Tag Archives: rejection

Sucker DJs, They Get Stopped By a Single Finger

17 Jun

You would think that by the age of fifty, I would be used to rejection. I mean, enough people have told me I suck over the years that it should roll off me. But it still hurts; even the mildest rejection seems to throw off my day. This is the problem of any creative projects; dealing with criticism.

This is the great problem being a writer; being soft enough to let your emotions flow through you, and hard enough to take rejection. I can see why F. Scott Fitzgerald drank himself to death.

Recently, a radio show host I love listening to mentioned they were reading Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, a book I have never had any interest in reading. They are reading it because they are fans of… what I can only call “serious” fiction. Calling it “adult” fiction has a different connotation. These are fictional books about modern day life, which is probably the second largest category of fiction published today. The largest category is romance, and I’ve figured out that the difference between Serious Contemporary Fiction and Romance is how it ends; if everyone lives happily ever after, it’s Romance, if they don’t, it’s “serious.”

So why am I bringing that up? Because Wallace killed himself only a few years after writing what some critics call the “best book of the 20th Century.” I only tangentially knew him, because he was a professor at Illinois State while I was attending, and saw him across the room at the University Senate. (The less said about my political career, the better.) His book had come out while I was attending and the rumor was they were trying to do “anything to make him stay.” He didn’t, he got hired by the Claremont Colleges in California, and killed himself there.

The book is about depression, or more specifically, what it’s like to be inside the mind of a depressed person who’s trying to go through life day by day, and having a hard time justifying to himself why he should go on. Apparently, this reflected the nature of the author himself, since his suicide was not the first time that he had tried. HIs wife came in on him strangling from a rope and saved him.

So this really inspires me to read the book, right? 🙂 It’s not the kind of book I would enjoy. And from past experience, I am never reading anything this radio host suggests that I read, because his taste is an exact 180 degrees from my own. But it does emphasize the writer’s dilemma; how can I be tough enough to get my story across and deal with criticism while still remaining soft enough to convey the emotions inside me?

This post came up in my mind because I received a relatively benign comment on my current story. Basically it came down to “look, I come here for fanfic, and this isn’t it.” Perfectly valid… but you felt the need to paste my story with your stink? If it’s not for you, skip it, and go somewhere else! Now I could delete it, but I told myself, no… post your rebuttal and have that as a trophy for anyone who cares. It made finishing said story (only 5,000 words away) very difficult to work on.

What I told him is what I’ll tell you; start with reading No Such Wizard, my recent novel. If you’re a dedicated Kindle user like I am, it’s only $0.99. Check it out! If you’re a cheapskate like me, I still want you to read it, but you can check it out on An Archive of Our Own (AO3) with simpler formatting, but the words are all the same. Enjoy!

A Creative Without An Audience Is…

12 Jun

So yesterday, I was talking about the feeling of utter failure of my D&D session, which is a topic guaranteed to alienate most of my audience immediately. 🙂 However, it’s only a microcosm of dealing with rejection, ADHD, the creative process, and dealing with other people in general.

To sum up, my long-running game was facing a crisis. The players don’t seem to enjoy my campaign, I’m certainly not enjoying it, and the last session was a complete disaster. When I went to work the next day, I was ready to drop out and end the whole game. I would miss my friends and the excuse the game is to hang out with them, but if no one’s having fun, what’s the point?

However, I also know from past experience that my ADHD mind immediately goes to the worst extreme first, or what I know are Automatic Negative Thoughts (ANTs). This happens when I get in an argument with my wife (“So we’re getting a divorce now, great”) or someone gives me feedback on my project (“They hate it, I’m a #@*$ing screwup”) or my son blows up on me for something I think is reasonable (“Well, *$#& him, he can #@($ing move out if he don’t like it!”).

So I told myself, wait a day, think about if the game can be fixed, and the solution might present itself. What hit me hard about this was that I thought I had fixed it a couple weeks earlier, but apparently didn’t address the key issues. However, the more I thought about it, it wasn’t just that the players wanted a simpler plot to follow, it’s that they didn’t want to make any decisions. I already knew my “table” was a “beer & pretzels game,” meaning players who didn’t really want to be involved with heavy roleplay or problem solving, so why did I think just shortening the amount I presented would fix it?

What I researched (and realized I’m not alone) is that I need to design more set-pieces (which I kinda already do; when you’ve got an online board, you need to have battle sequences set up in advance), keep the players on their toes by having things attack/react to them, and therefore they don’t have to make the decisions they can’t/won’t do. Focus on moments, not plots.

When anyone does creative things, whether it’s writing the books that I hawk here, or the games I play with my friends, you do it because you want the feedback. You want the gratification that people like your ideas, that you’re interesting, and that what you create is worthwhile. I sent out my recent novel, No Such Wizard, to several of my friends and asked them to read it. I knew they wouldn’t, but I wanted to pretend that they cared enough to try. One of them actually said they read it and that it was good! Wow! I felt warm and tingly about it. Then when I met them for drinks later, tried to ask them more about the book (what did they like, was it interesting, yadda yadda), they completely dodged the topic. Twice.

So I have to ask myself… did they actually read the book or were they just saying that to be nice? Frankly, I would have been happier if they hadn’t said anything; at least it would have met expectations.

I learned long ago to stop asking the world to conform to my needs and adjust myself to get my needs met within the limitations I have. What do I get out of gaming? Hanging out with my friends. Focus on how me and my friends can enjoy the experience. What do I get out of writing? I have fun creating these worlds and seeing what my characters do in them. Then focus on the process, not the result. If someone reads it, even better, because I have someone to share it with. Why do I write on my blog? Because there is so much additional research that I use to develop my stories that just wouldn’t fit in the story, so I put it here. Plus I have a place to publically kvetch about life, love, and whatever else needs to get off my chest.

Well, if you’ve read my quasi-therapy session, you have my thanks, check out No Such Wizard, my recent novel. If you’re a dedicated Kindle user like I am, it’s only $0.99. Check it out. If you’re a cheapskate like me, I still want you to read it, but you can check it out on An Archive of Our Own (AO3) with simpler formatting, but the words are all the same. Enjoy!

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