Kendra Bonnett--Getting Read #9
See that little tree growing out of the tiniest crack in an otherwise solid rock surface. We marvel. What enables that sole plant to succeed? We can't help but anthropomorphize it and admire its tenacity when, in fact, it's just doing what nature has always done...persevering. A seed finds an opening and takes full advantage.
See that successful painter, photographer, playwright, novelist, poet...author. Again we marvel. Those of us in the arts know just how rarified is the air the great ones breathe. There are awards, great reviews, lucrative book deals, bestseller bragging rights up for grabs. We aspire. We dream. But what does it really take for us to succeed?
Matilda and I had the opportunity to ask Sue William Silverman this very question. We interviewed her as part of our
Women's Memoirs Author Conversations series, and I invite you to take a little time to listen. Sue is the author of two, successful memoirs; a new book on the craft of writing; a poetry collection; and countless essays. Her response, in a nutshell, is "be tenacious." From her writer perspective, she advises us not to be afraid, never give up, and don't worry about failing. It's all part of the process.
From her author-as-marketer perspective, the answer is much the same: Yes it takes some skill and a little luck (e.g., finding the right publisher and agent can help), but above all else it's a matter of showing up every day, writing and not getting discouraged. "Everybody in the arts gets rejected," she adds, "if you're putting yourself out there." So be tenacious, and never stop believing in yourself.
Could it be that simple, you ask? Simple? Yes, I think so. Easy, no. The hardest thing is to keep charging forward in the face of disinterest or outright rejection. But that's what the great ones all have in common. Have you ever heard the saying, My overnight success was 20 years in the making?
Be tenacious today...and every day going forward. And remember the words of American author and wit Margaret Halsey: "Bulldogs have been known to fall on their swords when confronted by my superior tenacity."
Sue's comments got me thinking about blogging success. Increasingly authors are using blogs as part of their marketing effort to reach audiences through the Internet. If you've tried it, you know how hard it is to keep writing and posting on a regular schedule. It takes tenacity to keep coming up with ideas and finding time away from your job, your chores and your other writing to pound out a blog. But the hardest part of blogging is overcoming the apparent loneliness. Write for weeks on end without a single reader comment and you're ready to scream, "Is anybody there?"
I want to leave you with some hope and a reminder that you're always being read, whether or not you ever see a reader comment. When it comes to the Internet, your biggest (and most important) reader is Google. It's the fact that Google is reading your blogs that gradually builds your prominence in the search engines. So be tenacious and keep writing and blogging. Google's waiting for your words. And take courage from Amelia Earhart: "The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity."
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