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In her yt gorilla review “Why We Write: 20 Acclaimed Authors on
How and Why They Do What They Do”, Meredith Maran
talks about the bestselling American novelist David
Baldacci. She explains that Baldacci spent a decade working
as a lawyer by day, and working on his real passion—
writing--late at night. However, for many years, he had
nothing to show for his late-night efforts.
Baldacci explains that he always wanted to be a writer. In
high school, he started writing short stories and trying to get
them published. He continued doing this in college.
Unfortunately, he received few acceptances and lots of
rejection letters. Therefore, he concluded that trying to earn
a living by becoming a writer was risky, so he went to law
school as a back-up plan.
Baldacci got married and he and his wife had their first
child in 1993. He was the breadwinner, so the starving artist
route was simply not an option for him. For that reason, he
concluded that he had no choice but to make a living as a lawyer. Baldacci told himself that he
would be one of those writers who writes for fun and never gets published. Nonetheless, there was
no way that he was going to stop writing.And here’s another one: “If writing were illegal I’d be in prison. I can’t not write. It’s a
compulsion.”
Then, in 1996—after years of writing with little to no success--he got a lucky break. His novel
“Absolute Power” was accepted by a publisher. In fact, Warner Books offered him a multi-million
dollar advance for the yt gorilla review. Later on the book was turned into a film, starring Clint Eastwood
and Gene Hackman.
Baldacci was able to quit his day job and give up the legal profession to become a full-time writer.
That is, he was able to achieve what he had spent sixteen years dreaming about. Since then, he’s
written over twenty additional novels, all of which have become national and international
bestsellers. For years he wrote late at night when everyone else was asleep. He did it for free, for
the pure joy of writing stories. And his efforts paid off: he was able to turn his Sacred Dance—
writing—into a full-time gig and give up his Survival Dance.Scott Turow is someone else who worked as a lawyer although his dream was always to become a
novelist (apparently there’s a lot of that going around). He said the following in an interview:
"I was one of those kids who never wanted to be anything but a novelist. And I don't know
a lot of people who truly live the life that they dreamed of." 4
He played it safe and went to law school. After graduating, Turow got a job in the U.S. Attorney’s
Office in Chicago, Illinois. Then, every morning while commuting to work on Chicago’s “L”
train, he would write. He says the following: “I used to write on the morning commuter train. It
was sometimes no more than a paragraph a day, but it kept the candle burning.” 5
It took Turow a time period of six to seven years to write his first published novel, “Presumed
Innocent”. It became a bestseller and was turned into a movie starring Harrison Ford. While still
practicing law, Turow followed “Presumed Innocent” with other novels which also did well,
including “The Burden of Proof” (1990), “Pleading Guilty” (1993), and “Reversible Errors”
(2002). He’s gone on to sell over 25 million copies of his books.
The lesson to be learned from the three men discussed in this chapter—Grisham, Baldacci, and
Turow-- is the following: if you’re truly passionate about something, you’ll find the time to do it.
Apply an hour-a-day, consistently, and you can make your dreams come true.Jack Canfield is probably someone you already know. He’s the
co-creator of the “Chicken Soup For the Soul” series, with 47
New York Times Bestsellers and over 500 million books in
print worldwide. What you might not know about him is that
while he was writing his first “Chicken Soup for the Soul”
book he was an inner-city schoolteacher. In addition, he was
doing seminars and was involved in some other work-related yt gorilla review . That is, his schedule was packed.
Although he had tons of things on his plate, Canfield had
decided that he was going to write a book about “happy little
stories”. He shares that his wife would go to bed at 10:00 p.m.
each night, and at that time he would get busy writing. He
made a commitment to himself that he would write two stories
every week, so that he could have a hundred stories by the end
of the year. This meant that he had to write a story every three
and a half days, so he would stay up until midnight or 1:00 a.m. writing. As Canfield indicates, a
little bit at a time will get it done. Here’s a quote from Canfield:
“The key is to make a commitment to have a daily discipline of a little bit of
time where you’re going to write, and if you do, in a year, you can produce,
literally, a miracle.”
Steve Harrison, the man Canfield turns to when he wants to promote one of his books, explains
that we all feel overwhelmed. However, in his experience the difference between those who
become successful authors and those who do not isn’t that one group is overwhelmed and the
other one isn’t. The difference is that those who fail, use the word “overwhelmed” as an excuse
not to think and not to do. Meanwhile, the group that succeeds gets over their feeling of being
overwhelmed, they create a plan of how they’re going to accomplish what they want, and they get
busy working their plan.
Canfield indicates that he once met the famous businessman, philanthropist, and self-help author
W. Clement Stone, and that Stone taught him the formula for success. It goes as follows: “Take
one hundred percent responsibility for your life.” It can be further broken down into the following:
E + R = O
Event + Response = OutcomeRight now you may be telling yourself things such as the following:
I can’t find the time to work on my goals right now; I have a kid.
My boss is always asking me to stay after work and take on more job assignments.
I have such a long commute.
There’s just so much stuff coming at me. However, those statements are just the events or the circumstances in your life at the moment. Your outcome doesn’t depend on those events or circumstances in and of themselves, but on how you respond to them. Ask yourself the following: “What’s the story that I’m telling myself?”
Are you telling yourself that you can’t achieve your goals because you just don’t have the time? Or,
Are you telling yourself that you can figure out a way to carve an hour out of your day and start moving toward the achievement of your goals? If you tell yourself the first story, a year from now you’ll be in the exact same yt gorilla review that you’re in right now. If you tell yourself the second story, a year from now you’ll either have reached your goal, or at the very least you’ll be much closer to its achievement than you are now.Details:
E + R = O
Event + Response = OutcomeRight now you may be telling yourself things such as the following:
I can’t find the time to work on my goals right now; I have a kid.
My boss is always asking me to stay after work and take on more job assignments.
I have such a long commute.
There’s just so much stuff coming at me. However, those statements are just the events or the circumstances in your life at the moment. Your outcome doesn’t depend on those events or circumstances in and of themselves, but on how you respond to them. Ask yourself the following: “What’s the story that I’m telling myself?”
Are you telling yourself that you can’t achieve your goals because you just don’t have the time? Or,
Are you telling yourself that you can figure out a way to carve an hour out of your day and start moving toward the achievement of your goals? If you tell yourself the first story, a year from now you’ll be in the exact same yt gorilla review that you’re in right now. If you tell yourself the second story, a year from now you’ll either have reached your goal, or at the very least you’ll be much closer to its achievement than you are now.Details:
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