APODS – Support by Amanda Cabot

At last! We’ve reached the final step of APODS: Support. Some of that support is external, but you may be surprised to learn that a large part is internal.

Although writing is by its very nature a solitary profession, there are times when we need help if we’re going to reach “The End.” That’s why it’s important – I’d go so far as to say essential – to have external support. Typically, that support comes in two forms: personal and professional.

Cheerleaders

Personal – These are your cheerleaders, the people who encourage you on bad days, who celebrate your successes, who are there whenever you need the reminder that you’re a real writer. They may not be writers – in fact, most often they are not – but they’re the ones you can count on to cheer you when writing isn’t going well.

Professional – I’m a firm believer that every serious writer should be a member of a group of professional writers. Ideally, the organization has in-person meetings that you can attend, but if that’s not possible, find one with an active email loop.

Your professional support group is more than a group of cheerleaders, although they should cheer your successes. What they provide that the personal support group cannot is writing-related advice. They’re the ones who’ll brainstorm with you when you hit a mental wall. They’ll read a passage and tell you what works and what doesn’t. They’ll buoy you when you face rejection, suggesting other agents or publishers. They’re the proverbial shoulders to cry on, and they’re invaluable.

But, as valuable as external support is, it’s only one part of the picture. You, the author, need to support yourself. After all, no one else is going to write your book. Although there are many times when you’ll need internal support, we’re going to discuss the two most common.

The Muse is MIA

It happens. You’re excited about the book, but then the wellspring of ideas dries up. Or, as a fellow author says, there’s nothing in the well but kitty litter. Not good. So, what do you do?

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TAKE TIME OUT
  • Take time out. Step away from the computer, leave your office or writing space, and do something totally different. Go for a walk; read a book; watch a favorite movie. Your goal here is to let your subconscious work while the rest of you plays.
  • Talk to the animals. This is the time to find a confidante who won’t talk back to you, who won’t offer suggestions. While you’re grooming your dog or petting your cat, explain the problem. Tell it what’s happening in the book and what isn’t happening. Note: you need to be talking aloud, not simply thinking. There’s probably some scientific explanation of why verbalizing a problem helps solve it; all I know is that it’s an effective technique. What do you do if you’re like me and don’t have a pet? Talk to an inanimate object. The key here is to have a non-judgmental audience that can’t walk away.
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Fur Baby

You’ve Received a Rejection

Again, this happens. I won’t sugarcoat it. Rejection hurts, and if you receive enough rejections, you may consider abandoning the whole idea of writing. Don’t do that.

I’ve been known to say there’s no problem so big that chocolate can’t fix it. That is admittedly an exaggeration, but it’s worth considering. While you’re bingeing on Godiva, I recommend the following:

  • Remember that grieving is a process. It’s only natural to grieve when you receive a rejection. After all, your story isn’t simply words stored in cyberspace. It’s part of you. Recognize that you’ll go through the same predictable stages as if you’d lost a loved one:
    • Shock
    • Anger
    • Resistance
    • Acceptance
    • Hope

Understanding the SARAH model can help you cope with your feelings and avoid damaging your future. Never, ever, ever respond to rejection when you’re still in Shock or Anger. It’s one thing to call someone in your personal support group and bemoan the sheer idiocy of the editor’s reaction to your story, quite another to vent those feelings to the editor.

  • Open your “what’s special about me” envelope. You have one of those, don’t you? If not, you need to start one right now. Every time someone compliments your writing, save the comment. It doesn’t have to be an effusive endorsement. It might be nothing more than, “That line of dialogue is terrific.” All that matters is that it’s a positive affirmation of you as a writer. Whether you keep a printed copy of the compliments or store them electronically isn’t important. What is important is to keep the affirmations readily accessible for those times when you need to be supported.

When You Reach “The End”

Eventually, if you’ve persisted, you’ll reach “The End,” and your manuscript will be complete. What’s next? I recommend the Two Cs.

  • Celebrations – Without a doubt, you should celebrate having finished your manuscript. This is the time to gather with your support groups and rejoice in the knowledge that you’ve accomplished something that’s only a dream for many others. You’ve finished a book. Wonderful, fabulous, spectacular. Time for fireworks, champagne, and another pound of Godiva.
  • Commencement – “The End” of a book should not be the end. Instead, once you’ve finished celebrating, it’s time to begin a new story. You’re a writer. You’ve proven that by reaching “The End.”

(c) 2019 Amanda Cabot

Amanda Cabot

Amanda Cabot is no stranger to getting to “The End.” She juggled a sixty-hour a week job with nonnegotiable deadlines and building a house long-distance at the same time that she wrote two books a year. Whether or not she kept her sanity during that time is debatable. Amanda is the best-selling author of over thirty novels, eight novellas, four non-fiction books, and what she describes as enough technical articles to cure insomnia in a medium-sized city.

Her most recent release is A Tender Hope, the third in the Cimarron Creek trilogy.

Amanda Cabot, Cimarron Creek Trilogy
A Tender Hope, by Amanda Cabot

You can find Amanda at:

www.amandacabot.com
https://www.facebook.com/amanda.j.cabot
https://twitter

Writers Beware of the Legal Pitfalls: Negligent Publication

Negligent publication is an issue unique to books that provide directions, instructions, self-help (especially medical), how-to information, and other guidance. Although a lot less common than suits for defamation and infringement, there are publishers who have been surprised by liability claims that they are liable because people were injured following advice published in their books.

Direction

Cases

Even though the First Amendment guaranty of freedom of the press makes it difficult for injured readers to hold publishers liable for their losses, cases such as these have been brought and occasionally won.

Soldier of Fortune

Perhaps you’ve heard of the notorious 1992 Soldier of Fortune case (more of an “unreasonable risk” case than an “ordinary negligence” case), where the family of a man murdered by a hired assassin obtained a $4 million verdict against Soldier of Fortune magazine for publishing the advertisement by which the assassin was hired.

Travel

Other cases less famous include: Fodor’s Travel Publications sued, unsuccessfully, for not warning readers of the dangerous surf conditions on a Hawaiian beach; G.P. Putnam’s was sued, unsuccessfully, for misidentification of a poisonous mushroom in its The Encyclopedia of Mushrooms, which caused two plaintiffs to become severely ill; and Rand McNally was sued, successfully, for publishing a science textbook that contained an experiment that seriously injured a student.

Good Practice
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Karen the Newbie Squat Bicep Curl

As a matter of good practice, especially where you can’t eliminate risks (for example, you can’t guaranty that a person beginning an exercise
program described in your book won’t pull a muscle or have a heart attack), include conspicuous warnings that inform the reader of inherent risks and
disclaimers that deny your responsibility and require readers to be responsible for the results of their actions. If the notice is not just a scary warning, but truly smart advice (“check with your physician before beginning this or any other exercise regimen”), you can prevent problems from even occurring…the best defense of all.”

Please use this article as an educational resource only, it is not meant to provide legal advice.

(c) 2019 Karen Van Den Heuvel Fischer

The Christmas Pine: Pondering These Things in My Heart By Kathryn Ross

The glory of Lebanon shall come unto thee, the fir tree, the pine tree, and the box together, to beautify the place of my sanctuary; and I will make the place of my feet glorious.
Isaiah 60:13

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The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words by Kathryn Ross

Christmas past

I remember when Daddy brought home the Christmas tree each year. In those days, we’d never think of using a fake tree. We weren’t quite into the trendy silver trees with revolving multi-colored lights, either.

No. Mom and Dad would only have a real tree!

Christmas Tree Farm

Two weeks before Christmas we’d head to the tree lot and choose a nice full pine in just the right shape. Dad trimmed the base, dragged it through the front door into the living room, and secured it in the tree holder.

We had to wait for the lights to be strung and each bulb tested. But soon, we could begin opening all the ornament boxes and set to tree-trimming. We gently placed three or four silvery icicles on the branches and spaced out the colorful glass bulbs and home-made ornaments. Daddy made sure the tree-topper angel was in place. Together, as a family, we stood back to assess our festive work.

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The Beauty of the Christmas Tree

The beauty of this glorious work of nature, strung with man-made embellishments, immediately transformed the house. It cast a warm, restful glow throughout the living room—and our hearts. The pine scent’s restorative qualities alleviated stress and anxiety as it deodorized and freshened the entire house. With a deep breath, my whole body seemed rejuvenated and overflowing with a sense of great joy.

Our anticipation for Christmas Day increased as each morning passed with the comforting sight and scent of our wonderous Christmas tree. Mother kept it well-watered and checked the branches to be sure the greenery remained supple and soft. Tiny green needles peppering the carpet were easily removed with a daily vacuuming.

My favorite time to sit with the tree was in the evening. I’d turn all the lights off except for the glow of the bulbs on the tree. My once familiar home seemed entirely changed and beautified by its presence. Sitting in a chair facing the tree, breathing deep the healing properties of pine, and snuggling with my blanket or cat, the peace of the season permeated the sanctuary.

In these early days of my writing career, Christmas and its celebratory elements inspired me to wax poetic on the glory of the season. I still have my little green composition book from my childhood with neatly hand-written poems and short stories. Stirred by the delight, beauty, and sacred nature of mystery and wonder I felt deep inside, my words seemed to bubble forth from my spirit, ignited by His Spirit. 

Not that I understood such a truth then. In matured hindsight, I know these things now. I treasure them—as Mary—pondering them in my heart.

Christmas Present

I expect this is why the Hallmark Channel, in recent years, has become so popular with their nostalgic, romantic, guilty-pleasure Christmas movies we all love to joke about and binge watch—savoring every sappy moment of them. Their writers employ predictable cliché plots, lines, settings, and characters, and we don’t try to edit them. Only at Christmas could they get away with this, and we are happy to let them do so.

We all want to live in Hallmark Christmas villages with every small-town pleasure in kith and kin. Hallmark writers have tapped into a shared sense of wonder that Christmas bestows on young and old. But perhaps what they’ve tapped into is more akin to hunger—for the innocent, childlike, simple joys that Christmas awakens in our humanity. That restorative quality Christmas brings with it. We never want it to end.

I never want Christmas to end. Or my tree to leave.

But as in Christmases past, time marches on. Year after year, the big day comes and goes—followed by a week of family visiting. We see everyone’s trees and gifts—aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents. They pay a call to our home, too. Parties. Shopping. And counting the days before a new year supplants the old, and our Christmas respite is packed up in boxes until next time.

On New Year’s Day, the tree, which has brought us so much joy, is dismantled and removed to the trash pile, awaiting the garbage truck and its ultimate destination in the dump.

A sorrowful melancholy washes over me when I see disposed Christmas trees abandoned by the side of the road.

Even so, the pine scent lingers, and random needles might be stumbled upon in forgotten corners of the room in ensuing months. I may pause before vacuuming them up and cherish a transporting moment when I mentally return to my sanctuary in the glow of a glorious Christmas tree.

The Glory of Christmas

I’m glad we have seasons. There is a comfort in the repetition of precious moments throughout our lives. We hope that when Christmas comes around each year, we are grown a bit wiser and more able to appreciate the glory and beauty of the day. We hope we can better capture it in words on paper that may only ever be read by its writer—and the loving God Who so generously inspires our words with His Word made Flesh, dwelling among us.

Under the glow of the Christmas pine, I’m reading. I’m writing. I’m pondering things in my heart. Deep things shared with my Savior. I remember His birth and the beautification of the pine tree trimmed in lights and ornament remnants of lives lived from year to year.

A tree that was planted purposely for this job. Lived its allotted number of years. Was chopped down, to die. And then raised up in my home, alive again in a more glorious manner than before, transforming the entire atmosphere of my home with a newness of life.

It is a metaphor of Jesus Christ—His birth, life, death, resurrection, and the transformed life He lives in the home of my heart. Like the healing scent of pine, He vanquishes stress and anxiety, deodorizes and freshens the atmosphere of my life—beautifying the place of my sanctuary—and rejuvenates me with an overflowing sense of great joy, a glorious place for His feet to rest.

Be ye blessed this Christmas as you ponder—and write—about these truths in your own life.

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The Write Spice: Writing Tips for Flavorful Words By Kathryn Ross

Writer-speaker, Kathryn Ross, ignites a love of literature and learning through Pageant Wagon Publishing. She writes and publishes homeschool enrichment and Christian living books for home, church, and school. In addition, she shepherds writers through the steps book development and production. Her passion to equip women and families in developing a Family Literacy Lifestyle, produces readers and thinkers who can engage the world from a biblical worldview. She blogs and podcasts at TheWritersReverie.com and PageantWagonPublishing.com. Connect with Miss Kathy on Facebook.

Publish Don’t Perish — Tip #2: Never Give Up!

If writing is your passion, never give up! So many things may get in the way — time or the lack of it, discouragement, the need to earn a living, life …. The list goes on and on, especially if your goal is to be published by a traditional publisher. Your support group can provide you with the extra push you may need for Tip #2 — Never give up!

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The Author Toolbox

Candee Fick talked about the time issue in her article, So Little Time to Conquer this Mountain where she shares her tips and strategies in her busy life and offers a very helpful tool, The Author Toolbox. This article is about perseverance, keeping that goal in sight so that we never give up.

As writers, we all deal with discouragement whether we are trying to get published, or are already successfully published. Our journeys may be different, but the difficulties are similar if not the same. In today’s publishing industry, the age of the ebook and ease at which someone can get published independently has changed the course of the industry.

Why do we write? For me, it’s a passion for story. There is a story I can’t get out of my mind until I put it on paper. That’s how Hidden Bloodlines started — it was a story that perpetuated itself for two years before I attended my first writers conference in Estes Park, Colorado. As an attorney and dietitian with multiple articles and one published nonfiction book, writing was my life, but my passion was fiction — a story to share. However, I quickly learned that writing fiction is a totally different “animal” than nonfiction. It is a different art and it was important that I learn the craft. Future articles in the Publish Don’t Perish Series will talk about this craft and how to achieve the necessary skills for success.

NEVER GIVE UP!

For those interested in becoming published by a traditional publishing house, the road may be long and bumpy with uncertain forks. For those who don’t want to wait the years most likely involved with a traditional publisher, you may want to go the Indy way. Regardless of which avenue you choose, when you reach that publication goal , it doesn’t end. There are millions of books out there and you may ask, “How will anyone find me? Can I make a living writing? How successful can I be? Is it even worth it?” The Publish Don’t Perish Series in Thyme for Writers will help you discern the path that’s right for you. It will hopefully answer your many questions and help you avoid time consuming mistakes. I for one made mistakes that cost me years. Keep your eyes open for future posts that will steer you clear of these mistakes and make your road smoother. Remember, Tip #2 is critical — NEVER GIVE UP!

What is getting in your way of writing?

(c) 2019 Karen Van Den Heuvel Fischer