Early on in my writing career, I recognized my fear of criticism would destroy my dream of becoming a writer before it began. I wasnât aware I was doing it, but I started moving towards it purposefully. Most authors back then had no choice. But for black UK authors, it was even more difficult. Finding successful author role models we could aspire to were few and far between. And with my passion for speculative fiction, forget about looking up to a writer I
could relate to. Rejection was a part of the process, so if you wanted to progress, you had to learn not just to accept it but also to make it your friend. I took some heavy hits, dealt with uncomfortable situations, withstood confrontation and blatant racism. I learned not to take it personally, but it was hard. There were a few close calls where I wanted to give up, but I kept on keeping on. That might seem depressing to you. It did to me at the time. Itâs just that I believed I was doing the
right thing.
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âAre you paralyzed with fear? Thatâs a good sign. Fear is good,â says author Steven Pressfield. âLike self-doubt, fear is an indicator. Fear tells us what we have to do.âÂ
Think about it.
Fear leads to stress, stress segueâs into discomfort, prompts change, spurs growth, and finally results in success.
Pressfield wrote an entire book about how authors, musicians, and artists can overcome fear in order to create the things they were made to create. He dubbed the enemy âResistance.â And its something Iâve talked about a few times before because it is so relevant.Â
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âResistance will unfailingly point to true North - meaning that it will call out the action it most wants to stop us from doing. We can use this. We can use it as a compass. We can navigate by Resistance, letting it guide us to that calling or action that we must follow before all others.â - Steven Pressfield.
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What is fear telling YOU to avoid right now, Constant Reader?
The flip side of this coin is doing difficult tasks. I wonât lie and say writing speculative fiction comes easy because it doesnât, but it was a passion I was willing to work at. Looking back to where Iâm coming from and where I am now, I fully appreciate the advantage it has given me. My success as a speculative fiction author is something I attract because of the person Iâve become and not by shirking from the hard tasks.Â
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âIf you want more, you need to become more.â - Jim Rohn.
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By doing hard things, we become âbetterâ ourselves - more resilient, resourceful, and creative. This will increase our influence, which increases our affluence. Small things become big things â what you do today sets you up for success tomorrow. You reap what you sow.
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In my life as a writer, Iâm strongly in favor of challenging myself. I look for hard work, not for an ego âtingâ but because I know it will set me apart and strengthen my mind and soul.Â
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What difficult task has been calling out to you? Donât let that big, scary, challenging goal scare you away. Answer the call.
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The world needs youâŚall of you, the courageous you, the bold, ambitious, fearless, and unstoppable you. Don't disappoint.
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