Be stubborn.

single flower

A couple of years ago, Jennifer Louden interviewed me for her Teach Now course. This program teaches pedagogy and self-care for anyone who feels called to be a teacher, and I was delighted to be included as guest faculty.

Since then, I have been following Jennifer's work with admiration. Her writing is in service to people who are in service, and she dedicates herself to bringing lightness, ease, creativity and joy to everyone who works with her.

I was honoured to be featured on her site recently, when she launched her Life Navigation course. I was asked to give a different kind of advice than usual -- this time, on living a life that I've chosen. Writing this article for her site gave me significant pause. I had to be very honest with myself as I wrote it.

So then I thought: wouldn't it be special to have Jennifer Louden open up about her writing process, and share her insights with you?

The thing is, I've always had some certainty about my life path — I identified myself as a writer before I knew how to ride a bicycle — and I think this gives me psychic leverage. People always assumed that I'd be an author, because it was kind of the only thing I was good at when I was young.

But Jennifer Louden's path was not as clear. And even though we have come to writing in different ways, I am as strengthened by her advice as I think emerging writers will be.

Her Life Navigation course opens tomorrow, and it is based on her twenty-two years of working as an author, speaker and life coach. From the incredibly thoughtful questions that Jen asked when she requested the article, I got a taste of what it might be like to work with her. She's a wonderful, insightful human being. It's my pleasure to introduce her to you today.

For this guest post, I asked Jennifer: if she could advise emerging writers about one important part of the writing process, what would it be?

Her answer, below.

xo,

Sarah Selecky

  Jennifer-Louden

Writing has been my professional path since 1985. That path is made up of a variety of forms: book reviews for a Hollywood agency, mostly unsold screenplays and TV episodes, a smattering of short stories, essays, two (and a half) first drafts of novels, six books with something like a million copies in print in nine languages, a national magazine column for three years, and fourteen years of a weekly online newsletter that morphed into weekly blogging.

When I look back at all these years of work, the most vital thing I've learned, the wisdom I relearn every single day is immediately clear to me: be stubborn.

You see, writing is very, very hard for me. None of my friends or high school teachers said, "Jen will be a writer." True, I devoured books, loved movies, loved figuring out how stories and people worked, but words themselves — syntax, spelling, putting it together in a coherent, readable way? Nope.

My struggle to write is due in part to my learning challenges (grouped under the label dyslexic) and a health condition that often muddles my brain. But honestly, I don't care why writing is a challenge for me. What matters is I don't stop. I didn't believe my high school friend when I told him my first book was being published and he said, "But you can't write a book, you can't spell." I didn't believe my college friend who said, "You're not a writer, it's too hard for you." I didn't believe USC film school when, after finishing my undergraduate degree, they turned me down for grad school in screenwriting.

I didn't believe the agents who turned me down, the people who didn't buy my screenplays, or the first draft of my first book proposal. Most of all, I didn't believe myself when I would whisper, "You suck. It shouldn't be so hard. Go do something more useful. Go do something easier."


Being stubborn is my secret writing superpower and it's one I highly recommend.

Don't believe anyone who says, "Quit," especially yourself. Don't assume you don't need to be stubborn after you've had some success either. Eight years ago I had written five successful books in fairly quick succession, but since then I have only published one book. Recently, I finally hit upon a book idea I care about, but there are no guarantees.

So I bring on the stubborn. I bring on the discipline to write first thing, after yoga and meditation, before email and, please God, before Facebook. I bring on learning and good mentoring (thanks Sarah). Most of all, I bring on the daily practice of writing and I place my stubborn faith there.

Writing will rarely be easy for me. My dreams of crafting stories like Ray Bradbury or Lev Grossman or essays like Rebecca Solnit or Joan Didion remain dreams. Oh, well. Here is what I care about: that I keep learning. That I keep putting words down. That I never let despair win, at least not for long.

That I put my head down and keep going, word by word.

Join me?

Jennifer Louden helped start the self-care movement with her first book, The Woman's Comfort Book. She's written five more books, including The Woman’s Retreat Book and The Life Organizer that have inspired more than a million women in 9 languages. Jen has spoken around the world on self-care, written a national magazine column, and even sat on Oprah's couch talking about the power of retreats.

Join Jennifer for a free preview of The Life Navigation Course, based on 22 years of her best work. Sign up here.  


Stop what you're doing.
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15 comments

Kayce Hughlett
 

Thank you, Sarah for sharing Jennifer with us. She is a big reason my first book was published, because she encouraged me to be stubborn. Now... I'm well on my way to book #2 at age 58... against all odds ;) "Here is what I care about: that I keep learning. That I keep putting words down. That I never let despair win, at least not for long." JL ... Me, too! Namaste
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Lindsay Edmunds
 

Your advice about being stubborn gets to the heart of the matter. What did you do to establish the discipline of writing first thing, before email or social media? They are chronic temptations. Antisocial helps me but I am not yet quite stubborn enough. http://www.antisocial.com/
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steph
 

Thank you, Sarah, for sharing Jennifer (whose Life Organizer I always have beside me on my desk). And thank you, Jennifer, for this excellent post! I felt invigorated after reading it, and I love the message, and your tenacity. My God, it's so inspiring. Also, I was grinning as I read it. How timely. This morning my post on getting past writer's block, on being stuck, went out. And it mentions being stubborn, though not in the same words. Last week, Sarah told us TAs (for the Intensive) that real writers feel the struggle and do it anyway. :)
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jenniferlouden
 

Thank you so much for having me at your lovely writing home!
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Mary Montanye
 

After reading this, I know why I gravitated to Jen Louden years ago and have never, ever left her. I am a writer who also finds writing extremely difficult and had no support for it from anyone until I was in my forties! Without Jen and without Sarah (her Intensive rocks!), I would have given up long ago. Thank you both. I love you both. Please keep on being stubborn. We need you, Sarah and Jen.
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Darlene
 

I read Jennifer's article here and she's touched my heart although my heart seems so far away these days. I am so close to the point of despair it's kinda scary. Maybe this is what I need to write about for now... this feeling of despair. Thank you Jennifer for helping me see that's what is going on...despair. I thought I was very depressed and discouraged...but it's more than that. It's despair.
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Jennifer Louden
 

good on you Kayce!!!
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Jennifer Louden
 

Lindsay come to the call tomorrow and I'll talk about this. Baring that, start small with a new habit in your habit chain - namely when you start anti social - right after meditation, before email? First thing after you wake up even before coffee??
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Jennifer Louden
 

lovely to meet you Steph. And so happy my book is on your desk!!
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Jennifer Louden
 

love right back to you Mary dear!!
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Jennifer Louden
 

Darlene here is a quote I have in my quote file for my new book: "Despair is the only cure for illusion. Without despair we cannot transfer our allegiance to reality — it is a kind of mourning period for our fantasies." Philip Slater. I believe despair is something all humans - thinking, feeling, aware humans - need to work through. The question is: are you asking for and getting the support you need?
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Amy
 

Thank you Jen and Sarah for an inspiring article. I also have health problems that scramble my brain and it is very encouraging to know that I could be successful if I keep pushing.
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Kira Elliott
 

Thank you Jennifer for you searing honesty. I too am dyslexic and was told repeatedly I was dumb, could not write or even consider earning a living at it. I was told I could maybe be a janitor when I grew up. Today I work for a nonprofit, writing grants. I have a blog and I write essays and other work. This past week I was at a training to become an Amherst Writers and Artist Workshop leader and I found myself amazed, that despite the odds and how hard it is for me to write, I am a writer. Writing is infused in my life. It is how I find my place in the world. It is so refreshing to hear your story and to know that I am not alone in the struggle and that it is ok that I will never be a Joan Didion or Rebecca Solnit. They are wonderful but not me. It is about being stubborn. I think I am going to put that word up on my wall above my desk. Thank you so much.
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Jennifer Louden
 

Of course you can Amy! If I can, you can, I promise!!!
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Daphne
 

there is something very empowering about turning "I can do it" into "I am stubborn so therefore, I'm doing it anyway." makes me sit up straighter. :)
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