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Monday, January 26, 2015

Why Rejections Are a Good Thing

I've got plenty of writer-friends on the traditional-publishing path who are going through the soul-sucking process of submitting their books to agents or editors and getting rejections.

What does getting a rejection mean? Is it the end of your writing career before it even began?
Nope, not even close.

The best thing about rejections is that they ensure no one who's not excited and passionate about your work will be in charge of selling it. The only thing worse than no agent is a BAD agent! (or should I say, and agent who isn't your #1 fan!). Same thing with editors!

When we get rejections from a pool of agents or editors, they are actually helping us by weeding out the ones who aren't a good fit for our books. And don't we deserve someone who loves our books? I say, let 'em go! It wouldn't have worked out well anyway if they weren't the right person in the first place. :)

That said, when I sent my second-written novel out for submission to an agent and to Harlequin, I got form rejections from both (this was 2000). I was so completely wounded and emotionally hurt from those rejections that I didn't grow my imaginary balls back for another ten years (when I started submitting again in 2010).

By sending out your work, getting rejections but continuing to go for it, you're already ahead of the game by a long shot. We've never even heard of all of the writers who just give up completely in the face of rejection, as I had done for so long. The ones we do hear about, however, are the authors who just keep on keepin' on. They put the rejections behind them and keep submitting and writing new books.

I always know someone's closer to getting published when the amount of rejections starts picking up -- it means they're really in the game!

Oh, and as a side note, if you are an already-published author, and you found this post because you've gotten a rejection letter despite not being a newbie anymore, I am here to tell you that even published authors get rejections. We're just shielded from them by our agents. I remember in 2011 getting a rejection (and I'd been published since 2010), but when I looked online to see if any published author in the history of the world had every been rejected before, I decided by the lack of evidence, that I was the ONLY one!! 

Obviously this is not true. Published authors just don't want to taint their reputation by publicly saying that they were rejected for something (unless it's in their pre-pub years), so you won't see blog posts about rejection the way you will with writers who aren't yet published. I figured I should add that side-note here so the next time someone Googles it, they'll find out the truth ;)

Best,
Shoshanna

6 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. The fear of rejection becomes reasonably powerful when it blows into our personal confidence that we are lesser than others or reduced than the image we feel bound to project. When we revenue rejection as proof of our insufficiencies it’s hard to allow ourselves to danger being truly seen again. I have experience now I am myself elite assignment writer and provide assignment writing help service in UK. How can we open to alternative person if we fear that they will determine what we’re trying greatly to hide that we are stupid, useless, boring, needy, or in some way deeply insufficient. That’s way rejection is a wild way back to childhood embarrassment.

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  2. There is possibly no greater human fear than being rejected, denied and dismissed - particularly when we really care about what we have put "out around" - our emotions, our effort, our thoughts. As a writer, I always motivate my students who are looking for Australian assignment help service at secure assignment help in Australia. A human existence, I have been rejected on many time and under many conditions. It never feels like a good thing, at least at the time.

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  3. A very motivational post on rejection is the part of everyone’ life. Yes you are right about that a rejection is nothing more than a necessary step towards to success. I always explain my students who are often fails to do their assignment and looking for quality help with dissertation writing from the experts that try to again and again, success will come straight to your luck. Rejection just inspires them to keep trying and to try to do better.

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  4. Rejection is never easy but knowing how to limit the emotional damage it inflicts, and how to remake your self-respect when it happens, will help you recover sooner and move on with confidence when it is time for your next date or social event. I am always encourage my CV Maker team who are providing CV writing service UK at CV Folks because I have been rejected many times. Rejections also hurt our mood, attitude and our self-respect, they produce waves of anger and violent behavior.

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  5. Very inspirational blog on Rejections. We know that rejection really hurts, but they can also inflict hurt to our emotional well-being that spirits well yonder mere sensitive pain. I am always motivate my UK students who come to seek writing help with personal statement from me because I know rejection can also result from life events not including relationships, such as being turned sad for a wanted situation. Student may feel rejected by a professor who is bad-mannered. These types of rejection may resolve quickly and are less likely to have long-lasting effects.

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