Do you let childish fears control you?
Do
you let internal small childish fears about
rejection direct your life or you listen to the voice inside of you
that tells you to try. To give. To keep building and making
something new.
Most
people will cheer you on. Most people will want you to succeed.
Anyone who does not want you to succeed does not belong in your life.
Everyone
is an expert at failure. Everyone can point out how "this won't
work," or "that won't work" or my personal favorite,
"you suck."
And
they are right. For them, these haters, these non-friends, these ID
10 T's are absolutely correct. To them you do suck.
And
why would you want to have that in your life? Cut them out.
Find
the people who will support you. I found it in running. I tried 4
100 mile races over the last 12
months and my running friends didn't
care that I was only able to finish 2. They said things like, "You
still ran 50 (or 60 Miles)." “Good
job.” “Great effort.”
Sometimes
success is in the trying.
I've
been working/trying to start a new business. I've had a couple of
good months, and I'm still learning and trying.
But
I'm scared. I have been scared. And I realized that the fear comes
from a place of being rejected. Feeling rejected. It's a childish
feeling about writing that I've carried since college, when a
Professor told me I sucked.
See,
I wrote the story about some guys fighting over coffee. His response
was "I drink coffee and I can't ever see it being that
important." This was pre-Friends, pre-Starbucks, pre-coffee
becoming a national phenomenon. So I listened to him, and not to the
voice inside of me.
When
I moved to LA to pitch scripts to Hollywood, I was told NO more times
than I was rejected for dates in high school. It just became another
word. The approach was "if this producer doesn't like it, then
the next one will." And I wrote my ass off. I just opened up a
box and found seventeen completed scripts I forgot about. Can you
imagine that, writing so much that you forgot what you wrote? I
found a half finished novel and almost a dozen outlines. I found
that short story, the one that made me afraid to try to become a
literary figure.
I
stacked those piles of paper up and figured something out. I'm
probably not going to be a major literary figure in my lifetime. But
I'm a pretty good hack. I mean that in the best way. I write fun,
interesting stories that are like beach reads, or candy for the eyes.
I'm
going to be okay with that. I'll sing the Beatles song, paperback
writer, and crank out dime novels based on the scripts I wrote, and
the outlines I have.
Since
September, I've published 20 projects on Amazon. 4 novels in the Sci
Fi genre, and some of the scripts I've written. That's an average of
one book per week, which is an ACTION ITEM on the PLAN for my
publishing company.
I'm
staring an author's page, and if you are a reader, I'd like your
support. Watch for it here, and then like it to get updates. I'll
do a free promo for each book as it comes out, so download it and
leave a review. If you like one, you might want to buy another.
Am
I still afraid of being rejected? Yep. But I'm also afraid of
trying to run some major distances this year after a couple of
disappointing races and injuries last year. I'm afraid of failing at
this new career.
I've
been working on turning off my "give a damn" button. But I
do give a damn. A damn about trying something new, about pushing my
preconceived limits, about believing in a dream. I give a damn about
the freedom to travel, and build a brand, and stand for something
that is important to me. I give a damn
about writing fun fiction about spies, and zombies, and a couple
about magic (not all in the same book though!) and even a few
non-fiction books that talk about what I've learned along the way.
So
here I come folks, Chris Lowry the author.

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