After 4 years together, my
agent and I have parted ways.
This is numero dos for me, so
I’ve been through breaking up with an agent before.
However, this time around,
breaking up with an agent feels like…breaking up with a spouse because there
are “children” (pending manuscripts still out on submission) to consider.
Despite the obvious
differences between breaking up with an agent versus breaking up with a spouse,
this song remains the same: Could’ve,
would’ve, should’ve… And though our parting was simply a matter of going in
different directions, breaking up with this agent means that I’m all the way
back to the beginning of the journey.
And that kinda sucks.
On top of what I feel about
this is the fact that it’s now twice.
I feel what my friends who have had a few failed marriages have told me they feel—a
little embarrassed. I have all the thoughts I’m pretty sure those folks have: Man, if I can’t get it right twice, I should
just give up trying.
Despite all this, I have not
lost complete faith in publishing or in my writing… thanks to a very unlikely
source: Bethenny Frankel, the not-so-housewife of The Real Housewives of New York.
I know—reserve your
judgment. Also, come on…you know you
watch those shows, too.
I was actually listening to her
on a radio talk show, and while there was a time I dismissed her as a vapid,
wanna-be who needed to eat a hamburger—or at the very least, some carbs—thanks
to this interview (and, yes, this season of The Real Housewives of New York) I’ve come to see another perspective of her.
I’m fascinated by her
transformation post very public and very nasty divorce and post failed talk show—watching a
successful, bold, aggressive woman climb up the ladder of success and then have
multiple failures knock her down is somewhat validating that the journey to
success is not linear. And, listening to her on this radio show while biking the
other morning caused me great, great pause and a sort of a-ha moment happened
with regard to this recent change in my writing life.
Bethenny spoke about regret,
writing (she’s written a few best sellers), trusting
your instincts, seeing things as they really are, and making decisions.
On regret:
The one thing that has gotten me through has been
saying whatever is happening to me, I know I will realize later why it happened.
I’m not a total fatalist or
believer in absolute destiny—that things are predetermined and on a set course.
Yet, right now, though I don’t have a lot of time away from this experience, I
can already see the necessity of going through it, which I think could be
viewed as the reason. Any ounce of naiveté I had left inside of me regarding
publishing is now gone. Even though I’d been at it awhile, when I signed with
this agent, I still had a pie-in-the-sky perspective, and delusions of grandeur
about getting a book deal, what it meant and what it entailed. The reason for
this break up experience, in the grand scheme of things, is to learn a critical
lesson in publishing: Just because you have an agent who submits your work to
publishers on your behalf and who also invests time in your work, doesn’t mean
IT will happen. Important lesson to learn.
On Writing
Me, too. I often write to
unravel the knot of confusion in my head or to make peace with something. In
writing, there is exploration, hope, and possibility. The act of writing this
very blog post, right now, is validating. It validates that my experience means
something—that it matters.
On Using My Gut Instincts
We don’t use our gut instincts. We were given a
women’s intuition and we don’t use our guts. We use our heads and our hearts.
There are a few moments over
the last few years, when I felt, in my gut, something wasn’t working. But, I
ignored that feeling. I ignored it
because I was too scared to be alone. Because if I chose to part ways, I would
have to face my failures and, at the time, that terrified me. My head and my heart got in the way.
On Seeing Things as They Really Are
I think it might be what I want somebody to be.
I’ve learned over my
lifetime that people come in and out of our lives for specific reasons and at
specific times. My former agent came at a pretty low point in my writing life, and she restored a sense of hope and possibility and because of that, I ignored
some of the most obvious signs that maybe this wasn’t a match.
On Making Decisions
Women make decisions out of fear, rather than truth.
When I knew, after about two
years with each of those agents, that really things weren't working, I stayed for a
few more years, all out of the fear that no one would ever want me again, and
being on my own without the agent, I’d have to face the feeling of failure and
sadness…the irony is, I was going to have to face those feelings anyway. As a
writer, it’s unavoidable. Go figure.
***
And Now
The gift of this experience
is that for a while I’ve wanted to stop—and the stopping had nothing to do with
my former agent. The truth is, I’ve wanted to take a break from the treadmill
of trying to get a book deal; I’m tired. I need a break. I need perspective. I
need to reassess if my goal of book deal is what I need as a writer. I
used to feel it would validate my hard work…now I’m not so sure if the feeling
of validation comes from signing a contract with a major publisher, seeing my
name on the cover of a book, or seeing Random House or some other major
publisher on the inside cover. I’m not convinced any more that achieving that goal validates me as, some how, a better or more successful writer. I’m just not sure.
Hope And Possibility
I know there is another book
inside of me. I know that there is a (virtual) stack of already-written books
waiting for me to revise. I know that you can fall, you can fail, you can totally fuck
up, and you can come back. You can rise, and rise again.
And I will. I really
will.
2 comments:
Like a divorce or any other break up, the failure cannot be assigned solely to one of the parties. You are so right that our journeys are not linear. Along the way goals get reviewed, reassessed, and revised. With that in mind, your own journey is right on target. Keep writing, revising, blogging, teaching, inspiring, and discovering. These are the things that truly validate you.
You will, Hannah. I know you will.
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