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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Archives for February 2017

Archives for February 2017

Amnesia: The Key to Success

By Dan Balowon February 28, 2017
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At some point, anyone involved in motivational or inspirational communication will touch on the necessity of leaving the past behind and moving on from a painful experience or time of life in order to grow personally or professionally.

Millions of people spend billions of dollars each year on counselors helping them overcome past issues in their lives.

For Christians, leaving a past behind through forgiveness and redemption is a cornerstone of the Christian walk.

However, many authors remember every failure as if it were a millstone around their neck, crushing their spirit and threatening to undermine their work.

An author writes a book, which never sold to a publisher or didn’t sell well as a self-published work, and they give up.

For other authors, success is a millstone.

Multiple bestsellers can lead an author (and publisher) to put so much pressure on each new book to be as good or better than those preceding, making an otherwise enjoyable and fulfilling writing career a virtual literary death-march.

Or, an author might have been published and a book sold well, but then was never able to achieve the same success again. Initial success raised expectations (their own and others) and they have been a disappointment ever since.

Like the football player who scored four touchdowns in his first game and then didn’t score again all season.

Some authors have had their lives changed negatively both by their success or the lack of success. Both extremes can be destructive.

Marriages have been destroyed.

Families altered significantly.

Friendships fractured permanently.

Financial ruin.

Church involvement affected.

All because of either a publishing success or failure.

Most authors don’t truly grasp how much being an author places them in a precarious postion, if they allow it. You are choosing to be a “public person” resulting in being the target of both appreciation and criticism.

It is a risky business if you are not prepared spiritually and emotionally.

The best way to deal with it is through selective amnesia. (Often this comes naturally with age!)

Remembering only God’s faithfulness and his residency in you is the only thing that really matters. Everything else? Let it go.

Christian authors, who write beautiful passages on God’s faithfulness and his presence in the life of a believer, can sometimes be the very ones to forget the truths about which they write.

They forget their identity is in Christ, not in their writing.

They forget God gifted them with human relationships, not the first printed copies of a book.

They forget God is in control, not them.

The Apostle Paul in his letter to the Philippians discussed leaving the past behind for fellow believers when he wrote,

“Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. (Phil. 3:13-14, NIV)

“Forgetting” and “straining” are two very important aspects of being an author.

The prophet Isaiah wrote:

“This is what the Lord says—he who made a way through the sea, a path through the mighty waters, who drew out the chariots and horses, the army and reinforcements together, and they lay there, never to rise again, extinguished, snuffed out like a wick:

Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.”   (Isaiah 43:16-19 NIV)

Forget failure, remembering only the lessons learned, be thankful for them, and strain forward.

Forget success, remembering only that you worship a God who blesses, be thankful for it, and strain forward.

Remembering and holding on tight to failure or success will eventually weigh down on you and stifle your growth as a writer and your availability to be used by God in meaningful ways.

No Christian writer would desire this to happen.

 

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Category: Encouragement, Faith, Inspiration, The Writing Life, TheologyTag: Failure, Inspiration, Success, The Writing Life

Family Christian Stores Closes All Locations

By Steve Laubeon February 27, 2017
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Last Thursday Family Christian Stores (FCS) announced they will be closing all 240 locations in 36 states, liquidating their inventory, and laying off over 3,000 employees. It is a sad day for Christian retail. In this case, the only surprise is that it came so soon after their previous bankruptcy reorganization. In February 2015 FCS suddenly declared bankruptcy and it was not until June of that …

Read moreFamily Christian Stores Closes All Locations
Category: Book Business, Economics, Legal Issues, Publishing History, Publishing NewsTag: Book Business, Economics, Family Christian, Publishing News

Fun Fridays – February 24, 2017

By Steve Laubeon February 24, 2017
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Creativity comes in all forms. Taking the familiar and making it something beautiful and new. Brilliant.

Read moreFun Fridays – February 24, 2017
Category: Fun Fridays

I May Not See Your Facebook Post

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon February 23, 2017
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Posting on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media is a fun part of my day. I enjoy seeing updates and comments, and sharing with a broad range of people. I read updates, but I miss a lot. Like many other publishing professionals, I’m in contact with far too many people on social media than anyone can keep up with. Ever-changing algorithms… I’ve noticed that Facebook algorithms have changed. I …

Read moreI May Not See Your Facebook Post
Category: Agents, Communication, Social MediaTag: Agents, Social Media

Do Your Book a Favor: Take a Break

By Karen Ballon February 22, 2017
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Ever had one of those days? You know, you sit there, staring at the screen, fingers on the keyboard, and… It’s. Just. Not. Happening. Yeah, you have. All writers hit those days from time to time. I’ve learned, when that happens to me, that the best thing I can do is take a break. Now, I realize we can’t always just shut off the computer and walk away for awhile, so how about the next best thing? …

Read moreDo Your Book a Favor: Take a Break
Category: The Writing LifeTag: The Writing Life

Is Your Writing Controlled by Fate?

By Dan Balowon February 21, 2017
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I was going to title this blog post something along the lines of “Calvinist vs. Arminian Authors,” or “Predestination vs. Free Will in Publishing,” but these titles inferred an entirely different angle than I intended. Every author believes their book, if published and promoted enough has the potential to sell well. No author writes a book feeling deeply it will sell 349 copies. Someone messed up …

Read moreIs Your Writing Controlled by Fate?
Category: Book Business, Book Proposals, MarketingTag: Book Business, book proposals

Fun Fridays – February 17, 2017

By Steve Laubeon February 17, 2017
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Don’t blame me for this one: HT: Deborah Raney    

Read moreFun Fridays – February 17, 2017
Category: Fun Fridays

Easily Entertained

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon February 16, 2017
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Recently my husband, daughter, and I had dinner with my parents at King’s Barbeque in Petersburg, Virginia. My paternal grandfather discovered this restaurant in the 1950s and it is still one of our family’s favorite places. Since it was near Christmas, they displayed a unique decoration – a pig wearing a Santa hat. Amused, I took pictures with my cell phone. I heard voices. “That’s a first!” I …

Read moreEasily Entertained
Category: Creativity, Humor, PersonalTag: Characters, Creativity

Remove the Barriers in Fiction

By Karen Ballon February 15, 2017
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Few things empower fiction better than well developed characters. Which is why you don’t want to create unintentional barriers between your characters and your readers. What barriers, you ask? Well, here’s one that affects POV characters: John knew he was about to learn something important. Do you see it? The barrier? No? How about here… Sally realized she wasn’t getting it at all. This barrier is …

Read moreRemove the Barriers in Fiction
Category: Craft, Writing CraftTag: fiction, Writing Craft

The Isolated Writer

By Dan Balowon February 14, 2017
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In general, writers do not do their best work in a group. The very nature of creative writing is a solitary pursuit, but without taking great care, can morph into a feeling of isolation. And this can occur whether an author lives in a quiet rural town or in midtown Manhattan. (The one in New York, not Kansas) So, how does an author, feeling isolated and alone stay motivated? How do they develop …

Read moreThe Isolated Writer
Category: Career, Encouragement, Social Media, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Encouragement, The Writing Life
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