I am getting ready to submit a short story to a competition and pitch my YA manuscript to publishers. Although I've mostly got over the crippling fear of submitting, I still get an oh-my-god-what-am-I-doing rush when I hit send. Each time a rejection comes back in I remind myself that many p
ublished novelists were rejected multiple times (It's an interesting list, but I take no responsibility to the writing).
I have a magic number of rejections in my head, after which I'll get contracted. I know it's a delusion, but it keeps me going. I have recently struck on another tool to get me through rejections – this short story competition and pitching my latest manuscript will be the test. When (I can't even say "if" anymore) these get rejected, I'm going to invest in a mentor. I will go to my local Writers Centre and sign up for a writing mentorship program. I'm pretty excited about it and that will hopefully cushion me through this round of rejections. It has the added bonus of being a pro-active approach to reducing further rejections too, I hope.
Maybe this technique could get me through other undesirable events: I'm putting off making a dentist appointment – after I go, I can buy a bottle of wine (and drink it). I don't like mopping the floor – after I do, I get to sit down with a chocolate and a book.
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