Welcome to Kid-Lit Writing Wisdom where a team of multi-published kid-lit authors with over 170 years of combined experience as writers share their wisdom. You can read all about our team here. Before we get started, I’d like to share some good news and congratulate some of our team members.
Rosie Pova’s lovely book SUNDAY RAIN had a birthday on March 2. Welcome to the world, little one!
Vivian Kirkfield’s new book FROM HERE TO THERE: Inventions That Changed the Way the World Moves is really going places! (See what I did there?) Great collection of stories all in one book!
Kirsti Call’s picture book, COW SAYS MEOW just had an udderly sweet birthday on March 16! Welcome to the world little book!
Laura Gehl‘s rhyming board book BASEBALL BABY will come into the world on March 30. Happy early birthday!
I decided to launch our “wisdom” series with a general question. I half thought that there would be a lot of similar answers. Although, some answers might relate to another in small ways, the answers prove that although what most of us strive for is the same, everyone’s experience is different. I think most of us on the team agree that we are all still learning, but with so many years behind us, we do have a lot to share. The question for this post is . . .
Answers Most Important Lesson Learned
I am rudely offering my answer first because it is the longest answer.
COMPARISON, CRITICISM, AND JUDGMENT
A WRITER’S WORST ENEMIES
by Alayne Kay Christian
Through my own experience and through observing other writers’ struggle, one important lesson I’ve learned is comparison, criticism, and judgment are a writer’s worst enemies. When it comes to looking outside ourselves to find our worth via comparison and judgment, my experience and observations have been that it usually leads to self-criticism and pain. In the kid-lit writing world, it can be a long hard road to what one might consider success. Most of us see success as getting positive feedback on a manuscript, signing with an agent, getting a book contract, holding that published book in our hand, getting great reviews, having a million-copy seller, and on and on. Unfortunately, success is a moving target. Like a drug addict, we are always looking for the next success fix. But as soon as the pleasure of meeting a goal fades away, sometimes even while we are still enjoying it, we are looking for more of the same or maybe even something different.
In the online writing community, it’s almost a daily occurrence that someone’s good news (usually several people’s good news) is shared. Sometimes, it seems like an hourly event! Isn’t that great? It’s also great the writing community is always there to help celebrate our successes. But I know for sure that when you are surrounded by others’ perceived successes, and you can’t seem to see any successes on your end, comparing, criticizing, and judging is a surefire way to stop or hinder your chances of success. When we compare ourselves, our efforts, and our situations to others, we become our own victims because the next step is self-judgment and usually self-criticism. I suppose for some, the outcome might be inspiration, encouragement, and the strength to keep on keeping on. But for others, comparing, followed by self-judgment and criticism, lead to emotional confusion, discouragement, and sometimes a sense of defeat. Most climb out of it, pick themselves up, and get back on the rough road they have put themselves on in their writing journey. I admire and praise those who have found the peaceful route to their perceived success. But more than anything, I wish peace for those who struggle.
Of course, we all have our own path to follow. And we all have the road that will take us to where we are meant to be. I’d just like my ramblings to leave you with the thought that we have the power to make this writing journey a peaceful and pleasurable ride or to make it a treacherous and tumultuous one. For me, remaining aware of the compare, criticize, judge trap (whether it be directed at self, others, or both) is one of the best things I ever learned to do for myself. But the biggest lesson is to recognize it for what it is—the enemy. See that big flashing red light of discomfort and distraction and STOP looking outside yourself. Then, find a way to bring your focus back to you in the moment where you can find peace and joy in your writing journey. One lovely step at a time.
If doing what you love feels more like a struggle than a peaceful or joyful experience, take a good look within. You will likely find that you are comparing, criticizing, or judging (or maybe all three.) It’s impossible to be in the moment under those circumstances.
Coincidentally, while I was working on the above answer, the following Jane Friedman blog post popped up in my email. I feel like it is too related not to share. Although, I’m not talking about jealousy in my answer, falling into the compare, criticize, judge trap can lead you there. Click here to read The Green-Eyed Monster: Jealousy in the Time of Quarantine by Nancy Stohlman.
It’s funny how once you bring something into your consciousness, it seems to pop up everywhere. As I was preparing this blog post, I received newsletter from Jess Keating. Jess has a different take on jealousy. And she offers her creative guide to jealousy here. It’s definitely worth reading! Thanks, Jess.
To learn more about Alayne and her books visit alaynekaychristianauthor.com
SUCCESS LIVES IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF FAILURE
by Kirsti Call
My most important lesson learned on my publication journey:
Each rejection, each defeat, each failure only teaches resilience and leads to success in this business. Without years of persistence through the failures, I wouldn’t be where I am today. Success lives in the neighborhood of failure.
My book, COW SAYS MEOW came out on March 16! Here’s the 2 minute song my 15 year old daughter wrote for it: https://youtu.be/X14k86vW6FY (And I just got a very unexpected starred review from SLJ!)
Happy Creating!
To learn more about Kirsti and her books visit www.kirsticall.com
WRITING AUTHENTICALLY IS A MUST
by Rob Sanders
My most hard-learned lessons seem to be those that are the most obvious. I wrote and published for a few years before I finally owned the lesson that I need to write the stories only I can write and to write with authenticity. I still have to evaluate what I’m working on to see if I’m doing that. Life (and my writing career) is too short to spend time writing things that don’t truly represent who I am.
To learn more about Rob and his books visit www.robsanderswrites.com
WRITING IS ONLY THE BEGINNING
by Pippa Chorley
I think the thing I learned from the entire process is that writing is only the start. Once the book is handed over to the illustrator your work does not stop, its then time to begin marketing your book, engaging with other authors, preparing blog tours and launch events for when the book is out on the shelves, as well as school author visits, craft and storytelling sessions. For many authors that is particularly tough as we tend to enjoy the process of writing rather than speaking and shouting loudly about ourselves and our work. I do think in hindsight though that the earlier you begin this process the less pressured and easier it is, and the more you engage with other writers the less scary it feels and more enjoyable. Writers are wonderful people and love to help other writers and once you start talking to them, even via twitter and Facebook, it is easy to become part of this lovely community and gain the confidence you need to put yourself out there. So my tip would be to engage early on in small and meaningful ways and build it up slowly so that it never feels too onerous or overwhelming.
To learn more about Pippa and her books visit pippachorleystories.com
EVERYONE’S WRITING PROCESS IS DIFFERENT
by Marcie Flinchum Atkins
I wish I had known much earlier on that everyone’s writing process is different–that it’s okay to lean into what works for me. I’m fascinated by other people’s ways of brainstorming, organizing, and revising, and I learn a lot from the way other writers do things. What I have learned is that I need to think about what works best for my brain. Often, I hear a cool tip from another writer, and now my first step is to spend some time journaling about what that might look like in my own process with my current projects. If I think it might help, I try it out. If I think it needs tweaking, I change it to make it work for me. This means that I’m learning to trust myself more. I do a lot of reflection–weekly, monthly, quarterly, yearly. At every point along the way, I’m asking myself: “What did you learn about yourself as a writer or about your process?” Knowing that I can lean into my own quirks and develop my own unique processes has helped me abandon what is no longer working and feel more confident in my writing. It has helped me embrace the mantra: “Joy in the process.”
To learn more about Marcie and her books visit www.marcieatkins.com
The team will continue to answer the question in part two of THE MOST IMPORTANT LESSON LEARNED IN MY PUBLICATION JOURNEY with some great bits of wisdom from Beth Anderson, Laura Gehl, Vivian Kirkfield, Ellen Leventhal, Michelle Nott, Dawn Prochovnic, Rosie Pova, and Melissa Stoller.
What a fabulous way to begin this series, Alayne! I loved your advice (so spot-on!) and the links you shared. And thank you to Marcie, Pippa, Rob, and Kirsti for sharing their wisdom. It’s definitely an honor to be part of this group!
Thank you! I’m glad you are on the team, too. I loved everyone’s answers and can’t wait to share part two, which includes your excellent answer.
Thank you so much for putting together such a kind & talented kidlit group! Writing Wisdom will be such a fantastic resource. And Alayne, your intro post hit the mark for me, so as I end one week & turn to a week of vacation, I’m sloughing that yucky feeling from my shoulders and facing the light!
Oh my goodness, I love that you will be facing the late and enjoying a week of vacation. I’m also very happy that you see the value in our team and that my post hit you at just the right time. Have a fantastic vacation with no yucky feelings.
Aww, thanks Alayne! Yucky feelings, be gone! 🙂
Great kick off of the series! It’s interesting to see how, as different as these lessons in the journey are, they ring with all of us in some way.
Yes, I agree. Part two has a common thread in several answers. I look forward to sharing the post next week. Thanks for being on the team, Beth.
Thank you for providing this for your fellow creators! It’s so helpful to know that my struggles are not my own and happen to even the most successful authors. I always try to encourage other writers and take their wins as wins for the kidlit community and for the readers, but I also do it because I know when I have my wins they will be there for me, too.
Alayne, your words were especially helpful today. I received a critique of a manuscript I entered in a contest a long time ago, so long ago I almost forgot about it, but it pointed out mistakes I was embarrassed I made. I printed it out and attached it to the ms and will refer to the notes before I submit again, but a little piece of me believes that maybe, just maybe I wouldn’t make those same mistakes in my writing today. With the webinars, the support, and my CP’s, I feel like I’m continually growing as an author. I’m so grateful for their thoughtful and complete critique because it’s shown I’ve grown but it also reminds me where I began.
What a nice bit of sharing you’ve done yourself here, Colleen. Thank you. Yes, we are always learning and growing as writers. I love that you have framed your recent experience with these positive thoughts. To me, honest critiques are the most valuable. But, they can be hard to swallow when we first see them. It seems though, that many times, once we’ve had time to get past our emotions and sit with them, we find them encouraging and inspiring. And sometimes we find lessons learned. One time, I submitted a manuscript that came back with a response, and my first reaction was this person was out of their mind when they said there wasn’t enough to fill a picture book. I was like “Humph, I know how to write a picture book!” Then it occurred to me that I had forgotten to do a dummy, so I did one. Guess what? There was enough for about 11 spreads! I was embarrassed. What a hard way to be reminded not to get overly confident and skip paginating or creating a dummy to see how my story flows. It’s interesting that your comment relates quite a bit to the answers that we have in part two. I’m guessing when you read part two, you will relate quite bit. Thank you so much for taking the time to comment and share. And I’m glad that my words came at just the right time for you.
Thank you for this little kick in the pants. I’ve wasted too much time thinking about others’ successes. I’ve joined Storyteller Academy and am reminded daily of others who are traveling the same bumpy road. Their support is great, as is your blog:)
So glad our post was a kick in the pants. And how wonderful that you are in a situation where you can see we are all having different experiences, yet somewhat the same, along the road. Community and support is so important in this business. I think you will enjoy next weeks answers. Thank you for taking time to read and to comment.
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