How Jealousy Kills Creativity

Jealousy

Jealousy

Of course, we all know that feeling of wanting what someone else has.

We want to have just as much success, sell as many copies, get such a huge advance or become a bestselling author like someone we see doing it.

And when someone has what we want, we can feel envy or jealousy.

Envy isn’t really bad.

It tells us what we desire. It can even give a new push to our work, create a new intensity, and a new goal. And that is a good thing.

If you feel envy for something, you should notice what it is about, maybe write it down, and then go do the work to get to your new goal. Maybe you have even discovered a new role model who inspires you.

Jealousy, on the other hand, carries anger with it.  Continue reading

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Transform the Comparing Thought Pattern

Comparing yourself to yourself

Best comparison

Last week, I talked about three destructive thought patterns that we – and especially we writers – need to stop and shift into different, supportive patterns.

Today, we’ll look more closely at the first of those:

Comparing

I say “comparing” on purpose, because it is an active action when you go out and compare yourself and your successes to someone else and their successes.

And when you go out to compare yourself with others, you will inevitably find someone who is better than you. Someone in your genre, even. Someone with more sales, more fans, more awards … take your pick.

And of course, that will make you feel bad about yourself and your writing.

Which is the whole point of that thought pattern. Continue reading

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The Three Most Dangerous Thought Habits For your Writing

Dangerous Thought Habits: Comparison, Judging, Jealousy

What are dangerous thought habits?

They are ways of thinking and ways of spending our thinking time that can hurt your mindset and outlook. They can even lead you to make bad decisions for yourself, your writing, and your author business.

We’re all human. We think. We build habits around our thinking. And as humans, we’re prone to developing damaging thought habits.

From our experiences and role models, we create and learn certain behaviors, habits and ways of thinking while we are young, and we keep doing these things as adults.

However, some of those ways of thinking are prone to make us unhappy and angry. Those negative emotions can drastically reduce creativity and productivity.

Here are three things you need to stop doing in order to become happier, more self-confident, and in the end, more successful.

Comparing, being jealous and judging.

Dangerous Thought Habits #1: Comparing

Comparison comes naturally to us. I’m sure it started in kindergarten for most of you, or 1st grade at the latest. Maybe you just wanted to do the same things are your older sister. That’s where we learn to look at who is better than we, and who is not as good as we are.

And of course, there were grades.

Grades send a very clear message of where we stand in comparison with the other children. They also influence how we think of ourselves. Great? Good? Middling? Or not good enough?

You will always be able to find someone who is worse off than you, and for some, that’s a consolation.

But you’ll also always find someone who is doing better than you are – and that can be devastating.

Don’t do that to yourself. Eliminate this dangerous thought habit. look at how far you have come and learn feeling grateful.

Dangerous Thought Habits #2: Being jealous

Feeling that quick twinge of envy is not necessarily a bad thing. It is a sign you noticed something you want for yourself, and that is always good to know.

Maybe now you know that you want to win a certain award, and that makes you work even harder on your writing. Which is a good thing.

But if jealousy is making you sick inside, and you start feeling angry and that life is unfair – then you’re starting down a rather negative path. It leads you directly into a lack mentality which hampers creativity massively.

And being jealous will rob all joy from any success that you do have – because you can always be jealous of someone who does better.

If you find yourself thinking jealous thoughts, gently release them and remind yourself of your own journey and successes.

Damaging Thought Habits #3: Judging

Out of comparison and jealousy comes judging.

It’s very easy. If someone is better than you are – let’s say in book sales – and that makes you feel bad, well, it’s easy to find a reason why that person doesn’t deserve those sales, and is not, in fact, any better than you are.

Maybe it’s the genre, and you’ll never stoop to write erotica.

Maybe her fans are all morons, and it’s unbelievable why they would read such shallow stuff.

Maybe he’s been born rich and had it easy all his life, and got his  sensational contract because of old connections in New York.

Judging does only one thing: It shifts the imaginary grades in your head, putting you in a better position. Because that other person is now a bad person and thus less worthy than you are – in your mind.

It also never helps.

If you find yourself judging someone for what they are saying or doing, just pause for a moment. Become aware of what you’re doing, and then let it go. Again, look at how far you have come, and find something to be grateful for.

Don’t let those dangerous thought habits destroy your happiness and creativity.

Because that’s a terrible thing to do to yourself.

All these three dangerous thought habits – comparison, jealousy and judging – do only one thing for you: They make you feel angry and righteous, rather than feeling sad and disappointed.

Anger is a safer feeling than sadness. Feeling righteous is more pleasant than feeling disappointed.

But those feelings and thought habits block insight. If you’re feeling righteous, you’re not very willing to learn. You’re finding external excuses for where you are as a writer, rather than improving your craft. You blame the universe for your lack of success.

And all the time, you are sending out vibrations of lack, sadness and disappointment, covered with a nice helping of anger.

And the thing with that universe is that you get what you send out.

Which means you’ll get more lack, sadness and disappointment. And anger.

So become aware of any dangerous thought habits you might have and make a conscious effort to let them go.

Something that I have found very helpful myself is to keep a Gratitude Journal. Try it out. Write out ten things you’re grateful for, every evening before you go to bed. And observe how your mindset changes.

Bonus: Tapping Phrases

Here are some tapping phrases to start shifting those dangerous thought habits:

Even though I learned to compare myself to know where I’m standing, and looking at my sales rank makes me want to pull out my hair and kill a few of those bestselling authors, I’m okay the way I am, and I now choose to learn from those writers.

Even though I’m so jealous of those million dollar contracts, I could turn green with envy, I’m okay the way I am, and I’ll now focus on getting more books out.

Even though I would love to think that all those bestselling authors are just gaming the system and hoodwinking their readers, they just can’t be that good, dang it!, I’m still okay the way I am, and I now choose to stop making excuses and really work on my own writing.

Your Turn:

What is your most common dangerous thought habit?
How often do you check your sales rank?
How would a million dollars make you feel happy?
What’s your next book about?

Image Source: F. Moebius

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PPS: I can help you deal with the doubts and fears you might have about writing. And we can create new habits both for your thinking and writing. EFT is the fastest way I know to shift limiting beliefs, old thought habits and other kinds of blocks. Click HERE and send me an email. Together, we’ll figure out how I can support you best.

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The Myth of the Damaged Poet

Damaged Poet

Damaged Poet

There’s that myth out there… about how writers need to experience deep personal pain and hardship in order to be able to write deep, moving stories, or become literary geniuses.

That myth about the tortured mind and soul that can only find release by creating stories and releasing that pain onto paper.

You know what? It’s not true.

In fact, I dare say that most traumatized people do not feel like writing or revisiting those experiences except in a therapeutic way.

But I’m talking about that myth because I think it is very damaging to writers who are serious about their writing. If you happen to believe that this kind of personal background is necessary, and you won’t ever be a successful writer without it – this can really hurt you. In the worst case, you will create that kind of tragedy in your life.

So it’s time to let that belief fly out of the window. Continue reading

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Writers’ Block – A Safety Program

stop

Stop!

There are people who say that Writers’ Block is all in your mind.

And they are right.

But Writers’ Block is not something you can clear with your rational mind. Because it is actually something much deeper and much older. Writers’ Block is anchored in your non-rational part of your being.

Writers’ Block is a safety program.

We all have safety programs. They usually get installed in childhood, but sometimes they arrive later. Their only function is to protect us from feeling bad, being disappointed, recalling grief or horrible fear. They keep us safe, even if it means preventing something we think we like.

Sounds weird, but it is true. Continue reading

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That Dreadful Blank Page

A blank page

That Blank Page!

There’s that blank page. Or the empty file.

That thing you want to, have to, are supposed to turn into a story.

And you have no idea how to begin.

Your mind goes blank, all that old doubt comes creeping in, and you can feel yourself get blocked more and more every minute you stare at that page.

That’s writing hell.

The good news is that writing is not the same as reading. As Dean Wesley Smith has explained so well in his lecture series “Writing into the Dark”, you do not have to write a story from beginning to end.

You are allowed to start with the scene you have in mind.

Just start writing that part that you know. And then fill in the blanks afterwards.

But… but that’s now how it’s supposed to be! Continue reading

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Hurrah! A Publisher Contacted me!

Happy Day

Happy Day!

That’s such an awesome experience. It’s like celebrating your birthday and Christmas at the same time, isn’t it?

This wonderful feeling of recognition, of appreciation, of validation… your writing is finally seen and acknowledged.

Except that there is a catch.

Real publishers do not contact authors.

The exception are best-selling indie authors. Those that have already sold hundreds of thousands of books.

Real publishers – the kind that offers a contract, an advance and royalty payments, then prints books and distributes them – rely on agents to be presented with selected manuscripts. There are few exceptions, and even those do not look for authors. They wait for authors to propose a book idea to them.

So what’s with the publisher that sent you email or even called you on the phone? The one that keeps calling you? Continue reading

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Argh! That Review!

Got a bad review

Got a bad review

It happens to every author.

That review where you feel massively misunderstood. That review which makes you feel unappreciated and wrongly judged. That one that makes you want to kill someone. It doesn’t even have to be a 1-star one. It could be a nice one where they got one thing dreadfully wrong.

And it has nothing to do with you. Nothing.

It happens because a reader usually doesn’t even see the author. The reader sees the story and either likes it or not. Or dislikes part of it. And a review is simply a reader’s opinion.

Of course, that doesn’t really help if that review just came in and you’re torn between screaming, cursing and crying.

So here are three steps how to deal with it: Continue reading

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Oh no! I’m visible!

I'm visible!

I’m visible!

Are you familiar with this scenario:

You published a book or a few, and sold a handful, and now they are languishing in the 400,000s on Amazon and nobody ever sees them. You sell one or two per month. And it is utterly frustrating.

And the weird thing about this?

It’s a mindset thing.

What? I thought it’s about marketing and telling everyone and buying ads and …

Yes, that too.

But behind that is a very fundamental question: How visible do you want to be?

Because being visible is dangerous. Being visible makes people see your books and you. And possibly not like them.

If you’re a bit like me, that part might make something inside you cringe. Continue reading

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Three Ways of Regaining your Writing Mojo

No mojo

No Mojo

It happens to every writer: Losing the mojo.

Staring at the file, and not being able to open it. Or opening it, and the words don’t come. Lying in bed awake with dialog in your head, but it’s all gone when you get back to your computer…

I’ve been there.

And it’s a horrible place.

Here are three ways to get out of it.

1) Write something else. Continue reading

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