Showing posts with label goals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goals. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Setting Writing Goals




I've been blogging about how to write in a more literary fashion, though this post is more general.  'Tis the season most people set goals for the next year.  Many of us forget about them soon after, but a goal not written, as they say, is just a dream.  If you write your goals where you can see them and refer to them often, you're more likely to keep them.


A lot of people have heard about SMART goals, goals that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound.  SMART goals can help one achieve many things in life, but they may be particularly useful for writers.  For instance, if you simply want to get around to writing and just never find the time, sit down and write a goal right now, something alone the lines of "I will write poetry every day at 9 am for 30 minutes/5 pages/whatever for the entire year."  This goal specifically names what you'll write, is measurable, achievable (most days), relevant to a poet's career, and time-bound.


Say, you have a pile of writing already but need to edit, as I do.  Then, you may set the goal to edit your short stories for an hour every day at 10 pm for a month or until they are done.  If you need help with editing but don't have a writers' group yet, you may write that you will find a writers' group that works online by the end of the month by researching and talking to fellow writers.  Alternatively, you may set a goal to create your own writers' group by the end of the month then set out a plan to do it.


You may have a pile of writing you have already vetted through a writers' group and have already edited.  You may set goals to create a writers' platform (including a webpage, an email, a blog, a FaceBook page, a Twitter account, and any other social media platforms you can find).  Research how to do that and set a goal.  It's always a good idea for any beginning writer.  Then, you can tell an editor/publisher/agent you have a platform and a following.  In a blog soon, I'll be writing about how I went about doing this.  It would also be a good idea to set SMART goals about actually sending your materials out to agents or publishers as well, something along the lines of "I will send one short story per week out to a publisher."  I will also talk about this process as well.



Whatever your aim, you can focus better, know exactly what your plan is, and follow that plan through SMART or other kinds of goals.  But it's not a goal until you write it down.  Don't overwhelm yourself with too many goals, or you'll just get frustrated and walk away.  Go ahead and set 1-3 right now as a next step to achieving your dreams.

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Fulfillment



For the last year and a half, I have been working on the first novel of a sort of LDS romance trilogy, a tag team novel that starts with After the dream and is about Julia and Pedro, who discover that the illusion of happily ever after doesn't last and then have to pick up the pieces and start anew.  The next one will feature one of the major characters from the first one and will be called Pigs Fly.  It's about Connor, a man who decides he will only marry when pigs fly, then he meets a female pilot with a pet pig.  The third, Drama's Queen, features Connor's mentor, Gayle, who is a woman in her late fifties/early sixties and has decided since romance has never worked out for her, she only ever needs to worry about taking care of her elderly mother and running a community theater.  Then a man comes along to complicate things.

I have been wanting to get properly published in a popular market for as long as I can remember.  I have children's books and other short pieces to send out, but it always feels like pressing things get in the way of moving forward on my dream.  There is no satisfaction like seeing that email that publishers have received your manuscript after a lifetime of wanting that.  Of course, it will be better yet when I get an acceptance.  But that email ranked among the best Christmas presents I've ever had.  It means I followed through on a commitment to myself at long last.  Now, to push forward with the next.

I hope everyone who reads this had a wonderful Christmas season.