Thursday, March 24, 2011

Celebrating All My Courageous Writing Friends

Tomorrow is a big day for many romance writers. Many of us have entered the Romance Writers of America's contests for published and unpublished authors. The RITA and the GOLDEN HEART contests are our industry's version of the OSCARS for writers.

Today, as an unpublished writer, I'm getting all twitchy because I have two entries in the GOLDEN HEART. I have other unpublished friends who have entered as well. Tomorrow we will most likely be nervous and anxious as we wait for all the finalists to be announced. We'll pretend we don't care, but we do. It's a huge honor! A huge feather in one's writing cap. It opens doors. It doesn't guarantee publication, but it does mean that you've become part of a select sisterhood of writers. So it is a big deal. A very big deal. It's like getting a college degree: once you have it, no one can take that honor away. For unpublished writers it is also a huge affirmation that they aren't whistling dixie against the wind and completely delusional.

This is the creme de la creme. A finalist gets all kinds of writing princess perks. Who wouldn't want to be a Princess for four days at the RWA National Conference?

A lot of my wonderful published friends entered the RITA. This contest is important to them, too. I know it generates more interest. Gets agents interests, booksellers interested, but I'm not published so I have no idea how much extra oomph a RITA Award can give a published writer. I do know this: it's beautiful, bright and shiny. I touched one at a writer's meeting. The winner brought her RITA Statuette into the meeting and shared her victory with us. It was sweet. It was a moment. She was a Princess for four days during the RWA National Conference. Then she shared her sweet Princess moment with us.

The award mattered. A lot.

But for all the people who final, or win, these awards, there are many who don't. Tomorrow will be a day of highs and lows. Therefore I thought that today I'd focus on why we became writers--why we strive to create stories. Because we have to have more than shiny awards and statues to keep us going as writers. We have to have an inner drive that supersedes material recognition. Otherwise we won't keep writing--writing for no pay, no recognition, no awards.

So today, before the announcements are made, I want to say that YOU ARE ALL WINNERS! You entered, you wrote books, you took a chance, you put your heart out there, you risked losing. And in risking the disappointment you grew as writers.

I have a few quotes I want to share with you. Quotes that keep me going as a writer. Quotes that remind me about why I write:

I hope that your measure of success will be not the gratification of getting an agent or seeing your name on the cover, but putting together a novel of real depth--of having something to say and saying it in a story with lasting power. Donald Maass

The object of goals is getting there... the object of dreams is the journey. Delle Jacobs

The master in the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his information and his recreation, his love and his religion. He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence at whatever he does, leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him he is always doing both. James A. Michener

Tomorrow will be a big day. I have three bottles of champagne chilling in the fridge. I plan to open one of them and to celebrate everyone's successes. I am also going to have a THINGS THAT MAKE ME SMILE party.

So join me tomorrow for a special blog that celebrates ALL of the writers who have entered the prestigious RITA/GOLDEN HEART contests. Let's be happy for the finalists. Let's celebrate their victories. But let's also remember to celebrate the gift of having the courage to enter the contests because we all love writing compelling stories that move people.

And that is what we're all about: writers on a journey who encourage and celebrate each other!!

See you tomorrow!

16 comments:

Kellie Kamryn said...

No matter what happens tomorrow I'm happy with the accomplishment of finishing the book! And I can only make it better! Great words Christine for all those of us waiting! Fingers crossed for you too :)

Gwen Hernandez said...

Well said, Christine. Sticking with it makes you a winner. Good luck to you and all of our friends who entered the GH/RITA!

Ellen Brickley said...

Exactly, Christine - the achievement is in doing something! The recognition is also wonderful, but anyone who takes the time to do something has won.

My fingers are crossed for you and your writing friends :)

Melissa said...

Fingers crossed for you, girl! :)

Christine said...

Hi Kellie: You are so right! You finished your book--this is a HUGE achievement. So many people say they want to write one, but never do. They think it is easy, but it isn't. That's the truth. Ask anyone who has revised a book!!

Christine said...

Hi Gwen: Crossing fingers and toes for you, too! Hope we all feel like finalists tomorrow :-)

Christine said...

Thanks so much Melissa! I appreciate it. I hope that everyone comes over to play tomorrow and share with me their things that make them smile :-)

Christine said...

Hi Ellen: Thanks so much for joining in the great crossing of the appendages!! You're a positive person -- I hope I get to meet you in person one day :-)

Katherine Bone said...

I'll keep my fingers crossed for you, Christine! And, I might add, I'll be posted near a phone in case you want to give me a shout out WHEN the calls go out. ;)

I didn't enter this year but I wish everyone who did a heartfelt 'job well done' and a quote that has become my mantra during the highs and lows of writing.

"Never, never, never, never, never, never, never give up." Winston Churchill (This is on a bracelet around my wrist!)

Christine said...

Hi Katherine: Thanks for stopping in to say hi!! We are all winners--we wrote and finished books :-) I'll be ironing and checking my blog tomorrow. I always iron when I am nervous LOL.

:-)

Barbara Bettis said...

Christine,
Good luck tomorrow--it's always a nervous time, waiting for the calls!

I didn't enter this year, so for once I won't be biting my nails to my wrists. But I do have a few things I wish to donate to your ironing marathon :)

Unknown said...

Good Luck to you Christine, and all the other writers who entered the RITA/GH contests. My fingers are crossed for you all.

Christine said...

Hi Barbara: I know--I almost didn't enter this year because this is an "ironing" marathon! Thanks for stopping by and giving me your support!

Christine said...

Hi Andycea: Thanks for your well wishes. I hope only the best for all the writers who entered. A few will final, but we're all winners for sending in our entries.

Tracey Devlyn said...

Absolutely, Christine! Congrats to everyone courageous enough to put your manuscript out there. It's a difficult step to think your craft is good enough to win such a prestigious award. In my book, all the participants are winners already.

Grace Greene said...

Hi, Christine - I've heard it said many times that we deserve congrats for finishing a book and I think it's true - and good for us to remember. Sometimes our triumphs get lost in the midst of hard work and disappointment.

We couldn't have entered unless we'd completed (is it ever really complete?) a novel and took the big step to enter it. Good luck to you and to all of us!