For Authors: December 20, 2017 Issue [#8667] |
For Authors
This week: How to Be a Bawse Edited by: Jeff More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
"In three words, I can sum up everything
I've learned about life: it goes on."
-- Robert Frost
Trivia of the Week: Lilly Singh is currently the highest-paid YouTube star in the world. Her main channel (IISuperwomanII) has more than 12.7 million subscribers, her videos have been viewed more than 2.3 billion times, and she earned a reported $7.5 million in 2016. Oh, and she's accomplished all this by the ripe old age of 29.
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HOW TO BE A BAWSE
Born and raised in Toronto, Lilly Singh struggled with depression throughout her early life. She eventually started making YouTube videos as a way of dealing with her struggles. Over the past seven years, she's worked diligently to build and expand her brand, which includes comedy sketches, celebrity interviews, vlogging, music and other live performances, acting, and philanthropy.
In 2017, she added "writer" to her list of accolades with the publication of her book, How to Be a Bawse: A Guide to Conquering Life. Throughout the book, Singh details the events and attitudes that have helped her transition from a psychology major struggling with depression to a young woman filled with the confidence to achieve big dreams across a variety of interests.
Singh defines a "bawse" (as opposed to a "boss" like you might find in the workplace) as "someone who conquers their life as a whole. Not just professionally at work, but at home and in relationships and in how they communicate. Whatever it is, they conquer it." Throughout the book, she provides a number of suggestions and bits of practical advice about how that perspective, that confidence, can lead you to the success you deserve. Some parts of the book are particularly applicable to writers, including:
"There are no escalators, only stairs." As much as we'd all like to believe that there's a magic bullet that will take us straight to the top with very little effort, there just isn't. Getting to the top means taking the stairs one at a time. A lot of us spend time looking for shortcuts when, really, we should be focusing on getting to the next step, and then the one after that, and then the one after that.
"There are many things in life you have no control over and it is inefficient to become frustrated by that reality." With the subjective nature of writing, it's so incredibly difficult to discern what works and what doesn't. Sometimes good books never take off and bad books do. Sometimes a great author has one big success and then never has another one even though his subsequent works are technically just as good. Sometimes your book never makes it out of a publisher's slush pile while someone else's inferior story does. The thing about all these kinds of situations is that you have no control over their outcome other than giving it your best shot and moving on if it doesn't work out. The less time you spend fretting over what you can't control, the more time you can spend on the next thing.
“Whatever you’re doing in life, whether you’re a doctor, painter, student, or lemonade stand owner, it’s important to know the game so that you can excel at playing it.” Writers have to understand the rules of the game. Those include accounting for the subjective opinions of others, accepting that criticism of the work is not necessarily criticism of the writer him or herself, and that there is no one true path to success as a writer. The better we understand how to be a writer (and how readers respond to a writer's work), the better we can excel at our endeavors.
"Humans have a tendency to overcomplicate simple things because we overthink them. But if you take a step back and remember your priorities, it becomes easier to make a decision." Analysis paralysis can be a very real and very intimidating obstacle to success. In today's information age, it's so easy to become bogged down in details and overanalyze everything. How many of us spend days comparing and contrasting and agonizing over electronics, appliances, or automobile purchases? How many of us spend hours at a bookstore fretting over which book to buy? In acknowledging our tendency to overcomplicate things, we can better recognize how much analysis is enough and how much is too much.
Lilly Singh is a fascinating woman. I'm intrigued by YouTube celebrities and the followings that they attract. And hey, someone going from zero to 12.7 million subscribers (and $7.5 millions in earnings in one year!) probably has some wisdom to impart about how to hustle and conquer.
Until next time,
Jeff
If you're interested in checking out my work:
"Blogocentric Formulations"
"New & Noteworthy Things" |
This month's official Writing.com writing contest is:
I also encourage you to check out the following items:
EXCERPT: Do you understand yourself? There have been times when I think I do but looking at my life as a whole, there are pieces of me I fail to recognize and/or misinterpret. I think I can safely say I am in better shape in this analysis than I was ten years ago. The reason is I have taken some time to scrutinize who I really am.
EXCERPT: If we allow our fears to control what we think, then we will project unrealistic views and expectations. Which will lead us away from what we strive to be in our life. Into an unfulfilled existence.
EXCERPT: You can never change a person, you can only make them think. Don't ever try to change a friend, or a family member, or anybody else.
EXCERPT: So very often the wrong questions are asked. So very often the right questions remain unanswered. The truth is a voyage, the voyage of humanity. We’re all after the same answers to the same questions and ultimately you don’t find the answer until it’s just too late to matter.
EXCERPT: Every writer has a beginning. For some, it may be early. For others, they develop the love of scribing their later years. What may seem elementary to you may not be clear to the writers who are new to the craft. |
Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter! https://www.Writing.Com/go/nl_form
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Feedback from my last newsletter about genre audiences ("For Authors Newsletter (November 22, 2017)" ):
Elfin Dragon-finally published writes: "I'm just like you. I love reading different genres and hope to also write in at least two (well three if you count poetry). Hmmm, maybe many genre of poetry as well? So complex."
I'm no poetry expert, but I'm sure some poets consider themselves as genre poets of one kind or another!
Quick-Quill writes: "Thank you for answering my question. I think I'll write under different names and just tell my audience this isn't a book they will like. I got a review from a friend who bought my book out of curiosity. He wrote that he 'only read in the bathroom a few pages at a time.' He bought the book in July 2017 and sent me the response Nov 2017. He continued by saying he didn't like mysteries, but that my character development kept him turning pages until the end. I'd say that was the best review. My book is a good bathroom read. "
Nothing wrong with being a good bathroom read! And I think that's a very encouraging sign for your book if someone who is not a fan of the genre feels compelled to keep reading through to the end... in one sitting or many.
DB Cooper writes: "Steven King is very talented but doesn't fit into the horror genre."
I think some of his stuff is definitely straight-up horror. But, yeah, some of his stuff really isn't. Then again, when you're as prolific as Stephen King, I imagine there's a temptation to start experimenting with different genres and subgenres at some point.
Lilli 🧿 ☕ writes: "Excellent newsletter filled with great info. Thank you!"
You're very welcome!
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