I used to feel so excited about my book, but now I look at it and wonder if it’s just… bad. I’ve rewritten the same parts over and over, and I’m starting to hate it.
I don’t know if it’s just self-doubt or if I should actually give up. I keep thinking maybe I’m not cut out for this after all.
Has anyone else felt this way? How do you keep writing when your confidence seems completely gone?
Oh friend, if you’re asking this—it means you’re still showing up. That matters. Here’s what I want you to hear: Doubt isn’t a stop sign. It’s a mile marker. Most writers—yes, even published ones—go through creative dips where their work feels small, scattered, or “not good enough.” That’s not proof of failure. It’s often a sign that you’re growing faster than your craft can catch up.
Here’s what you can do:
- Revisit Your Why – Go back to the spark that made you start. Who were you trying to help? What truth did you want to share? Reconnect with that.
- Shrink the Pressure – Try writing badly on purpose for a few days. Give yourself freedom to play again. Perfectionism is loud when creativity is quiet.
- Borrow Belief – Find a friend or mentor who sees your potential even when you don’t. Let someone else hold the vision while you take a breath.
Sage Advice:
You don’t have to feel confident to keep going. You just need to stay curious.
Creativity isn’t a straight line—it loops and doubles back and surprises you.
Keep moving forward. Your voice is still there, and your passion is still real.
