Luck has little to do with link. A long lasting 書く career doesn’t just happen. A writer can burst onto the scene and quickly disappear. Another can have a series of hits then write a bunch of flops and never be heard from again. The difference between a long lasting career and one that burns out is strategy. Here are seven rules to help あなた find the right strategy for あなた and get あなた started on your journey to long lasting success.
Learn the power of focus. For most of us, we have もっと見る than enough to do on a daily basis. And when it comes to any 書く project the 一覧 can grow exponentially- あなた have a blog to write, a monthly newsletter to keep up with, two deadlines for upcoming books, a speaking engagement and more. A long “To Do List” can be overwhelming and for many of us can lead to procrastination, confusion または just plain paralysis! The solution? Do one thing at a time. Come up with a goal for the day. 書く または marketing? Then do the tasks that will accomplish that goal. If あなた have extra time あなた can focus on other less pressing tasks.
Keep moving. Humans are smart. Sometimes too smart. Many times obstacles come in our way like a 木, ツリー in the middle of the road and instead of going around it, we try to chop it down または climb over it. Don’t focus on the obstacles. A rejection is an obstacle but instead of focusing on it 移動する to the 次 submission または work on something else. So your first play wasn’t the greatest, start your 次 one; okay so your お気に入り editor left your magazine, try to woo the new one. Don’t focus on the roadblock. Go around it.
Don’t use a shovel to eat soup. Use the right tools that work for your project. Whether it is the tool of language (different language is used in romantic fiction versus ファンタジー または literary) または software. However, あなた don’t need all of the latest technology to be a prosperous writer. I still write all of my initial story ideas long hand before entering them on my computer. To help ‘speed’ the process, a 年 前 I bought a Neo AlphaSmart that has helped me capture ideas and bits and pieces of my manuscript and アップロード it directly to my computer, but my handwritten notes are still my old standby. There are a lot of reasons to spend money, new software, 書く books, gadgets that promise to make your 書く life easier, choose only the ones あなた really need.
Time stops for no man. How あなた spend your present time dictates your future. Daydream about 書く and months later you’ll have a lovely daydream and nothing to 表示する for it. If あなた envision a book write it every day, if not every 日 at least every week. With our busy lifestyle many of us--beginner and professional writer – let time get away from us. For some of us, we are always trying to ‘find’ time to complete または start our 次 manuscript. Time never stands still so it’s up to あなた to grab a hold of it rather than waiting for it to be ‘enough’. I know a dear friend of mine who when she was working full-time always dreamed of being able to stay ホーム and paint. She now works from home, but still doesn’t find enough time. Why? Because she hasn’t learned the importance of time management. She fills her time with activities that don’t get her close to her dream of painting. So now every 日 she puts in a half 時 when she must paint and is working towards her dream of being a full-time artist. Time is not the enemy, how あなた use it is. So be conscious of what あなた do with it. You’ll be surprised how far you’ll go.
Be your own cheerleader not your opponent. We all suffer from doubts, but don’t let your inner critic stop you. When a baby is learning to walk she’ll fall down a lot. She’ll get bruised and cry, but in order to master the skill she’ll need to keep on getting up and trying again and again. We understand that falling is part of the process, but for some reason as adults we’ve become averse to falling. We’ve interpreted it as ‘failing’ and it is. But one must fail his way to success. When あなた fail at something, instead of letting the critic have the final say, replace it with your inner cheerleader. The one that says, “That’s okay, keep going.” または “I know it didn’t work this time, but 次 time will be better.” Like the baby learning to walk we have to keep getting up. One rejection letter または two hundred should not stop あなた from building your 書く career. So an editor didn’t like your latest story, come up with something else または 提出する to a different editor. Every career will have its ups and downs. The ones that burn out are the ones that hit the floor and stay there.
Claim your status. Whether you’re published または unpublished claim the fact that you’re a writer. Don’t wait for someone else to give あなた that validation. Once again your inner critic may be saying, “I’m not a real writer because I haven’t published anything.” または “I’m not a real writer because I’m not published in hardback.” “I’m only a genre writer; I’ll be a real writer when I’m in mainstream.” または “I’ve only been published in the community newsletter I’m not a real writer like a journalist.” If あなた write, you’re a writer. あなた don’t need anyone’s permission. However, I will caution you, if あなた make this claim, take the necessary steps あなた need to grow your skills as a writer. On the flip side there are a number of people who proudly call themselves writers, but never grow in their craft and their careers shows this lack. So constantly strive to be a better writer. This can be accomplished in many ways, online workshops, attending a conference, taking college courses, self-development によって reading, etc. Don’t ever stand still.
Be flexible. Successful 書く careers are rarely linear. Writers have to take detours when a magazine closes または a new editor hates the writer’s work. A successful mystery series suddenly becomes stale または market trends change the type of work that is accepted. Stretch your 書く muscles so that your career can always take a new and exciting journey. Do あなた write poems? Try 書く an 記事 on poetry. Perhaps that could lead to a book. If your novel isn’t selling, perhaps serialize it online または take the theme and write a short story. Fiction authors try non-fiction. Don’t let yourself be victim to the whims of the industry.
Success is mainly strategy. Writers whose careers have lasted haven’t been without failure, disappointment and setbacks, but these individuals have learned how to 移動する フォワード, 前進, 楽しみにして on the goals they’ve set for themselves. Hopefully with these seven rules あなた can linkfor success.
Learn the power of focus. For most of us, we have もっと見る than enough to do on a daily basis. And when it comes to any 書く project the 一覧 can grow exponentially- あなた have a blog to write, a monthly newsletter to keep up with, two deadlines for upcoming books, a speaking engagement and more. A long “To Do List” can be overwhelming and for many of us can lead to procrastination, confusion または just plain paralysis! The solution? Do one thing at a time. Come up with a goal for the day. 書く または marketing? Then do the tasks that will accomplish that goal. If あなた have extra time あなた can focus on other less pressing tasks.
Keep moving. Humans are smart. Sometimes too smart. Many times obstacles come in our way like a 木, ツリー in the middle of the road and instead of going around it, we try to chop it down または climb over it. Don’t focus on the obstacles. A rejection is an obstacle but instead of focusing on it 移動する to the 次 submission または work on something else. So your first play wasn’t the greatest, start your 次 one; okay so your お気に入り editor left your magazine, try to woo the new one. Don’t focus on the roadblock. Go around it.
Don’t use a shovel to eat soup. Use the right tools that work for your project. Whether it is the tool of language (different language is used in romantic fiction versus ファンタジー または literary) または software. However, あなた don’t need all of the latest technology to be a prosperous writer. I still write all of my initial story ideas long hand before entering them on my computer. To help ‘speed’ the process, a 年 前 I bought a Neo AlphaSmart that has helped me capture ideas and bits and pieces of my manuscript and アップロード it directly to my computer, but my handwritten notes are still my old standby. There are a lot of reasons to spend money, new software, 書く books, gadgets that promise to make your 書く life easier, choose only the ones あなた really need.
Time stops for no man. How あなた spend your present time dictates your future. Daydream about 書く and months later you’ll have a lovely daydream and nothing to 表示する for it. If あなた envision a book write it every day, if not every 日 at least every week. With our busy lifestyle many of us--beginner and professional writer – let time get away from us. For some of us, we are always trying to ‘find’ time to complete または start our 次 manuscript. Time never stands still so it’s up to あなた to grab a hold of it rather than waiting for it to be ‘enough’. I know a dear friend of mine who when she was working full-time always dreamed of being able to stay ホーム and paint. She now works from home, but still doesn’t find enough time. Why? Because she hasn’t learned the importance of time management. She fills her time with activities that don’t get her close to her dream of painting. So now every 日 she puts in a half 時 when she must paint and is working towards her dream of being a full-time artist. Time is not the enemy, how あなた use it is. So be conscious of what あなた do with it. You’ll be surprised how far you’ll go.
Be your own cheerleader not your opponent. We all suffer from doubts, but don’t let your inner critic stop you. When a baby is learning to walk she’ll fall down a lot. She’ll get bruised and cry, but in order to master the skill she’ll need to keep on getting up and trying again and again. We understand that falling is part of the process, but for some reason as adults we’ve become averse to falling. We’ve interpreted it as ‘failing’ and it is. But one must fail his way to success. When あなた fail at something, instead of letting the critic have the final say, replace it with your inner cheerleader. The one that says, “That’s okay, keep going.” または “I know it didn’t work this time, but 次 time will be better.” Like the baby learning to walk we have to keep getting up. One rejection letter または two hundred should not stop あなた from building your 書く career. So an editor didn’t like your latest story, come up with something else または 提出する to a different editor. Every career will have its ups and downs. The ones that burn out are the ones that hit the floor and stay there.
Claim your status. Whether you’re published または unpublished claim the fact that you’re a writer. Don’t wait for someone else to give あなた that validation. Once again your inner critic may be saying, “I’m not a real writer because I haven’t published anything.” または “I’m not a real writer because I’m not published in hardback.” “I’m only a genre writer; I’ll be a real writer when I’m in mainstream.” または “I’ve only been published in the community newsletter I’m not a real writer like a journalist.” If あなた write, you’re a writer. あなた don’t need anyone’s permission. However, I will caution you, if あなた make this claim, take the necessary steps あなた need to grow your skills as a writer. On the flip side there are a number of people who proudly call themselves writers, but never grow in their craft and their careers shows this lack. So constantly strive to be a better writer. This can be accomplished in many ways, online workshops, attending a conference, taking college courses, self-development によって reading, etc. Don’t ever stand still.
Be flexible. Successful 書く careers are rarely linear. Writers have to take detours when a magazine closes または a new editor hates the writer’s work. A successful mystery series suddenly becomes stale または market trends change the type of work that is accepted. Stretch your 書く muscles so that your career can always take a new and exciting journey. Do あなた write poems? Try 書く an 記事 on poetry. Perhaps that could lead to a book. If your novel isn’t selling, perhaps serialize it online または take the theme and write a short story. Fiction authors try non-fiction. Don’t let yourself be victim to the whims of the industry.
Success is mainly strategy. Writers whose careers have lasted haven’t been without failure, disappointment and setbacks, but these individuals have learned how to 移動する フォワード, 前進, 楽しみにして on the goals they’ve set for themselves. Hopefully with these seven rules あなた can linkfor success.
Ms. Farogonda asked for the winx to come down to her office. when the winx reached ms. farogonda's office she told them that diana wants to speak wth one of you. she didnt tell me who but she told me to pick two extras. ms. farogonda can i go, bloom asked her. flora will be going along with musa and aisha ms farogonda told them. hmph bloom pouted, can we at least go with them bloom 発言しました quikly. fine all of あなた girls can go and im bringing the specialist. ok stella 発言しました in a sing song voice. lets go 発言しました the winx. they met the RF boys outside and went in the owl. winx: WINX BELIEVIX
AT THE アマゾン
flora: let's get going
aisha: see ya winx
bloom: meet back here in an 時 k
ok bloom musa said
( diana appears in front of them)
GUARDS take them away
what??!
(to be continued)
AT THE アマゾン
flora: let's get going
aisha: see ya winx
bloom: meet back here in an 時 k
ok bloom musa said
( diana appears in front of them)
GUARDS take them away
what??!
(to be continued)
Tears,
a combination of helplessness and anger,
a combination of joy and gratitude.
what different meanings it holds!
sometimes of love,
sometimes of hate.
with what different feelings we cry!
but those tears are the same.
they dwell inside the eye,
ready to attack,
the peace of our heart.
to flood the face,
with undoubted 愛 and care,
with undoubted anger and hate,
with undoubted pain and despair.
pain? yes, and despair too!
the breakdown of our heart,
the dawn of the truth,
leading to flood the face,
with our sentiments undoubted.
It’s the color of you
あなた always wore it
It’s the color we shared
As we hid from them
With it we showed our true selves,
Though no one cared
Our オレンジ book bags
Were our shields from some of the pain
We protected each other
But it wasn’t enough
We were like two オレンジ crayons
When everyone else was green
Then あなた left me alone,
All I had was our color orange
As they hit me
I took peace in knowing
あなた were in the オレンジ field in the sky
あなた always 発言しました was there.
The オレンジ of the sun set
Is your smile
Even though あなた left too soon
Orange…
Now it’s my color
My way of remembering you
Now I am the lone オレンジ in the rainbow
Without あなた here
I protect my own
Though I wish あなた were here
Now オレンジ is my color
A color for your bravery
A color for my survival
オレンジ will forever be our color
Even though death took あなた away
Forever オレンジ for you,
Sweet Cassidy.
あなた always wore it
It’s the color we shared
As we hid from them
With it we showed our true selves,
Though no one cared
Our オレンジ book bags
Were our shields from some of the pain
We protected each other
But it wasn’t enough
We were like two オレンジ crayons
When everyone else was green
Then あなた left me alone,
All I had was our color orange
As they hit me
I took peace in knowing
あなた were in the オレンジ field in the sky
あなた always 発言しました was there.
The オレンジ of the sun set
Is your smile
Even though あなた left too soon
Orange…
Now it’s my color
My way of remembering you
Now I am the lone オレンジ in the rainbow
Without あなた here
I protect my own
Though I wish あなた were here
Now オレンジ is my color
A color for your bravery
A color for my survival
オレンジ will forever be our color
Even though death took あなた away
Forever オレンジ for you,
Sweet Cassidy.
Violently, the ground shook,
As the mountain exhaled black smoke.
Overwhelmed, they ran for cover,
Those left began to choke.
Cherished, were the possessions left behind,
Melted and scattered as ash.
Beloved, the children lost,
They couldn’t make a 迅速, スウィフト dash.
Darkened, the cloudy heavens above,
Black clouds fell from the sky.
Covered, the people escaping,
With no way out they began to die.
Lost, the souls of the trapped,
A snatched half-chance at life.
Fallen is Pompeii;
Civilisation, 愛 and it’s people’s cries.
As the mountain exhaled black smoke.
Overwhelmed, they ran for cover,
Those left began to choke.
Cherished, were the possessions left behind,
Melted and scattered as ash.
Beloved, the children lost,
They couldn’t make a 迅速, スウィフト dash.
Darkened, the cloudy heavens above,
Black clouds fell from the sky.
Covered, the people escaping,
With no way out they began to die.
Lost, the souls of the trapped,
A snatched half-chance at life.
Fallen is Pompeii;
Civilisation, 愛 and it’s people’s cries.