Some thoughts on rejection

I once dated a wonderful guy.  He was funny, smart and good-looking. Generous. A great listener. My family loved him. And I loved him, too, except not in the way I wanted to. For some reason, he wasn't quite right for me. I once was dumped by a guy. He told me he wanted space, which since we were both independent and spent lots of time apart, was really code for 'I'm over you'. It hurt, absolutely. And for awhile there I thought 'I'm obviously way too boring/emotional/freckly/fat'. But that breakup wasn't the end of my dating life. Other people found me tolerable, even delightful 😜. I just wasn't right for that person. And I've realised that rejection in the writing world is often the same. The work might be great, but there's a mismatch. When we receive a rejection, it's easy to blame ourselves. To spiral into thoughts of 'my writing is shit' (which reminds me of the time I accidentally called my manuscript a manushit) and 'I'll never get anywhere' and 'where's the chocolate?' And sure, there must be times when the submission wasn't up to scratch. It was rushed out, not proofread well, or it's an early career submission. It has good elements but needs some work. But over time, as we improve, other factors come into play. The journal already commissioned an essay on belly button lint. We sent a dark story and they're looking for a funny piece (or vice versa). The style doesn't resonate with the competition judge (even though another judge will love it). On Monday, I had dinner with two writer friends. Both women are very talented. One writes screenplays, memoir, novels, short stories, essays and more. The other writes plays, short stories and essays and is an accomplished actor. Both have won awards and fellowships. Both have been published, one in book form. These women are dynamos. And yet, as we ate our yellow curry, they spoke about the rejection emails they'd received the past few days. I chimed in to say I'd had recent rejections, too. We commiserated over pieces we thought were strong, yet were not accepted or didn't place in competitions. And as we whined and laughed and wined, I had a minor epiphany (can an epiphany be minor?) —

Rejections don't mean our work isn't good.

Turns out, the writing world is like the dating world. Not everyone will fall in love with our work (and we won't fall in love with everything we read, either). As with dating, we shouldn't try to be who we're not, to please someone else. They'll like us or they won't. We'll be rejected for sure, but acceptances will come when we least expect it.And in the meantime, we can write.

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Speaking up, getting loud, not just walking past

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Writer's Block - causes and treatment