Maybe it’s just my inner optimist chatting away, but I
believe that setting high goals can be a great motivating tool for writing.
Setting goals allows you to sit down and figure out what you really want. Hoping
to publish this year? Knock out a first draft? Or build up your fan base? While
all the goals include writing, they can take you in very different direction.
Learning to set the right goals helps to keep you on track especially when work
and laundry start piling up. Here are a couple of goal setting tips to get you
started.
1. Start out small. Goal
#1 shouldn’t be climbing Mt. Everest. Begin with small, achievable goals and
build up. When I started my first novel I didn’t think about selling it. I
simply set a daily goal of 500 words. Then I moved up to 1,000 and 1,500 until
one day I had a first draft!
2.
Write them down. Something about the act of sitting down and writing out your
goals makes them more real. You can post your goals on the fridge as a daily
reminder or keep them in a private journal.
3. Make yourself
accountable to someone. A writer friend of mine tells everyone from her boss to
the next door neighbors about her goals. While you don’t have to be quite so
public about them it’s always a good idea to tell your goals to a trusted
person in your life. Find a writing partner to set goals with or have a friend
call you once a week to cheer you on. It’s all about staying focused and
motivated.
4. Know your
limitations. I tend to set very high goals for myself especially when I have a
lot to accomplish. But I also accept that sometimes life simply gets in the
way. As a full time mom, wife, friend, and writer I only have so much time in
my day. If I’m a little short on my goals this month I don’t let it get me
down. I simply put it on the list for next month and keep writing.
5.
Reevaluate every few weeks. Life changes
and so do your goals. You may have a busy month at work and can only manage a
few words a day on your novel. Instead of abandoning your goals just change
them to fit your current time limits.
Blurb:
“The
French Blue diamond must be destroyed.” Haunted by the words of her dying
father, Lady Madeline Sinclair arrives for the London Season with more than
parties and the latest fashion on her mind. She has sworn a vow, and the
beautifully headstrong and fearless Madeline will allow nothing to distract
her…until she meets the infamous Lord Colin, Duke of Douglas, a man known for
his scandalous past engagement. With a dark grin and stormy eyes, he threatens
to make her forget her duty, along with her manners.
Bound
together by the mysterious diamond, Madeline and Colin soon succumb to the
passion raging between them, even as the diamond eludes their grasp. But the
true threat lies in the hands of an enemy whose dangerous obsession with the
past has the power to destroy them both.
Excerpt:
“I
promise not to hit you again,” she replied, forcing a light tone. “If you
promise not to throw me to the ground and—”
“And?”
One eyebrow shot up.
“Provoke
me.”
He
laughed then, a full, rich sound that seemed to drop the tension from his face.
He was more recognizable now, and Madeline felt her shoulders relax.
“I
am sorry,” she added. “My behavior that day was unforgivable. I do hope we can
start over as friends, Lord Douglas.”
She
held out her hand, the small warning bell in her head quickly silenced.
“It
would be my pleasure.” He took the offered fingers, bending slightly to press
them against his lips. Not a trace of impropriety, but a sigh caught in her
throat all the same, and she held it there, no longer breathing.
In
the back of her mind she knew this was not a good idea. She knew perfectly well
she should invent some excuse, run straight back into the ballroom and discuss
Lady Farris’s flowers. She didn’t move.
“And
since we are already intimately acquainted, I must insist you call me
Colin.”
“Colin,”
she said, finally exhaling so the name rushed out in a breathless tone. She
wildly searched her mind for something else to say but never managed a word.
Colin
pulled her to him, the kiss as much a surprise as her own response to it.
Madeline’s body instantly betrayed her, melting against the strong arms that
held her until she had lost all sense of her earlier outrage. The world fell
away, leaving nothing but Colin’s searing lips blistering her own—and the faint
smell of lilacs.
5 comments:
Thanks so much for hosting me! I hope everyone has a great writing day.
Excellent advice, Jennifer. Beautiful covers. Entertaining excerpts. Nicely done.
So true about goals, Jennifer. I have over all goals and then daily goals. I'm a list maker. Keeps me on track to check them off as accomplished. Your book sounds like an exciting (and romantic) read.
Writing down your goals seems like an excellent idea. That way you can't cheat and extend your deadlines in your mind. Thanks for visiting us today, Jennifer.
Thanks for your comments everyone. Brenda- I'm a list maker too. It's the only thing that helps me remember what to do next!
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