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Rejection? I've Got Your Rejection

Rejection at any level sucks, right?


You see someone you're attracted to and ask them out, and you get the thanks but no thanks response. You interview for your dream job, and they go with someone else. You raise your hand to give a high five, and you're left hanging. All of it sucks. But the kind of rejection I'm talking about has to do with writing.


Your writing.


Your creation.


Flecks of your soul.


Writers Are an Odd Flock


We, as writers, are an odd flock. I mean, surely you've realized that by now. And if you haven't, you will. There is no denying it. No other vocation requires people to spend hour upon hour in solitary confinement, locked away inside their heads, their own worlds, talking with people who don't exist anywhere else but on paper.


Dutifully, we pound out words and sentences to bring these people, places, and things alive. We agonize with our characters, don't we? We feel them at their worst and champion them at their best. At times, we will them to make decisions, but once fully evolved, they have minds of their own, becoming unwieldy bits of bothersome fodder to our tale. (It is magic, by the way, when that happens)


When Is It Enough?


For some writers, it is enough to begin writing.


For others, it is enough to finish the first short story.


And others still, it is enough to finish their first novel.


But for others, there is a need to be published, to let the world judge their work.

And it's to the last group I'm speaking. Writing is incredibly personal. Why? Because it's flecks of ourselves, our pain, love, hopes, and dreams sprinkled across the page for everyone to see. It's a glimpse into our innermost secrets, the locked inner chambers of our minds and hearts.



Rejection? I've got your rejection
Rejection? I've Got Your Rejection


And that's why it hurts in a very personal way when we have our writing criticized and rejected. It matters not if it comes from our fellow contemporaries, our writers in arms, the ones who are supposed to be helping us improve and grow as writers. It hurts even more when our writing is rejected by the insurmountable wall of the publishing industry.

It is important to realize how brave we are as writers. It took a lot to bleed on the page for the sake of our art, to agonize over the wording, the tone, and to master the proper voice. It took even more courage to submit a story to a publication with the hope we would earn the right to appear in print.


Some writers might say, "Oh, that's such a shame."


Others might say, "Tough crap, deal with it."


I'm kind of in the middle. I've been on the receiving end of brutal rejections, which stung for quite a while. I have amassed quite an impressive array of rejection letters from magazines, journals, anthologies, agents, and publishers alike. If you've been wading through the trenches of fiction publishing, I'm sure you have too.


Rejection? I've Got Your Rejection


The important lesson learned--and it's a hard one to swallow--is that rejection is part of the writer's growth. It truly is.


Think of the rejection as the publication saying right now, at this point in time, with this story, in this shape, the answer is no. It doesn't mean you can't write. It doesn't mean the story sucks. It means, right now, it's a no. So, leave the story to simmer, go back over it with a fine-toothed comb, and submit it again.


The first rejection is always the hardest. For me, it took about a week to get back to it. The writing, I mean. Submitting again took me a little longer. But it became a rallying point.


Other writers get rejected. Everyone does. It's part of the game.


Be Stubborn, Rejection is Part of the Process


I'm incredibly stubborn. Ask anyone who knows me. I have Scottish, Irish, and German blood running through my veins. The only person more stubborn than me is my mother, the daughter of a U.S. Army Colonel. I didn't let it deter me. When the rejection came in, I took it to heart and buckled down. It drove me to write better and to come up with better ideas. I began to read books on writing and incorporate things to improve. I read about how to better focus my query letter and how to word it so they would have a hard time saying no.


I began to submit more pieces, and although I received even more rejections, they didn't sting as much, and I started to wear each one as a rite of passage.


Rejection? I've got your rejection


Don't let rejections get in the way of what you love.


So, join me. Wear your scars proudly and keep writing and submitting. The acceptances will start coming.


Never stop.


And always remember to write ON!

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