With the start of the new year comes another set of resolutions. This post comes a few days later than planned, which allowed additional time to reflect on what I really wanted to accomplish in 2008. I also wanted to be as clear as possible about my intentions before documenting them. Then and only then could I commit to a new course. Hopefully this curtails backsliding, or at least lessens the chance.
A few lessons learned from past years helped shape my final choices. First, each goal must be reasonable, yet force me to reach further than before. Working towards a resolution like: “get a million dollar advance and movie rights for a novel.” is a bit ill-conceived by design. Because the reaching the end point hinges wholly on the actions of others, it’s unreasonable. Not that this outcome is impossible; it certainly can happen.
Editors and publishers determine advances and they have paid awesome sums for first novels in the past. They probably will break out the checkbooks again. But in the end, there are less than three dozen fiction writers a year who net million dollar advances. Still, the intent of the goal is sound. Everyone likes money and fame, right? The real problem is approaching a highly desirable outcome in such a way that reaching the finish line relies on so much upon the efforts of someone else.
Stating such a goal like the above example invites frustration. No doubt some bright spark will prove me wrong, but whatever. I only speak for me. What really matters is that the core intention of of an ill-conceived goal can be preserved-and even reached–with a simple re-frame.
Consider this example in place of the original goal: “Write a novel I believe deserves only the best literary representation in the business, and submit my very best effort to an agent who closes million dollar deals.”
Now the focus is on the actions of the writer, instead of anyone else’s response or movement. And by taking on responsibility for what they can influence and letting go of everything else they cannot, the writer allows for the possibility of anything to happen. Maybe after receiving the best the author has to offer, the agent picks up the manuscript and sells it. Maybe they pass the project on to someone else for consideration. Maybe they send the package back unread. Maybe nothing happens until the writer sends it to another ninja agent.
Regardless of the outcome, by pursuing the revised goal, the writer still wins.
Since the goal rests on action, the very least thing the author takes away from that journey is a far better manuscript. And that’s much further than most ever bother to venture. Far and away, in fact. I know plenty of people who fall in love with their early drafts and file them away to rot forever, unread.
The second theme for my resolutions: where possible craft complementary goals. So working towards one goal impels taking steps towards another, and a synergy forms, if you will. For instance, say one goal is exercising three times a week, and another is fitting into my first interview suit by August. Well, gee I’m going to have to lose weight to fit in that suit, and exercising might help me do it.
And last, I wanted resolutions that were specific. The less vague, the less opportunity for fudging along the course of the year. Usually this takes the form of “reinterpreting” or “revising” the original goal to something more “realistic”. I’d rather put more time on the front end and make minor adjustments in the field–and only where absolutely necessary.
My 2008 writing resolutions…
1) Write 14 hours a week, in one of two basic schedule configurations: Two hours on weekdays and four on Saturday. Alternately one hour on weekdays and the balance across the weekend. A bit more is fine if my calendar allows it, but fourteen is the absolute minimum.
2) Complete the first draft of The Confession by July 1, 2008.
3) Finish the screenplay started last summer by September 1, 2008.
4) If necessary, resume whole scale querying for The Last Track. Right I have no idea if this is needed. In 2007 I hit 41 agents. Most of them have new interns now, and there are still 35 A-list agents I never tried, so the potential pool is about roughly 75 again.
5) Follow the Abs Diet for 6 weeks–the initial length of the program. If the results are good, continue. If not, find another eating and exercise plan. Lose the ten pounds of fat gained since Thanksgiving. Eek.
6) Review my progress with these above goals every eight weeks.
That’ll keep me busy for awhile.