Write What You Know, But Learn As You Go

by Julie Lavender @JLavenderWrites
Recently, I had the pleasure of contributing an article to The Old Schoolhouse Magazine for their Raising an Entomologist theme. The acceptance took me back on a reminiscent journey of my writing.
Very early in my writing trek, after receiving many rejections, I decided I needed to actually do some research to find out more about the actual concept of becoming a published writer. After all, my undergraduate and graduate degrees were both Early Childhood Education.
I heard the phrase “write what you know” at a conference and decided to adhere to that path. I sent a query to an educational publishing house for a teacher resource book idea. Because of my education degrees, teaching experience, the company said I was a great fit to write the book I’d proposed. I completed the manuscript, received my pay, and looked forward to seeing the book in print.
By the time I received the acceptance, I was no longer teaching. My new hat was stay-at-home mom. I continued on the “write what you know” path and sent in queries to a sweet, non-paying publication for stay-at-home moms called Welcome Home. I had several pieces accepted, which helped me get acceptances to a paying market, Lifeway’s ParentLife Magazine.
Fast-forward a couple of years, and I added the homeschooling mom hat to my resume. I queried Homeschooling Today Magazine about a unit study on insects, because, after all, I was married to an entomologist, so I knew I had a resident resource at my disposal. That acceptance led to other science-based unit studies, as well as others, and I wrote for that magazine for several years.
As my children got older and took part in Vacation Bible School and children’s ministry activities, I jumped right in as a volunteer with each activity. I used that knowledge to help me get an acceptance as a Group Publishing curriculum writer. I wrote lessons for that company for years and have pieces included in two dozen resources.
While at a Group Publishing workshop, I met a fellow author who wrote children’s news events for the Denver Post. She asked if I’d come aboard as a writer with her. I hesitated to say yes – I’d never written for a newspaper, but, she reminded me that I’d be translating current event articles into kid-friendly language, and she knew my background with Early Childhood Education. It was my first step off the “write what you know” path. I decided I could “learn as I go” with my friend’s help.
I enjoyed writing with the Post for a number of years, and that gave me the confidence to query my local newspaper editor about contributing a family column. Another, “learn as you go” adventure. He jumped at the chance to have another monthly columnist and later asked me to contribute faith-based pieces to the paper. I was so excited to write God-stories in the newspaper that I didn’t hesitate to say “yes,” even though I knew for sure that would be a “learn as you go” path into the wilderness, because I knew nothing at all about newspaper freelancing.
I’ve enjoyed a great time as a newspaper stringer and continued contributing to other avenues that were already a part of my repertoire. Keeping the idea of “write what you know,” combined with “learn as you go,” keeps my writing fun and adventurous.
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Published on March 10, 2021 22:00
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