I’ve been writing for a while now—mostly in fits and starts—but I never quite feel like I’m getting anywhere. I’ve finished some things, abandoned others, and honestly I keep wondering if I’m just spinning my wheels.
I want to take my writing more seriously, but I feel like I’m missing something—like there’s a mindset or way of thinking that successful writers seem to have that I don’t.
What do I need to understand about writing if I want to really stick with it for the long haul?
That’s such an important question—and the truth may surprise you. The biggest shift? Understanding that success isn’t a finish line—it’s a rhythm.
When we think of success as a single outcome—publishing a book, hitting a list, going viral—we risk tying our sense of worth to things outside our control. Real progress happens when you stop chasing a final “win” and start building a repeatable relationship with the work. That means:
- Writing when it feels messy
- Showing up when no one’s clapping
- Celebrating learning instead of just outcomes
Let me tell you something quietly powerful: Sustainable creativity comes from not needing each piece to prove your talent. It grows when you write from curiosity, not performance. You’ll publish more, connect more, and stay well.
Sage Advice:
- Define success in multiple dimensions: creative growth, audience connection, and process satisfaction.
- Build habits, not goals. A habit can carry you through when motivation fades.
- Protect your joy. You’re allowed to love what you do—even before anyone else does.
Keep asking big questions like this. They shape your path more than any tool or tactic ever will.
