Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Wonder How You Say We in Canada **

Yep, I'm still alive. Despite the longest hiatus I've ever taken in more than five years of writing this blog.

My absence wasn't necessarily planned and I've thought of posting often, but one thing or another has kept me away. That and the fact I STILL cannot talk about what I really want to talk about so to keep from saying too much I've said nothing.

If I've learned anything from the nearly 13 years of writing it is that waiting is the norm. And of all the skills one must possess to make it in this business I believe patience is the most vital.

We must have patience for the stories and characters we write. That small seed of an idea must germinate and grow or the story and its inhabitants will be as stale and tasteless as a bowl of lettuce.

We must be patient through the process of writing and editing. We must learned to step away from the computer on those days when every plot point, every character and every sentence seems like a waste of time. the delete button is deadly to a disgruntled writer, but trust me, premature ejectulation will only increase your disappointment.

When we are finished we must be patient with the editing process and remember it is not a race to send your manuscript out in the world. We must take TIME honing the perfect query.

And perhaps hardest of all, we must be patience once the manuscript is submitted to agents or editors.

Then if we are fortuitous enough to see out work published we must be patient for readers to find and discover our babies. We must be patient in reminding ourselves a writing career is a process not an event.

And as that process grows we must remind ourselves about non-disclosure contracts and the importance of continuing to write ... to dream ... to believe.

We must be patience and remember some things, perhaps even most things are beyond out control. We must remember why we started writing in the first place.


** PS. I'd like to explain how the title of this post relates, but yep, you guessed it -- I'm not allowed.

10 comments:

Joanne Brothwell said...

I love this post, Travis. I especially enjoyed how you managed to slip in "useless lettuce"!

Patience is a virtue, no doubt, eh?

Bernice Simpson said...

Whatever you do, don't say "we" or anything, for that matter, in Canada in December, January, or February or whoever goes with you may never speak to you again.

Old Kitty said...

I don't understand!! Why can't you say "we" in Canada?!!? Oui? We? I'm confused!!! Patiently so! LOL!

Take care
x

G. B. Miller said...

Dude, you're starting to sound like a career politician.

Snap out of it!

:D

Debra She Who Seeks said...

Ooooooo, cryptic! Plus somehow Canada is related? Yowza!

Charles Gramlich said...

Well, it sounds promising anyway.

Anne Gallagher said...

If we guess what it is you can't talk about, do we get bonus points if we get it right?

Just wondering.

the walking man said...

OUI don't know how to saw we in Canada for we here in Detroit with our french root support the Quebecois.

Travis Erwin said...

Even if you guessed, I couldn't say anything. But I hope that changes soon.

Terrie Farley Moran said...

Welcome back and I will wait for further news--patiently!