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Writing Coach Podcast 191: Time passing

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Writing Coach Podcast 191: Time passing

WCP191 Time passing

How you think about time-such as if you have enough, not enough, or plenty of it-impacts what you create in your writing life. Many writers credit time as necessary for their skills, clients, or assignment quality to improve.  An overemphasis on time passing to become a better freelancer isn’t useful or accurate, and can be a disempowering framework.



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How you think about time—such as if you have enough, not enough, or plenty of it—impacts what you create in your writing life. Many writers credit time as necessary for their skills, clients, or assignment quality to improve. 

An overemphasis on time passing to become a better freelancer isn’t useful or accurate, and can be a disempowering framework. Time passing isn’t the important factor in if I learn or complete something; often time passes and we don’t learn or complete our writing.

Ironically, the refrain of “I need more time to pitch” (or finish the current assignment or freewrite or work on a book or whatever it is) often creates a sense of frustration, scarcity, urgency, or fear. In turn, the writers spends less or no extra time. 

Because if you don’t have enough time, why bother?

If the requirement for effective pitching was more time, I’d be all for it. But it’s simply not the missing ingredient.

Time happens either way: if you write the pitch or not, time goes by.

If you could only write a pitch effectively or efficiently, you’d almost certainly opt for a good slow pitch over a quick one that doesn’t get assigned. 

Time isn’t the missing element. Skill, clarify, confidence, practice, and prioritization are all more accurate assessments about what to focus on.

🔗 Mentioned on this episode

Adam Grant on Instagram

Carol Dweck on Developing a growth mindset

WCP 135 Constrain for focus

WCP 120 Priority power

WCP 112 Fifteen minutes of focus

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What should you include in a pitch to an editor?  

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