I wasn’t going to blog. At least not for quite some time. Sometimes I do
wonder about it, all these words endlessly, pointlessly spewing. I decided to shut the fuck up. But then – ho ho – I got a direct message:
Just out of interest, have you ever done a blog on
the fear of rejection? Sep
30, 7:56 AM.
Have I? No, I
don’t think so, not directly. I answered
– but didn’t get a reply. So I figured
maybe I should. Write a post, that is. Cos I know a lot of people who seem to let the R
word drag them down, stop them reaching for the stars.
I dunno. As a freelance journalist, rejection is so
familiar, it could be my mother, sister and aunt all rolled into one. You pitch ideas – they’re turned down.
Sometimes you don’t even get an email saying ‘no thank you.’ As a book writer,
you get it in shedloads too. I have
files upon files on my PC of unpublished books – proposals lovingly worked and
reworked; some progressed into chapters over weeks, months. Only to be rejected. It’s par for the course. You have to keep trying; you can’t always
expect to get it right first time. Sometimes you look back and you think,
‘Yeah, that really was shit; what the bejesus was I thinking?’.
Sometimes you look back and think ‘Feck, that was fabulous; why didn’t
it sell?’
Funny thing; the ones that really get me, time and
again, are the ‘nice’ rejections, as my agent calls them. I’ve had a bucket of those for Samael, my YA
novel. The ones that go on about how
wonderful the writing is, how gripping the plot, how different and
exciting…blah blah..except…there’s always an except. And a rejection, however nice, is always a
rejection. Except…hmm…not always. ‘If
you ever rework this, do let me have another look.’ And, yeah, sometimes you need to rework; to
shift things slightly and then try again.
What do you learn from it? Bottom line? Keep trying. If it’s worthwhile, don’t give up. You have to be honest with yourself. Maybe it isn’t right, maybe something needs to be
changed, to shift. Or maybe the timing is wrong. Or maybe – hey - it’s just bad
luck, Fate, the malign universe, whatever.
But you have to keep trying. I know a writer who won’t submit his work
because he’s scared of being rejected.
Well, okay, his approach means he won’t be rejected but he sure as hell
won’t be published either, will he? It’s
like the lottery – the odds may be high but if you’re not in it, you sure as
hell can’t win it, can you?
But I suspect my shy DM friend isn’t thinking about
work. I imagine she’s thinking about
relationships. And, ah, that is slightly
different. But, come to think of it, not
that different. Fear of rejection is,
bottom line, fear of losing face, right?
And, honestly, is it so very awful if you lose your face? What is a face after all? A construct, a mask we present to the world.
Is it the *real* us? No.
People bang on a lot about relationships. About ‘the
rules’ and so on. About having to ‘play the game’ - like a relationship is a
game of chess. And, on some levels, yes it is…(who was it that said it was
actually war – was it Ovid? And, of course, chess is civilised war) but you
have to start playing in the first place.
If you don’t lay your pieces on the board, you ain’t going
nowhere…except back to Spider Solitaire.
So, to those who fear rejection, I would
say…don’t. Embrace the possibility.
What’s the best that can happen? The
other person will say ‘Yes!’ What’s the
worst that can happen? The other person
will say ‘No.’ And then you will either lick your wounds and move on, or wait and try again.
I wrote this a few days ago but this morning I
was thinking about it again and wondering if this post would be any way helpful
to my shy querent. So I thought I’d ask my oracles for some clarification. iPod
oracle said this: except, hmm, it's not on YouTube... and this...and, grrr, neither is Kathryn Williams, Up North.
But this is:
"Does it really matter,
As long as you're not afraid to feel?"
And that's the bottom line, really. You have to feel. Or you're dead.
13 comments:
I love losing my face. A most favourite way being to have it bitten off. :o)
Well, the sides of your room may be covered, wall to wall, with rejection slips, but you haven't quit. Which is the important thing. Didn't Edison find a thousand things that didn't work before he perfected the light bulb?
Good for you to say what you said. And to keep going yourself.
Blessings and Bear hugs.
Marek: Yeah, I've kinda gotten used to it now too.. :)
Bear: You have no idea how close I came...how close I come...but bless you.. xx
When I first started this writing lark, I got my first rejection via e-mail within an hour of it being sent. It was a custom rejection though, which made me at least take comfort in the fact that someone had bothered to read the full proposal. It can get demoralizing sometimes but publishers at the moment are only putting out what they know will definitely make them boat loads of money.
One thing to bear in mind (or steel yourself for) is the possibility of your work, once published, being not so well received by the public. That would be worse than private rejections by agents and publishers I think.
As you say, if you don't try, you'll never find out. Demonstrate your stickability, all the time! It gets a mite easier to accept each time - whether it's publishing, relationships or whatever. Beside, if everything worked, you'd never have time to try something new, would you?
Thanks for this, really struck a chord! I have rejection 'letters' piling up and trying not to let it bother me... Like you say, at leaast I'm feeling something.
I've linked a post about rejection as a blogger to this one, hope you don't mind. Love your encouragement in this post and wanted to add special encouragement specifically for bloggers. Vx
Great post, Jane. I used to feel worried about rejection when I first submitted DAR, but realised it was just par for the course, and if nothing else, it was experience.
Now I'll be trying again with my next book and I'll wait for the rejections to roll in. I think what I hate most is when one spends a long time over a submission getting is just right, following all the rules and going to great lengths to get the right spelling of the editor or whoever you need to submit to, then you hear nothing back. Yes, that really gets my back up!
CJ xx
Beagle Oracle Rocks. There is no other Oracle to hold a light to him. And I think you're right about rejection. And sometimes it's the other way round - I reject something because of the idea that I might lose face because the object of my desire (obv am talking about a chap) doesn't measure up in some way. Am having this currently (and working with it). Chap on dating website got in touch. He can't spell for yumcious toffee. This would normally have me running for the hills and rejecting him (I think this is something to do with thinking that the man of my dreams has to be able to spell to show off to my friends that he's intelligent - wtf?) but I decided not to (reject him out of hand, that is). To see where it goes. And you know what? He's funny and his second email acknowledged (without prompting) his bad spelling. No big deal. No fuss. Lesson learned (for this ten mins).
Needed to read this today. Been getting marginally pissed off recently with being constantly ignored by editors after pitching ideas (or even completed commissions!). But rejection is part of the process. However, I don't feel it's getting any easier.
I figure rejections are the karmic way of preparing you for the right acception. Who needs those nay-sayers? Hang in there, because the right one's waiting.
This all stems back to the 'why do I write?' question. Is it to release emotions; get it off your chest, or is it a search for acceptance? If it's the latter, then rejection will always hit harder to take. I write poetry pieces to release pent up frustrations and emotions. I've never really intended to publish them, even though my family keep nudging me to. Thoughts on a sleeve, rather than heart will always give writers somewhere to start.
NTS: it always pays to proof read BEFORE publishing!!!
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