Reframing Rejection

We’re human. Rejection hurts, and it’s easy to instinctively take it personally. But it's not always about you. What I’ve learned when it comes to my own writing is that “no” sometimes just means “not right now” or “not here but somewhere else.” I’m learning to take rejection as an opportunity to improve and grow, something we can always do as writers. And as humans.

Frontispiece

What I’ve realized is that I didn’t see myself as a writer because I was turning off my creativity. I was writing user manuals and release notes when I wanted to be writing stories. I was turning off the part of my brain that had something to say. I’ve always had the means to tell my story; I just didn’t realize I could.

A Path to Somewhere

I want to write my story and release it out into the world, and then I want to keep writing. I want to find creative manuscripts that have something to say and help turn that manuscript into a finished book. I want to feel that feeling I had as a child when that first newsletter would come off the copy machine in my mom’s office.