I headed back out to try again.

PictureMe, protecting my nose.
Clearly I needed a different backdrop . . . maybe one that wouldn't be so eager to shove its branches up my nostrils. I found a nice tree and thought that perhaps a portrait of me, in repose amid the leaves, would work just fine. I leaned up against the tree, which jostled its branches a bit, alarming the hive of white-faced hornets that had taken up residence there. In case you are unaware, this particular species of stinging insect is quite territorial, and has no qualms about flying into your hair or, yes, up your nose.

Picture
At this point, I'd decided that a photo among the flowers or delicate branches around me was not in the cards. I waited several hours for the hornets to settle down, then finally discovered the perfect place for my photo: the side deck. The camera could sit at a good angle, the sun wouldn't shine into the lens, and the hornets were on the other side of the house. What could go wrong? I set up the camera, selected the delayed timer option, and got ready to pose, smoothing my hair and flashing my most brilliant smile. Here was the result: me, squinting, looking as if I'd just gotten a whiff of a particularly stale fart.

Picture
I was determined at this point to get my stupid author shot, come hell or high water. I clicked my way through weird smiles, crossed eyes, the return of the white-faced hornets, and a particularly amorous dog that had escaped from the neighbor's yard to make friends with my left calf. It was not easy. It was not fun. I did not feel glamorous, attractive, or particularly fond of Mother Nature by the time I was done.
One hundred and forty-seven photos later, I finally had a usable shot. Eagle-eyed critics will note that the image is slightly out of focus, to which I say "Move your face closer so I can slap you." I wasted twelve hours of my life trying to get a usable picture, not to mention having my nose violated unpleasantly more than once. This is the picture that you will have to live with on my site for the next year. I figure it'll take me at least twelve months to recover from this experience.

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