Every word I write is another stroke that takes me to the shore of a completed book

Any journey Getting startedyou set out on requires time and at least some hard work. No matter how difficult such travels may be, however, the destination is always reachable. Wrong turns may be made along the way or a cliff then a thicket of thorns may stand between the starting point and the goal, but ultimately with some careful thought, a little sweat, and a never-say-quit attitude, you can overcome those setbacks and obstacles.

In many ways, writing a story or a book is much like a journey in which you are out at sea on a rowboat. Your destination – a palm-fringed island or the published novel fresh from the printing press – beckons in the distance. Though making a straight line for that objective seems sound, the endpoint is farther away than it initially appears. So you row a little harder.

Sometimes rough waves and the receding tide push you back and deeper into the waters. As a writer, this may be the equivalent of rewriting a chapter, or restructuring a subplot, or redeveloping a character, stretches you’ve already covered.

In the rowboat, you must remain persistent, not allow the ocean swells to sink you; so as a writer you must not allow the editing of a piece or the thoughts of a beta reader overwhelm you and keep you from believing in your goal.

Instead you must concentrate solely on rowing…on writing…of dipping oar into water…of pressing pen against paper. After a while, you look up and realize that landing is indeed closer.

And then, suddenly, the oars no longer can go as deep as they did before…and there’s only a few paragraphs left to write. You’ve reached the sand rising to the beach…the final page of your tale.

At last, you can you stand triumphant.

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Published on November 15, 2014 07:01
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