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This week: Impostor Syndrome and Other Afflictions Edited by: Jeff More Newsletters By This Editor
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"The two most engaging powers of an author are to make
new things familiar, and to make familiar things new."
-- Samuel Johnson
Trivia of the Week: Michael J. Sullivan is one of the most successful authors who got their start in self-publishing. His three different series have all been picked up by traditional publishers, translated into fourteen languages, and resulted in the creation of his own small press to publish his books. It's been said that he started writing books in order to help his daughter (who suffers from dyslexia) learn how to read. |
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IMPOSTOR SYNDROME AND OTHER AFFLICTIONS
Writers, as creative individuals, have a certain amount of subjectivity present in their work. It's not like we're accountants adding up bank balances, or assembly line workers who make a certain number of widgets per hour. The value of our work is determined by an audience's subjective opinion rather than an objective need. As a result, a writer's mental state plays a big part in the content creation process, and there are a wide variety of afflictions that, while technically applicable to anyone, most often find themselves at home in creative individuals who have to make concrete decisions out of a multitude of possibilities, and hope that the audience responds favorably.
Impostor Syndrome is the phenomenon by which otherwise successful or high-achieving individuals have trouble internalizing accomplishments, often resulting in a fear that they will be exposed as a fraud, despite all external evidence of their competence. Examples of writers suffering from Impostor Syndrome include authors with a successful first story who then can't seem to finish a second for fear of not living up to their original success, or a writer who has a track record of consistently turning out well-received, quality stories who still convinced themselves that every new piece of writing isn't any good.
Procrastination is the avoidance of doing something that needs to be done, and is probably the most familiar to us as writers. Writing is hard work. Coming up with compelling characters and figuring out the narratives those characters are caught up in requires an enormous amount of thinking, contemplation, and tough decision-making. On days where the words aren't coming easily, it can be incredibly tempting to come up with something else - anything else - to do other than sitting in that chair and putting words on that page or screen.
Writer's Block is the inability to produce new work or think creatively. Brought on for a variety of reasons, when writer's block strikes it can completely cripple a writer's creative output because the words and ideas just aren't flowing... and without those creative options, there's nothing to write.
Over-sensitivity is a serious problem for anyone who puts their heart and soul into their work. Not every audience member or potential audience member is going to see the hard work a writer puts into those words on the page. Not everyone is going to likes the ideas or execution the writer presents. And not everyone is going to be particularly considerate of a writer's feelings when expressing how they feel about a story or a character, or separating your work from you personally as a writer.
Popular advice for dealing with these afflictions is often something brusque like, "It's all in your head" followed by "just push through it" or "the only thing stopping you is you." And, unfortunately, that's not terribly helpful for a creative mind that's struggling with something like this. No matter how rationally we look at a situation or tell ourselves that we shouldn't be feeling the way we feel, our emotions are valid and can get in the way of our writing productivity.
The most important thing you can do when you find yourself in a situation where one of these afflictions is pulling at your emotions is, first and foremost, to recognize it. For some writers, it's enough to call it what it is. "I'm just procrastinating. I need to get back to work." If that tactic doesn't work, find a support system that can talk you through it whether they be other writers, a significant other, a fan, or anyone else. If you're feeling the pangs of Impostor Syndrome, sometimes all it takes is someone saying, "You're not a fraud. That's just self doubt talking. You're a talented writer."
The idea of affirmation can be a tricky one for a lot of people, because it feels self-centered and aggressively egotistical for someone to talk about how great they are. But affirmations work, and they needn't be self-aggrandizing. Just acknowledging that you have talent and your work has value might be enough to inspire you to keep writing and finish that book, that chapter, or even that paragraph.
Don't let these challenges (or any others) get in the way of accomplishing your goals. Recognize the pitfalls and take steps to avoid them so that you don't stall out on the road to achieving your goals.
Until next time,
Jeff
If you're interested in checking out my work:
"Blogocentric Formulations"
"New & Noteworthy Things"
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EXCERPT: He looked carefully at the man in the mirror: steel-colored eyes, weathered face, black hair with more than a touch of gray…
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