The newspaper had a special section yesterday about the new
economy, particularly about jobs, getting them, keeping them, creating them. I
almost didn’t read it. It didn’t seem particularly valid for my situation,
other than as help for my sons and when did they ever listen to me? After all,
I’ve never had a ‘real’ job. I’m ‘retired.’ And I seek to be published, not
hired. (Surprisingly similar things, but like I said, when have they ever
listened to me? I could be sexist and say, hey, they’re men, or…and moms of
boys will understand, say, hey, they’re boys, or I could say, hey, I’m just
mom.)
They’re right, I worked at a pet shop before I was married
and cleaned a theater for several months when my husband was laid off one
winter. And gosh, a pet shop is mostly fun, isn’t it? Well, yes and no. Loved
interacting with the animals. I was good at it. But lessons are learned: Puppies,
kitties, and various other pets poop. A lot. And back then, we had puppies,
kitties, and various other pets as the product we sold, and in the pet shop
world then, product died. It was a hard fact for someone like me to learn and
cope with.
Hey, for my career class, my chosen careers where Veterinarian
or novel writer. I was told women are not accepted at Veterinarian Colleges and
you can’t make a living writing books unless you’re a journalist. Yes, it was
the dark ages and yes, the thing about novel writing is still true unless you’re
Nora Roberts or Steven King or really, really lucky.
The theater was just a big house where everyone was partying,
and what on earth are people doing in a public theater anyway? You would not
believe what I found hanging around the seating area. Seriously, folks?
I digress. I found three surprisingly valid articles for me,
a novel writer. Will any of it guarantee I’ll be published? No more than it
guarantees anyone else will get a job, but it’s a good thing to pack in your
backpack and carry with you no matter which you want.
From one article was about improving yourself and your
skills continuously. My take away for every day.
·
Learn something new for your writing.
·
Devote at least 15 minutes every day learning or
improving a skill you use in your writing.
·
Learn a new word, its meaning and use.
·
Read a writer’s magazine, at least one article.
From another:
·
Find and nurture support. This can be a
challenge if you don’t run into other writers in your day to day or you can’t
attend meetings or such. I’m in that situations. Thank goodness for the
internet. There are friendly writers and many, many support groups. That leads
to the challenge of how you spend your time on the internet. Be strong.
·
Plan your writing day. Have goals, whether in
time, words, whatever. Meet them, exceed them, raise them.
·
Broaden your skills and update them.
·
Work on your bio. Read it and try to add to it.
·
Attend workshops, seminars; buy DVD’s, whatever
to help your writing skills.
Third article:
·
Reading, therefore writing is in a flux right
now. Keep up.(Are you sensing a theme or repeated point here?)
·
Change with the times while holding to the core
of good writing.
·
Remember, things go on whether the economy slows
or not. People will read. They’ll want fresh, great reads no matter how it’s
delivered. So the focus has to be on the writing.
·
No job, no business is easy. Problems will come
and those that stay around adapt and embrace change
·
Smile. Enjoy what you’re doing. Fall in love
with it. Every day.
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