How Authors Practice Patience While Waiting to Hear News on a Submitted Manuscript

by Ane Mulligan @AneMulligan
Congratulations! You finished your manuscript. That's so exciting! At the conference you went to, an agent (or editor) you pitched asked to see the full manuscript. When you got home, you polished it and sent it off.
Now what? How do you do pass the time, while you're waiting to hear back from the publisher? Sitting around twiddling your thumbs isn't the best use of your time, and you don’t want to send another email asking where the contract is. In fact, you don’t send anything for 3 months, if you haven’t heard back.
I know it’s hard to wait. That’s your baby you sent off, so here are my tips to keep you busy while waiting—some really good and some…well, see for yourself.
11 Tips for After Manuscript Submission
1. Clean out your sock drawer: If yours is anything like mine, it could use a good cleaning and culling. And while you're at it, you can dismantle your clothes dryer to find the ones it ate. You might even find the missing mate to your Halloween jack-o-lantern socks.
2. Sort out your bathroom drawers: We all collect makeup and manicure items we don't seem to use. I'm donating my nail polish to the little girls next door. They like to paint their daddy's toenails, and I get so tickled at his embarrassment during the summer.
3. Catch up on your laundry: If nothing else, reduce the 6-foot-high piles in your bedroom and the kids' rooms to 2-foot piles.
4. Paint the deck: You complained to your husband about it last Spring when you wanted to write outside. Now's a good time. Grab that roller and have at it.
5. Clean the chimney: After all, if Dick Van Dyke could do it, so can you. Just be sure to use proper harnessing in case you get stuck, so someone can pull you back out.
6. Spend hours on social media: Make up for all the time you were writing and stayed off Facebook. Post how anxious you are that A to Z Publishing hasn't sent your contract yet.
Okay, those are all fairly silly and not all that productive for a writer. Besides, the kids can do most of those—except number 5. Save that one for your Cousin Eddie.
My Best Advice is:
1. Start your next book: While my agent shopped my first publishable manuscript, I started on the sequel. My journey was long, and God clearly showed me He was in charge of the time and place He had for me. So I kept writing. By the time that first book, Chapel Springs Revival,was published, I had book 2 and 3 written. I've only ever written to one tight deadline.
2. Write an article for a magazine: Magazines are always looking for articles. Check their guidelines to see what they are looking for. Don't send a Southern recipe to a European travel magazine, or a hack for fixing a flat tire to a fashion rag.
3. Take a day trip for inspiration: So many ideas come from driving around. I used the name of a fish bait store I saw in the back woods of upper Lake Lanier. It sparked the inspiration for an entire series.
4. Try your hand a photography: No fancy camera needed. Use your phone. You may find you have a great eye for composition, and who knows? You might just snap a suspicious looking person who sparks the "what if" for your next manuscript.
5. Try new recipes: If you're like me, I don't cook great meals when I'm deep into writing a book. It's catch-as-catch-can for sandwiches and soup. So this is a good time to try out a new crockpot meal. You might be able to use it when you go back to writing.
6. Brainstorm: Get together for lunch with some writer pals and brainstorm ideas. You'll all come away with fiction fodder. And while you're at it, eavesdrop on conversations around you. I've picked up several ideas to incorporate into stories, or characteristics for my next protagonist.
The worst thing you can do is fret about when you will hear back.
TWEETABLEHow Authors Practice Patience While Waiting to Hear News on a Submitted Manuscriptfrom author @AneMulligan on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)

Published on February 26, 2023 22:00
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