Writers in the Storm

A blog about writing

storm moving across a field
May 29, 2019

One Random "Yes"

Tiffany Yates Martin

Hello, dedicated author of great worth. Yes, you.

I already know these things about you—I know many things about you, actually. I know that you have a story to tell—lots of them, most likely. I know that you care passionately about your craft. I know that you love words, and language, and the magic of creating new worlds and new people who didn’t exist anywhere outside your head until you gave them the spark of life and brought them into the world. I also know that you care about other people, and part of wanting to share your stories with readers is because these ideas that live so vividly in your head entertain and affect and move you, and you want to share those experiences with others, to connect through the holy, transformative medium of story.

I know these things because you are reading a blog like this. Because when you aren’t immersing yourself in all things writerly, you are writing, or thinking about writing, or maybe just dreaming about writing, a bass note of longing that underlies the melodies of all your days. I know it because you carve out time from your already packed schedule to sit alone in a room or a coffee shop or a hidden corner of your house and you painstakingly put words on the page, looking to give voice to all the ideas and pictures and populace teeming in your head, to actualize your magnificent vision. I know it because most days you probably feel as if somehow you’ve fallen short, that what appears on the page lacks the depth and scope and impact of your grand mental version. But you try again, and again, and again, and some days you even marvel at what you have wrought, thinking you are finally getting the hang of this ephemeral art. Until you reread those same pages the next day and wonder who the hell you were kidding, thinking you had something to say and the talent to say it.

If I—a total stranger to many of you—already know all these things about you, then surely you must know them at an unshakable soul-deep level that nourishes and sustains you in the endless vicissitudes of the creative life—the ups and downs, the voluminous rejections, the painful silences of being lost in the slush pile, the long wait for an agent or publication or the sales of your dreams. Yes?

What, no?

You have chosen a difficult road—the path of the creative always is. Your confidence and self-esteem will probably travel a violent sine wave of highs and lows. You’ll struggle with motivation. Well-meaning family and friends may ask you why you put yourself through so much suffering for a pursuit where you have such a minuscule chance of “success,” as they (and perhaps you) define it. Beta readers and crit partners may slam on your beautiful baby and make your pride in your work feel foolish. Your editor may return your finally-anointed, soon-to-be-published manuscript with pages of notes and daunting stacks of comments in Track Changes. Even in the industries that reap great rewards from artists’ output, with a few headline-catching exceptions the person with the least influence and the least direct benefit from it is the creator.

This business can be so harsh--you can create the most magnificent piece on the planet and still not find a publishing home for it (some of the best and most original stories I’ve ever worked on were ultimately rejected by agents and publishers). The industry is driven almost entirely by marketing departments these days, and what they believe will sell doesn't always have any bearing on what's great storytelling and writing.

In exchange for digging deep into your most vulnerable soul and bravely sharing what you may find there, you will receive countless painful rejection letters (which you probably have counted, actually) or perhaps worse, indifference; you will endure long stretches of waiting to be chosen: by an agent, by a publisher, by review sites and publications, by the readers who can put you on the coveted New York Times bestseller list.

Here is the open secret that somehow doesn’t often register with artists as they wait to be chosen so their “real careers” can begin: When you get the “yes” it is utterly random.

You hit the right editor on the right day in the right market. Or an agent plowing diligently through her slush pile stumbled onto your manuscript at the very moment she was in the right frame of mind and the right mood looking for your very genre. Or some constellation of coincidence and luck and perhaps contacts got you the right review in the right publication that made your book take off.

So much of all of this is arbitrary, friends. Your writing has no more nor less worth on the day after all that magic happens than it did on the day before. That’s not to denigrate your talent, your hard work, your originality, the scintillating power of the gorgeous story you created. But it could’ve been you—or it could have been a thousand other authors and manuscripts, depending on a myriad of utterly random factors over which none of us has any control.

Considering that perhaps depressing reality, how is a writer supposed to carry on?

You have a superpower. In all of this, there is in fact a magical wellspring to which you can perpetually return, a holy font of fortitude—a single constant, one source of inspiration and support and dauntlessness: you, worthy author. You choose you.

Choose yourself and your craft—every single day, every single moment. Surround yourself with what helps nourish and strengthen you for the difficult moments—that same eternally fertile seedbed you draw on when your child is devastated or defeated, when your significant other or your dearest friends or family face crises and self-doubts and pain. Hold yourself, as the yogis say, in the highest possible regard. You don’t need to wait for validation: you have arrived already. Every day you dedicate time to your creative art, you have added something precious and unique to the world: your story, your voice, your “right effort,” to quote the Buddhists.

Find ways to stoke your own creative fires even when they begin to bank. I promise you that your writing has worth—you have worth. If you have kids (or pets!), sometimes it can help to think of your writing as a child—you'd never give up on that kid, even if everyone else on earth kept rejecting her. You'd always believe in her.

I'm not trying to make this sound easier than it is—I know firsthand how it feels when your self-worth flags and you wonder what the hell you were thinking trying to have a career with words. But this is the most normal thing I know about writing—the most universal, sadly: that writers seesaw between utter delight in the craft and their efforts and utter despair. I think it's the price of getting to live a creative life. So for what it's worth, if it helps, what you may be feeling is very, very normal. You are normal, cherished author.

Surround yourself with your people—creative souls like you who understand the capriciousness of inspiration and conviction. Find the “helpers,” as Mr. Rogers says—those people who believe in you and remind you to do the same when your resolve flags.

But more than that, find the champion, the warrior, inside you—the one person who will always, always be there for you. Read Jennifer Weiner's story about getting her first novel, Good in Bed, published—every publisher either passed because her heroine was overweight or asked her to make her skinny—and Weiner refused, knowing there was a readership for a plus-size heroine. And she started a whole movement in books. Read Big Magic, by Elizabeth Gilbert, which addresses the challenges of creative life in such a lovely and inspirational way. Read Brenda Ueland's beautiful paean to creativity, If You Want to Write. Books like these will nourish your creative core. Watch Waiting for my Real Life to Begin, the documentary about former Men at Work frontman Colin Hay, a moving portrait of artistic self-sustenance even in the face of failure. Listen to these uplifting lyrics from James Taylor! The chorus fills my soul.

I often ask writers this question: If someone told you right now that you would never, ever be published, that what you were doing with your writing now was all you would ever do, would you stop?

I hope you get your random “yes,” author friend. I hope the picture of your success that you’ve cherished for years comes to pass just as you always dreamed. But if…! If it doesn’t, here’s my most heartfelt hope for you: that you will come to the end of your days with nothing but fulfillment and gratitude for your life because you were brave enough, true enough to your deepest soul to follow a creative path, rocky and uneven and even solitary as it may have been. Not everyone holds on to that holy creative spark we’re all born with, and what an inestimable loss that is for our spirit.

Tiffany Yates Martin is privileged to help authors tell their stories as effectively, compellingly, and truthfully as possible. In more than 25 years in the publishing industry, she’s worked both with major publishing houses and directly with authors (through her company FoxPrint Editorial), on titles by New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal bestsellers and award winners as well as newer authors. She presents editing and writing workshops for writers’ groups, organizations, and conferences and writes for numerous writers’ sites and publications.

34 comments on “One Random "Yes"”

  1. This is a lovely piece, and I really appreciate the way Tiffany has named the fact that "success" is random. That can be both distressing and comforting, because it reminds us that there is an essential element that is beyond our control. At the same time, of course, we still have to do everything we can! It reminds me of job-hunting. You have to purse every lead, try absolutely everything you can, yet nothing works out ... and then the job appears from an unexpected source. So many things in life seem to work that way! Yet (to me) there is a danger in focusing too much on this thing called "success." Yes, we have to "believe in ourselves" in the face of the daunting odds and a pretty broken publishing system. But (in my view) we need to define "success" much more broadly and deeply than external validation. It's complex, and I guess each of us has to find our own sweet spot between "I write only for myself" and "I really want to be known and acclaimed." Both/and, whose proportions are always in flux!

    1. What a great way to describe it, Barbara! That's exactly what I was getting at--I think we won't be really happy as creatives until we know what success looks like for us, on our terms--because so much of it is out of our control.

  2. Thank you Tiffany, this post is uplifting and inspiring.We, the writing community are likely aware of the points you make but don't always apply them to ourselves (me!). For my "sweet spot:" FIRST, I do write for myself because I enjoy what I create. I am a constant "what if" person and love finding the answer by writing it. Hence a new story line. SECOND: I will delight in any success as a published author I'm fortunate to achieve...frosting on the cake of enjoying what you do.

  3. Ah, a literary Golden Retriever, just like me! I would write even if there was no chance of publication, but I sure love publishing! Thanks for this, Tiffany.

    1. Ha! Literary golden retriever! 😀 Agreed--publishing is a wonderful way to bring your art to readers, but there are so many more ways to do that than just the traditional path. Although if that's what an author wants, more power to them--as long as getting or not getting it is not defining how we feel about ourselves and our art. It's that artificial external definition of our worth that I think is so damaging to our spirits.

  4. Hi! Yes. And thank you. I’m off to dust off the old James Taylor cds. He’ll be an excellent companion for my character, for my soul.

  5. Tiffany, thanks! Yes, there certainly is a random element to success. It's important to recognize that and in many ways embrace it. If you roll the dice often enough, a winning number will come up. Maybe not the first one you thought of, but some kind of win. Maybe only the gratitude for doing something you love, but that's enough.

    1. I just heard author John Gilstrap, in a wonderful keynote speech, say that there was no such thing as failure until you quit. I loved that. Thanks for the comment, James.

      1. Oooh, Tiffany, you reminded me. I think Winston Churchill said something like that. if i find it I'll send if on. If memory serves it's a great quote.

  6. This was inspiring. Thank you for writing it.

    (And I've read Good in Bed, which was brilliant and couldn't possibly have been the same story without an over-weight heroine)

    1. Thanks for saying that--it means a lot. I loved that book too, and I totally agree. And I love her belief in the story she was telling even when everything in the market told her to change it.

  7. Wow, i needed to read this and have this reminder. When you’ve hoped and worked at something for so long and often times feeling alone while you were doing it, it helps to get encouragement and to know many face the same doubts and struggles. Thank you.

    1. This can be SUCH an isolating craft, true. Another reason it matters so much that we find our "people." I'm so glad the post helped, Martha--hang in there! I mentioned in another comment that author John Gilstrap recently said in a keynote speech that there was no such thing as failure until we quit, and I loved that.

  8. Although I'm working "on a roll" right now, I know I'll need this later, when I cycle around "my track" again. Thank you for a thoughtful article, Tiffany. I remember the day I finally realized that getting a manuscript to the right person at the right time was the way to get that big break in publishing. Not counting on that miracle. Head down, working.

    1. Yes, the slog! 😀 Thrilled to hear you're in one of the peaks right now, Fae--but yeah, I think knowing the valleys inexorably come helps us to be at least ready for them.

  9. this was beautiful and something I can relate to on every level. However one point I would like to make is this, I write because I can and I do not for fame or fortune or to have a name niched out for others to read and wow them with. I am a strange writer who just writes stories for me and because I love to write simple as that. I write everyday and never stop. I do take refresher breaks though a few times a week to get better ideas for my novels. writing is my therapy for those times when the things in life get hard and tough and it allows me to put my emotions into words that help to heal me and soothe the wounds that can occur. I also write from the heart and soul of me to others who need some words of encouragement, uplifting and pure love that they might need at a difficult time in thier lives at that moment. so I have published three novels in a triology and though it might never make the New York's best seller list I am proud of it, because I had a goal to get published and have my writing on book cover and see it published and I did it and that was what my goal was entirely from the start of those books to the end of them. It was the best thing I had ever done and accomplished something I had always dreamed of doing. I also had kept a promise to a teacher who encouraged my writing from the age of ten who passed away before I hit high school, she always was my best supporter in life and whose opinion mattered the most.to me besides my Aunt who also encouraged my dream. when they died the passion continued and I made them both proud the day I received my books in print and saw my name on them and ever since that dream came true, my writing has changed somewhat but I learned a valuable lesson through it. those who said I couldn't do it were proven wrong and my proof was there in book form to contradict them. I could write and publish more novels if I so chose to because I have eleven novels written and saved on a disc, and am working on another one now, but I write for me and my pleasure of writing and spinning new stories that I love best to write. if they ever got picked up by an agent or publisher and wanted them to be published I wouldn't say no but I wouldn't be as happy as I am just writing for me and those I love who love to read it because they have learned to appreciate and value what I do and can't wait to see what I come up with next. just had to put this out there. not sure if it pertains to what you just wrote here but wanted to add my two cents so to speak to a fellow writer. I have a very high respect for writers period of any kind and style and love to let them know they are valued and appreciated. thank you.

    1. That's lovely, Michelle! Sounds like you're already there, as far as defining success on your own terms and taking ownership of your writing career. Congrats on your novels, and all those WIPs! Thanks for the comment.

  10. So much truth here. I somehow landed my dream agent a few years back, and to this day I wonder how that happened. That said, I'm still waiting for yeses in other areas. I appreciate your beautiful encouragement!

    1. How wonderful about your agent--it's such a blessing to have a team, allies. But we're ALL waiting for yeses, aren't we? That will be the title of my autobiography. 🙂 Thanks for the comment, Julie.

  11. This post brought me such peace and motivation all at once. It is nice to just have the reminder that someone else gets it and that you just have to keep pushing through. Great post!

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