If you've been reading our recent blog posts, you've had glimpses of how we TeachingAuthors are spending our summer, from researching to reading to teaching.
This week, I'm attending the Catholic Writers Guild Convention in Schaumburg, Illinois, where
on Wednesday I gave a presentation on "Coping with Your Inner Critic." Much of my talk was based on the book Wrestling with Your Angels: A Spiritual Journey to Great Writing (Adams Media) by Janet O. Hagberg. Unfortunately, the book is out-of-print, but you can still find used copies online.
Hagberg says,
“We all have strong inner critics standing on one shoulder, reminding us of our failures, telling us to stop before we embarrass ourselves . . . .”The critic’s fundamental goal is to destroy our confidence. But Hagberg also reassures us that:
“If on one shoulder we have the critic, on the other we have an angel . . . providing answers to the critic.”
Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay |
“The critic loves to be needed, and the grooming, editing, and polishing aspects of writing lend themselves to the critic’s skills. . . . Critics are also great at sorting out how to use feedback. . . . "
- a post I wrote several years ago on using deadlines to silence the inner critic
- April's great Wednesday Writing Workout on overcoming our writing fears in this post, which includes a terrific poem
- Mary Ann's post on when to listen to the inner critic
- Jeanne Marie's post on how she uses an outline to quiet her critic
- JoAnn's post on how she outsmarts her critic by getting up early
- Ryan Urie's piece on Write to Done on "How Fear Helps You Be a Better Writer"
- Suzannah Windsor Freeman's article on Write It Sideways, "15 Common Writing Fears You Need To Face"
- Sage Cohen's post at Writer's Digest on "10 Ways to Harness Fear and Fuel Your Writing"
4 comments:
Thank you Carmela, I missed your talk I'm sorry to say...but what a wonderful time it was
Great to meet you there, Anne. Thanks for sharing your talk.
Thanks for all these great links, Carmela! And I just put Hagberg's book on my wish list--it sounds like my kind of read.
You're welcome, Rebecca!
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