I pretty much do have my dream job. The hours still suck and my boss can be an asshole.
It's not like I think getting published will solve all my problems. I'm just so sick of doing what I do. And I just realized it's been a whole year since I started my WIP, and it's still nowhere near finished because it's such a fight to find writing time...and I've got to write a book in a year, AT LEAST. Anything else just isn't a professional pace. I'm just so frustrated with myself and my life right now.
Stephanie, I haven't figured it out yet but I'm guessing Minneapolis to Stevens Point would be around a 2 1/2 to 3 hour drive (one way). Which may be too far to drive over for a visit in one day--even though I would LOVE to host you guys for a playdate if you get the urge to make it over.
MM, your art work has improved noticeably since the last time I saw some of your sketches. That really looks like you.
and I've got to write a book in a year, AT LEAST. Anything else just isn't a professional pace.
Susan, I admire your dedication, but ... you're juggling work, family, and writing. I'm having problems finding time to write and I'm NOT the parent of a toddler. Maybe the expectations you're setting for yourself aren't achievable at this time, and driving yourself crazy to try and meet them will only make things worse.
Maybe the expectations you're setting for yourself aren't achievable at this time, and driving yourself crazy to try and meet them will only make things worse.
Well...I'm not pulling that "book a year" number out of thin air. I've heard that from numerous published authors, agents, and editors as a sort of minimum if you're serious about building a career, and that if at all possible you should push for that pace even before you're published just so you'll get used to it, because it's not like you'll get to quit your day job when you first sell anyway.
That said...well, the WIP is a whole new genre, so I've been having to reinvent my personal wheel WRT plot, structure, etc. Not to mention, you know, rewrite a key turning point of European history. Hopefully Book Two of the series will flow a little more quickly.
Susan, this is where I'm going to be very blunt, but I mean it kindly.
You're sabotaging yourself. Yes, your job is full of boring, stupid bureaucratic problems. So what? It's just a job, a paycheck. It isn't what defines you. Almost everyone I know is stuck in a similar sort of position. The few people who are doing what they love are being driven crazy by their work in other ways, and have made a lot of sacrifices and difficult choices to allow them to be driven crazy by the career they love. No one's life is perfect.
I know you're venting, and I know you realize all of this. But I really do think that you are spending more time than might be good for you worrying that your job isn't really what you want.
Jilli, I don't mind the blunt at all. I probably need it to shake this funk.
It's just a job, a paycheck. It isn't what defines you.
I think my problem is that I let it define me. I somehow picked up the attitude very early on that your job is what you are. So my desire to be published is driven by two factors--an entirely healthy desire to have an audience and the ability to concentrate more of my time and energy on what I love, and a desperate longing to have an answer I can feel proud of when people ask me what I do.
and a desperate longing to have an answer I can feel proud of when people ask me what I do.
Okay, I'm going to let you in on a secret that has made me very happy.
DON'T CARE WHAT OTHER PEOPLE THINK.
Seriously. Who cares if other people don't approve of something in your life? As long as what makes you happy isn't murdering people, who cares? Stop worrying about it.
Who cares if other people don't approve of something in your life? As long as what makes you happy isn't murdering people, who cares? Stop worrying about it.
Truly, Jilli is a voice of reason.