A few months I did a blog on the P word – procrastination.
Today,
I’m back to talk about a different P word, the one that determines the
possibility of success – Persistence.
I have
two quotations that have guided my writing career for as long as I can
remember.
The
first is:
A professional writer is an amateur who
didn’t quit. (Often attributed to Richard
Bach, bus he supposedly disavowed saying it.)
I have
read a lot of differing opinions about that quote ranging from arguments about
what constitutes a professional writer to what determines the level of success
required to claim writer status. I’m not really interested in any of those
arguments. In my mind, it comes down to this – writers write. So
whether you do it for a lot of money or none, if you haven’t quit yet (or have
and came back to it), then you’re on the right/write track.
The
second quote follows naturally from that.
She wrote what she loved, until she
loved what she wrote, and she sent it out one more time.
I have no idea where this quote came
from. I have it on a scrap of paper that is so old it’s turned yellow and
brittle.
When I
tried to Google the source of that quote, I got a bunch of links to Taylor
Swift’s new album. It’s really tempting to tag Taylor in this post and see our
views skyrocket. I have no idea why that quote triggered Taylor's name, but
when I thought about it, I was glad it had.
A
lesson in procrastination vs. persistence
The
other day, I was supposed to be writing, but when I signed on to Twitter to
join my #1k1hr group, #TaylorSwiftonGMA was trending. I very easily got sucked
down a rabbit hole of Taylor Swift videos.
Avoiding
that kind of rabbit hole is a constant struggle for me. My husband used to
drive me crazy flipping channels on the television. It seemed he’d stay on
something just long enough for me to get hooked. He would move on, but by that
time, I would be begging him to turn it back (to some show I'd probably be
embarrassed to admit watching), because once I'm hooked, I need to find out
what happens.
Which
is what happened last Thursday on Twitter. First there was a video about Taylor's
father handing out pizza to the people who waited on line overnight. Then there
was Taylor singing a song from her new album. Then... and so on.
It's
important to note here, I've never particularly been a Taylor Swift fan. I was just curious
about what all the fuss on Good Morning America was about. My interest had been
piqued.
Am I
alone in this? I know we joke about going to Facebook to check one thing and
discovering we've spent an hour instead of the scheduled 5 minutes.
As it
turns out though, watching Taylor Swift videos for an hour wasn’t without some
benefit. One of the clips on GMA gave a history of her career starting as an 11
year-old girl determined to make it in Nashville. She explained that her mother
and little brother waited in the car while she delivered karaoke demos she’d
made. She talked about walking up and down Music Row knocking on doors.
"I would say, 'Hi, I'm Taylor. I'm 11; I want a record deal. Call me."
I cannot imagine having that kind of dedication
at my age, let alone at 11.
But the story didn't end there.
I found an article on ENews that included this:
"She
came back from that trip to Nashville and realized she needed to be different,
and part of that would be to learn the guitar," Andrea told EW.
"Now, at 12, she saw a 12-string guitar and thought it was the coolest
thing. And of course we immediately said, 'Oh no, absolutely not, your fingers
are too small—not till you're much older will you be able to play the 12-string
guitar.'
"Well, that was all it took. Don't ever say never or can't do to Taylor. She started playing it four hours a day—six on the weekends. She would get calluses on her fingers and they would crack and bleed, and we would tape them up and she'd just keep on playing. ENews
"Well, that was all it took. Don't ever say never or can't do to Taylor. She started playing it four hours a day—six on the weekends. She would get calluses on her fingers and they would crack and bleed, and we would tape them up and she'd just keep on playing. ENews
What intrigues me is how someone has that kind of
drive to succeed - especially at such a young age.
Taylor is not unique in her work ethic. We hear
stories all the time about athletes and their superior dedication to their
sport, practicing endless hours until they can sink that three-point shot
flawlessly, or lead a team to another Super Bowl victory.
What can we, as writers, learn from this mindset?
That question has really been on my mind a lot
lately. Writing is not a career for the faint of heart. It requires a lot of
hard work, is often solitary, and you can go many years honing your craft
before you manage to snag that contract.
And when you do, you just get to do it all over
again.
Some
writers succeed brilliantly, and others, as in my quote above, never rise to
that professional level for one reason or another.
Why?
I found
some interesting thoughts on that topic in an article at a teaching workshop I
attended this week. I'm going to link the article. Take a minute and go look -
it's short.
The article states: The question, then, is why some
people are better at developing their potential than others.
What intrigued me about the answer was the psychological
analysis. I'm just going to share a couple of key quotes that intrigued me.
They will all make more sense if you read the article.
The trouble is that most people don’t seriously want what they say they want.
’I want’ means, ‘if I want it enough I will get it.’ Getting what you want means making the decisions you need to make to get what you want.”
In other words,
few of us are willing to do what it takes to achieve what we desire.
Some aspirations
are simply superficial desires for status, not declarations of will followed up
by action.
Real motivation is
the key ingredient. Those who actually succeed at getting better are obsessed
with their goals, turning that motivation into genuine talent over time.
These
thoughts hit home with me, because throughout my life, whenever I was working
on something that I cared passionately about, I was unstoppable. My energy was
boundless, nothing could stand in my way.
When I
find myself faltering, it's usually because some little voice in my head is
whispering, Do you really want it enough to work this hard?
Obviously
adolescent Taylor Swift did.
Do you?
Is
writing something you feel passionately about and are you ready to make the
decisions you need to succeed. Are you willing to put in the time to develop
the talent? Are you ready to bloody those fingers?
If you’re
not a writer, is there something else that you are passionate about to this
level?
Let's
chat.