Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Time Saving 101 Topics to Avoid Reading
Time Saving 101 Topics to Avoid Reading I read a lot of blogs, newsletters, magazines, and websites. As a fast reader and research guru, I can hardly resist to let some resource pass me First and foremost, give yourself credit for knowing what you need and what you dont. Not everyone is an expert and not every piece of expert advice is worth reading. Topics I will immediately discard: 1) Writers block. This is so dang personal that nobody can tell someone else what to do. I happen to be one who believes in either writing through writers block or taking a nap to wake up and start writing refreshed. I dont believe in it much, and I definitely dont want to hear about someone elses. 2) Self-editing. There are so many ways to self-edit, so many angles, so many levels. There isnt one right way. If you understand good writing and appreciate proper grammar, then figure it out. 3) The best way to market. Marketing depends on your extrovert level, your wallet, your tech savvy, your social media appreciation, your genre, your platform, your region, your experience in other arenas. The best way is to analyze your strengths, and the strengths of a handful of successful people you trust and admire, and just do it. 4) Outlining or pantser. I delete those instantly. Each writer has to test both ways and figure it out. 5) Religion or politics. Enough said. 6) Finding time to write. This isnt a secret. You make time, or you dont. You prioritize, or you dont. So many of these topics are the result of someone needing filler so they write about an evergreen subject. Some writers talk about these subjects because they are avoiding their more serious writing. Some want to sound experienced when they are not. Fact is, they are not unique topics. They are washing machine items, constantly spinning around in the tub. How do I know to discard them without reading them? I read the email subject lines, first lines in the first paragraph, and/or titles. Yes, I practice what we hear preached all the timeletting the opening hook dictate whether I read further or not. When I have 300-500 emails per day, I need some sort of gleaning mechanism, and why not that which we teachopening with a bang, or at least with enough meat to suck me in. And if the writer still wants to pick such a mundane topic, then they need to show me they have a new twist that will totally wow me.
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