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Writers Worth: When Fear Has Many Faces

Jenn Mattern is one of the most fearless people I know. She’s an aggressive marketer, planner, and writer. I don’t know a time since I’ve known her that Jenn hasn’t had several projects going on at once. Her whiteboards in her office (she has a few) scare the hell out of me. They’re loaded with to-do items, and they seem to trail on beyond the whiteboards and into her conversation.

So when Jenn said this post topic kicked her ass, I was shocked.

When she said writing it brought her to tears a few times, you could have knocked me over with a feather.

But that’s how I know Jenn’s left nothing out. It’s exactly what I expected, and what anyone who knows her has come to expect — Jenn glosses over nothing. She goes balls out (impressive, considering she’s female) and leaves a little of herself on the page.

This post is different. This is Jenn exposed to her most vulnerable core. It took a ton of effort on her part to get this out, and I feel a bit shitty for giving her such a rough topic not realizing how it would affect her. But somehow I think what you’re about to read was something that had to come out so that she could begin to see daylight.

There’s no way to properly thank someone for the beautiful agony they produce on your behalf. I can only say thank you for feeling safe enough in this space and brave enough in your life to go there, Jenn.

The Many Faces of Fear

by Jenn Mattern

Fearโ€ฆ

When Lori asked me to talk to you about the role fear has played in my freelance writing career, I thought โ€œOh, thatโ€™ll be easy!โ€

I was wrong.

Fear can be a funny thing. We all face it. But we all face it in our own ways โ€“ fear of rejection, fear of failure, fear of asking for what we want, or whatever your own fears might be.

For me, fear has sort of gone full-circle lately โ€“ the very things I had to overcome in the beginning of my career have left me wondering if itโ€™s soon time to throw in the towel.

Let me take you on a little journey through the impact fear has had on my freelance writing career, and how itโ€™s led me to where I am now.

Pre-Freelancing Fears & Confidence

Thereโ€™s no escaping it โ€“ fear and confidence are often intertwined.

Confidence has been a weird thing for me most of my life. I had very little early on. I spent most of my life being told I wasnโ€™t good enough in one way or another. I still often am.

I wasnโ€™t pretty enough. I wasnโ€™t โ€œgirlyโ€ enough. I wasnโ€™t quiet enough. I wasnโ€™t โ€œagreeableโ€ enough. I wasnโ€™t exotic enough. Or fun enough. Or social enough. Or athletic enough. Or talented enoughโ€ฆ

And if I wasnโ€™t โ€œnot enough,โ€ I was โ€œtoo much.โ€

I was too outspoken. Too principled. Too fast. Too tall. Too independent. Too smart. (That last one always seems to come from men.)

Not enough. Or too much. Inadequate. Or intimidating.

Thatโ€™s the story of my life.

Itโ€™s difficult to find confidence when you hear these things, especially from the people youโ€™re supposed to be able to trust the most.

And that can leave you feeling afraid โ€“ afraid to be heard, afraid to be seen, afraid to put yourself out there, afraid to say what you want, afraid to exist — because you always worry youโ€™ll be judged in the same way. It doesnโ€™t help that you often are.

It makes the thought of taking chances terrifying.

But taking chances is essential to freelancing.

Going into business is a risk of its own. So is every pitch, every new client you take on, every rate change, every service changeโ€ฆ

If you stop taking chances in freelancing, youโ€™ll never get anywhere.

In hindsight, itโ€™s a small miracle I ever got into business for myself with those kinds of fears and doubts early on in my personal life. I wanted to. I had good reason to. But I didnโ€™t actually plan to at the time. And no one in my life was supportive of the idea.

I wasnโ€™t just afraid though. I felt utterly worthless at times. When youโ€™re constantly told youโ€™re โ€œnot enough,โ€ you start to believe it. After all, you donโ€™t deserve for good things to work out for you. Youโ€™re not even ordinary โ€“ youโ€™re less-than. So with many small business owners failing after a few years, why on earth would you be one of the ones to succeed?

When a lack of confidence leads to these kinds of fears, it can prevent you from ever taking the huge risk that striking out on your own can be.

But I was lucky.

I worked under some amazing bosses early on. And because of them, the fears that held me back in other ways never affected my work. If anything, they helped me build confidence on the professional front.

I learned to be assertive. Firm. Unafraid to speak my mind. Unafraid to ask for what I wanted (noโ€ฆ insist on what I deserved). And I almost always got it โ€“ job offers, raises, promotions, project leads.

That made freelancing easier for me than it otherwise might have been.

That confidence and assertiveness fit naturally into freelance writing.

For example, I met a fellow writer early on who suggested I start pitching business publications โ€“ one in particular sheโ€™d been writing for.

I asked her what they were paying just to get a rough idea of whether or not theyโ€™d be worth my time to pitch. She said $.25 per word. That was pretty good in the early days of online-only content.

I asked for $.35 per word.

Never thought twice about it.

I figured Iโ€™d leave some negotiating room. But they accepted it outright.

That first โ€œyesโ€ was a bonus confidence boost of sorts.

And this is something I try to teach newer freelancers…

Every โ€œyesโ€ makes the next ask a little easier.

Thatโ€™s true whether itโ€™s a pitch or increasing your rates, or anything else for that matter.

Each โ€œyesโ€ was important to me not so much because I lacked professional confidence, but because I was frequently told I should.

A Different Kind of Fear in Pitching

Donโ€™t get me wrong. I still have plenty of fear when it comes to pitching prospects or quoting projects. And Iโ€™m all too familiar with impostor syndrome.

โ€œIโ€™m not good enough.โ€

โ€œWhy would someone ever pay me that much?โ€

โ€œThere are far better writers out there.โ€

Whatโ€™s different for me is Iโ€™m not bright enough to try to protect myself up front.

I tend to go with my gut.

I make the pitch. I ask for what I want. I send a quote I think a prospect will never agree toโ€ฆ

Then the fear kicks in.

I doubt myself. I second-guess a quote. I slip into worry-mode after delivering something, especially if I donโ€™t hear back from the client quickly. I assume Iโ€™ll never hear from them again.

This happened just recently.

A long-time client found out I offer a certain kind of consulting and asked for a quote. I sent one. A big one โ€“ much bigger than any of our past contracts. I didnโ€™t hear back for a while (I think it was over a month). So that fear set in, wondering if theyโ€™d been so put off I wouldnโ€™t hear from them at all. It was silly. Theyโ€™ve known me over a decade. But the fear and doubt still weighed on me.

Ultimately they did get in touch to get on my schedule โ€“ no questions or arguments about price. Iโ€™m finishing up their project next week.

That post-pitch or post-quote phase is pure agony.

Half-assed backwards, right?

Thankfully it usually works out.

But that doesnโ€™t make it any easier when the anxiety kicks in.

No Writer is Immune from Fear (and Yes, We Remember it Well)

Itโ€™s easy for people to look at you when you have more experience under your belt and assume you donโ€™t know what these fears feel like. I see it often from new writers:

โ€œYou donโ€™t understand what Iโ€™m going through.โ€

But I do.

For example, Iโ€™m well aware of what financial struggles feel like.

My ex-fiancรฉ and I split up shortly after I started my business. He bailed on our lease, and I went from two incomes to one to pay all the bills very suddenly. It was โ€œsink or swim.โ€ Either I quit and take a full-time job for stability. Or I had to make a success of things โ€“ fast.

I remember the fear that I might not be able to make rent and keep a roof over my head. A few months I almost couldnโ€™t.

I remember wondering how Iโ€™d keep food on the table and, more importantly, support my little fur-brats.

Heaven forbid I get sick, or something go wrong with the car, or anything else happen that would result in unexpected expenses.

I worked 60-80 hours per week trying to get the business off the ground.

It was hard. It was scary. And I learned a lot about pushing past fear then โ€“ not because I wanted to, but because I didnโ€™t have a choice.

But as scary as that was, it was nothing compared to the fear of mediocrity and being stuck in some traditional job the rest of my life, working my tail off for someone elseโ€™s benefit.

And thatโ€™s the thingโ€ฆ

[bctt tweet=”Fear can cripple you, or it can motivate you. ” username=”LoriWidmer”]

In most cases, I let it motivate me. Iโ€™d tell you to do the same, but like most sappy-crappy advice, that would be over-simplifying reality.

Iโ€™m driven to face the challengeโ€ฆ to prove something, if only to myself. And I constantly feel like I have something to prove to myself.

I can do this thing no one thinks I can do. I am enough.

And until recently Iโ€™d gotten pretty good at convincing myself that was true.

I think the resulting panic that comes after asking for what I want is more a fear of failure than anything else. Maybe not so much โ€œfailureโ€ as irrelevance.

What if this time is different? What if I just donโ€™t have โ€œitโ€ anymore?

Maybe I donโ€™t.

I wonder that almost every day now.

Is it time to leave? Is it time to walk away? Why do I even bother anymore?

There are a couple of reasons for that.

One reason โ€“ the lesser of the two โ€“ is the rise of insta-experts in the freelance writing community in recent years.

These are the frauds who pretend to have expertise theyโ€™ve never actually put the work into building.

Theyโ€™re the ones who care less about earning a freelance income than making an easy buck off the backs of newbies they can con into believing they have.

Theyโ€™re the ones building their names largely by lying, stealing, and exploiting colleagues, and who worry more about building the image of expertise than the real thing.

Iโ€™ve watched far too many experienced pros go dark because they got tired of competing with people who arenโ€™t bound by honesty and ethics.

And I donโ€™t blame them.

The insta-expert crowd has made me consider walking away for years too. But Iโ€™m too afraid of what happens to new writers when those are the only influences they can find anymore.

So unfortunately for the con-artist types, no matter how hard things get and no matter how much I want to quit sometimes, Iโ€™ll probably stick around solely to make their lives as miserable as possible. (Itโ€™s sport really.)

The fear I struggle with the most now though โ€“ and the one thatโ€™s all but devoured my love of what I do — has nothing to do with impostor syndrome or being afraid of rejection by clients.

Itโ€™s not so much about the phony insta-experts and the damage they have the propensity to do. Iโ€™ve always been able to deal with them.

My biggest professional fear these days is that I might never find passion or purpose again.

Itโ€™s also my biggest personal fear.

Iโ€™m not going to go into too many specifics of why. I tried in the dozen or so other drafts of this post. But it never comes out quite right. Iโ€™m too torn between pain and anger from one day to the next to say much without regretting it later. But I can give you some background.

What matters is what started when I went through three years of hellโ€ฆ lucky to live through something doctors said I probably shouldnโ€™t haveโ€ฆ something that led to severe depression after multiple pregnancy lossesโ€ฆ something that damaged relationshipsโ€ฆ something that nearly cost me my business because there were months at a time when I could barely even get out of bed.

After all of that I nearly gave up, on just about everything. I felt so depleted.

But a little over two years ago I reconnected with someone from my past โ€“ a force of nature who tends to swoop in, up-end everything in my life, and then blow on out again before I know what hit me.

They reminded me of some things โ€“ who I am, what Iโ€™ve done, why Iโ€™ve been where Iโ€™ve been, what I wanted, why I wanted it, and what I was capable of.

They left me with something I was lacking. They left me with hope.

So I started to rebuild.

I started to feel passionate about my work again.

More important, I rediscovered my purpose โ€“ what I was working towards (professionally), the difference I wanted to make and the unique position I was in to make it, and why I got into business for myself in the first place (on the personal side). I finally remembered what was supposed to come next โ€“ what was missing in my life.

Things started to feel better. I was recovering physically, emotionally, and professionally.

Then, about six months later, I realized something.

What Iโ€™d been looking for, and waiting for, and working so damn hard for most of my life โ€“ it was right in front of me, and it had been for a while.

Suddenly, the hell Iโ€™d walked through for years โ€ฆ it finally felt okay.

The years-long fight to get through it was worth it. I knew if I hadnโ€™t gone through all of that, I never would have found my way to where I was supposed to beโ€ฆ to find those things Iโ€™d almost given up on.

But I did find those things.

And I wish I hadnโ€™t.

I stupidly dared to be happyโ€ฆ truly happy. I donโ€™t think Iโ€™d ever smiled so much in my life.

But almost as quickly as I found those things I spent my life working toward โ€“ the very things that gave me hope and a reason to keep going every day โ€“ they were taken away.

Worse, they were stolen, and by someone I cared about and would have trusted with my life. Trust comes hard for me to begin with โ€“ even more now.

There is so much I could say about what happened. And part of me wants to. But none of it really matters.

What matters is the very things that gave me purpose are gone now. And theyโ€™re gone because someone who meant the world to me felt entitled to take, and take, and take with no regard for what they were leaving behind for anyone else.

I donโ€™t know how to explain what it feels like to have someone take everything, then tell you they โ€œcanโ€™t copeโ€ with seeing the pain they caused, making even their own bad behavior all about them and how it makes them feel โ€“ like everything else.

I donโ€™t know how to explain what it feels like to have someone you care about tell you theyโ€™re struggling, and they know theyโ€™ve behaved badly โ€“ to ask you to help them over that hurdle, promising that once they arenโ€™t preoccupied with simple survival (something you could empathize with) that things would be better, and theyโ€™d finally act like an equal rather than taking all the damn time.

I donโ€™t know how to explain what it feels like to have someone all but beg you to stay for their benefit over and over again, only to use what you helped them build to stab you in the back for the benefit of the very kind of phony, thieving, manipulative filth youโ€™ve spent a career fighting against.

I donโ€™t know how to explain what it feels like to be told you are the one thing in this world someone can turn their back on (after they got what they wanted), when you were the one person in this world who cared enough to lift them up when they were in an extremely low place and about to throw everything away.

I donโ€™t know how to explain what it feels like watching the good in someone deteriorate, knowing you were just collateral damage in their perpetual campaign of self-sabotageโ€ฆ and there wasnโ€™t a damn thing you could do about it. The hopelessness is nothing compared to the feeling of helplessness because youโ€™re stupid enough to still care.

Thereโ€™s a lot of anger. And I break down in tears multiple times a day. But there are no words to explain any of it. Every day feels like a bad dream I just canโ€™t wake up from.

Part of it is losing that person who meant a lot.

But itโ€™s more than that. Itโ€™s everything they happily and knowingly took because using me could benefit them โ€“ things the loss of which will affect every day of the rest of my life.

Itโ€™s every reminder that yet again, full circle, I was not enough.

Not enough for effort. Or respect. Or basic decency. Or honesty.

Itโ€™s every reminder that my value was only ever in my usefulness.

And everything is a reminder.

This person became so ingrained in pretty much every area of my life that the things that used to bring me joy feel agonizing now.

This person was a friend before we started working together, and the latter was a mistake. Because where early in my career work was my refuge from the people who made me feel like nothingโ€ฆ now work is another constant reminder.

So now nearly every aspect of my work is just another reminder of everything Iโ€™ve done and gone through โ€“ every struggle, every hurdle, from Day One until today –what it was all for, and knowing that now it was all for nothing.

So yeah, my biggest fear these days is that Iโ€™ll never find passion or purpose again.

Donโ€™t get me wrong. Iโ€™m not going anywhere, no matter how often I think about disappearing and putting all of this behind.

Like I said earlier, I wouldnโ€™t give certain insta-expert bullshit artists the satisfaction.

Iโ€™ll still do the work. Iโ€™ll continue creating things even if thereโ€™s no good reason to. Iโ€™ll still make money โ€“ I tend to make more when work becomes a necessary distraction, and this will be no different. Moneyโ€™s just never been a big motivator for me. Itโ€™s never felt rewarding. It was just a means to an end to do something that actually mattered.

But Iโ€™ll keep building because I have no choice โ€“ Iโ€™m a builder, a designer, a fixer, and if Iโ€™m not doing those things, I wouldnโ€™t know what to do with myself.

So thatโ€™s good news for others I guess โ€“ it means more for them as I become an even bigger tool for everyone else. Right now, for me, that beats the alternative.

But look. I donโ€™t want anyoneโ€™s sympathy. And I feel bad that I canโ€™t fully explain the root of this โ€“ I know itโ€™s not easy to understand. But itโ€™s still much too painful. This yearโ€™s topic and timing werenโ€™t exactly ideal.

I know people like to vomit lines about how everything works out, or itโ€™ll all be okay, or time heals all wounds, or the best thing to do is forget about it, or Iโ€™ll find some other passion or purpose, or internalized lies about how no one really controls things in our lives but us, or some other positivity-police bullshitโ€ฆ but please spare me the good intentions when you have no idea what was lost.

It does not help. And thereโ€™s a 99.3% chance it will really piss me off.

The reality is some things arenโ€™t replaceable. Some things have no substitute. Some dreams come with expiration dates. Sometimes every option left is settling. And some people arenโ€™t cut out to settle.

Iโ€™m one of those people.

Iโ€™m guessing my fears donโ€™t look all that much like yours, eh?

Thatโ€™s the nature of it I guess. There will always be something standing in our way. You climb those walls, or you knock them down.

Iโ€™ve had a career of that. I guess I just never thought about what Iโ€™d do if I got where I was trying to go only to watch someone burn it all down.

What I build in its place will never make up for what was lost. But itโ€™ll have to do.

Sometimes thatโ€™s life. And sometimes thatโ€™s business.

You keep going because you have to for one reason or another. And I have to because, like usual, I have something to prove โ€“ though, for the first time, I donโ€™t really know what that is.

So what that means for now is more improvements to current sites. It means building new ones.

It means continuing to freelance (because unlike some folks, I wonโ€™t teach others things I donโ€™t actively do).

It probably also means spending more time on my fiction even if only for an escape.

Iโ€™m certainly not short on things to do.

And that will mean more working hours than usual because work is what I do when I donโ€™t feel much like doing anything.

And that will mean pushing through from one day to the next, over and over, because thatโ€™s what I have right now. I donโ€™t know what comes next.

This might be my new normal.

Maybe by some miracle Iโ€™ll find out one of those things I lost isnโ€™t entirely gone and Iโ€™ll have something to fight for again.

Or maybe Iโ€™ll eventually shut everything down and quietly walk away. But thatโ€™s not today.

I donโ€™t know.

What I do know is that Iโ€™ll always write, whether thatโ€™s freelancing or blogging or books, and whether thatโ€™s under my own name or a pen name I keep quiet to โ€œdisappear.โ€

Writing is a compulsion. Itโ€™s not just something I want to do. Itโ€™s something I have to do. Itโ€™s breathing.

And Iโ€™ll continue working for myself in some way because there is no way in hell Iโ€™m going to let someone else dictate what I do with my life and time, even if Iโ€™m not sure what I want to do with it myself.

And Iโ€™ll continue helping new writers for the foreseeable future, because I still remember the people who cared enough to help me.

And thatโ€™s that.

I donโ€™t have any big lessons on fear for you.

We all go through it. Sometimes those fears are shallow โ€“ surface-level things most of us face at one time or another. And sometimes theyโ€™re very different. All I can say right now is this:

I hope you let your fears motivate you rather than break you.

I hope you jump those hurdles and break down those walls.

I hope your fears make you stronger to deal with whatever comes next.

I hope you let your fears drive you forward rather than having your eyes pinned to the rear-view mirror.

And I hope you let your fears, and overcoming them, bring out the best in you rather than letting the desperation that often comes with those fears bring out the worst.

Iโ€™ll share another post with Lori soon where weโ€™ll get a bit more practical โ€“ looking at fears that stem from comparing yourself to others.

But for now, no lessons. Just hopes.

Jenn Mattern is a freelance writer, blogger, and PR consultant. She runs All Freelance Writing, where sheโ€™s helped new freelance writers launch and grow successful businesses since 2006.

28 responses to “Writers Worth: When Fear Has Many Faces”

  1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
    Jenn Mattern

    Thanks for having me and for putting WWM together again (and Paula too!).

    1. lwidmer Avatar
      lwidmer

      You are always welcome here, Jenn. Thank you. You always give 100%, but this… you’ve outdone yourself.

  2. Sharon Hurley Hall Avatar
    Sharon Hurley Hall

    Wow, Jenn! I have no words and will spare you the platitudes. I do appreciate you sharing this, though it must have been excruciating. You know where to reach me if you ever want to chat. ๐Ÿ™‚

    I have recently gone through a similar mental Q&A about my passion and purpose for writing, and am just starting to come out the other side. Mostly, I did that by picking one of my passion projects and starting it even though I wasn’t fully motivated. Then the motivation started trickling back. And now I’m getting out of a situation that isn’t working for me. I hope against hope that will help me rediscover my mojo.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I wish you much more luck with that than I’ve had. ๐Ÿ™‚

    2. Sharon Hurley Hall Avatar
      Sharon Hurley Hall

      Thanks, Jenn ๐Ÿ™‚

  3. Cathy Miller Avatar
    Cathy Miller

    Wow, indeed, Jenn. Recently, a close friend of mine was diagnosed with breast cancer. In my feeble attempt to share something I thought would communicate understanding, my friend simply replied, “This is not about you.” My response was, “You’re right.”

    So, all I can express about you sharing something so personal is I love you for allowing yourself to be so vulnerable and so you. I will be there if you need me in any way.

    I’ll leave it at that because I’ve learned – it isn’t about me. Love & hugs, Jenn.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I know you’re there if I need you. Thank you Cathy. *hugs*

  4. Maureen Avatar
    Maureen

    Thank you for sharing, Jenn. Your strength and selflessness in giving back to other freelance writers is admirable and appreciated. Hugs.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      Thanks Maureen. Back at you. ๐Ÿ™‚

  5. Yo Avatar
    Yo

    Sometimes, I think hope takes more courage than anything else.

    platitude
    platitude
    poop

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I could really use one of Princess’s Yolander “poop” puppets these days. ๐Ÿ˜‰

      For those not familiar: https://allfreelancewriting.com/podcast/19/ (appropriately tied to a podcast Princess and I did on fear & confidence)

    2. lwidmer Avatar
      lwidmer

      So. Much. Poop.

  6. Ranee Boyd Tomlin Avatar
    Ranee Boyd Tomlin

    Although our experiences are different, I’ve been going through my own version of facing betrayal/lack of trust/no confidence in myself, others, or the Universe. Your words spoke to me like none other. Thank you for helping me realize I’m not the only one whose experiences with both personal life and work have created fears that are beyond the garden variety (and much deeper than imposter syndrome). There’s some small comfort in knowing I’m not alone in this type of soul-level struggle. I wish you the best as you move forward in the ways you need to. And selfishly, I’m glad you’re staying around to continue supporting new writers. We need you.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      Thanks Ranee. While sometimes it’s nice hearing people have been through similar things, I’m also sorry to hear that you are. I hope you pull through in whatever way you see fit. And I’m glad you found something here you could relate to.

  7. Paula Hendrickson Avatar
    Paula Hendrickson

    Dear Jenn – I am so glad you’re not someone willing to “settle.” You’re a true original, a crusader for good, and I LOVE watching you do battle against those insta-experts too busy trying to part new writers from their money than actually take the time to learn about the very skills they’re trying to sell.

    You’re one of a kind. Stay that way. (I know you will!)

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      Thanks Paula. I suspect you’ll enjoy my second post this month. All about the insta-expert bullshit artists and the way they cause new freelancers to draw false comparisons. ๐Ÿ˜‰

    2. Paula Hendrickson Avatar
      Paula Hendrickson

      You know I will!

    3. Sharon Hurley Hall Avatar
      Sharon Hurley Hall

      Oooh, can’t wait for that one!

  8. lwidmer Avatar
    lwidmer

    For me, this post echoed so much of the shit I’ve shoveled to get to where I am right now. The fear. The people who have disappointed. The ones who have just taken advantage. The ones who have just taken.

    I don’t think there’s ever a time when we’re not shoveling, but at least we’re building up muscle, right?

    The “not good enough” stuff. Oh yes, been there, too. I now see that we are good enough if we say we are. That’s the only opinion that matters. It took me decades to come to that realization, and I won’t say it’s not still there in the periphery. But coming through the fire tends to give a confidence the next time the flames are lapping at your heels.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I’m done shoveling. I’m done “building up muscle.” I’ve been strong my entire life. And I lost what mattered most in this world for my trouble. So fuck it. My sense of self-worth isn’t tied to what anyone else thinks of me. I learned that lesson long ago. It can’t do a damn thing to bring back anything that was taken away. It’s a nice thing to strive for if you don’t have it. Necessary even. But it’s also not enough.

    2. lwidmer Avatar
      lwidmer

      Amen.

  9. Gina A. Avatar
    Gina A.

    Jenn, all I know is over many years of circling the internet in endless pursuit of just one “expert” who could validate my belief that quality online writing matters — I finally found you. That was probably 5+ years ago. And your name has been stamped into my head ever since. I always knew I was right that quality writing justified the bottom line, but apparently I had enough fear that I needed to hear it from someone experienced, to somehow make me feel sane in a world of bottom feeders. Your ruthless honesty almost made up for my long-suffering quest for reassurance. It grounded me with the kind of conviction you feel when you know thereโ€™s another kid in the class you can depend on. I got more than I was hoping for through your voice — someone with a personality and a professional authority who spoke not from a traditional ivory tower, but from the Wild West of the web. I still circle the web with my fears, torn between writing for websites I believe in and creating my own art, distracted by digging past lies to some truth in a sea of information, wondering what itโ€™s all for. I still end up doing nothing, driven by anger, afraid thereโ€™s not enough time to do what Iโ€™m not doing enough of. And in the midst of it, youโ€™re the kind of expert Iโ€™m still looking for. Someone who makes you realize life is just what it is. Thereโ€™s no template to dictate oneโ€™s particular path. And itโ€™s those most honest who give us hope. Thank you, so much. Your honesty gives me hope.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      Well, go & make me all teary-eyed again… ๐Ÿ˜‰

      Thank you Gina. I’m glad if I’ve helped you in any way over the years. I’m also glad you’ve grown in a way where you can see through some of the bullshit out there better now. That will help you find your own way. The related fears might not vanish, but you’ll learn to trust yourself even more as you go. ๐Ÿ™‚

    2. Ranee Boyd Tomlin Avatar
      Ranee Boyd Tomlin

      Gina, just as Jenn spoke to me earlier, you’ve spoken for me now. I loved both the what and the how of your writing. Thanks for a great comment.

  10. Devon Ellington Avatar
    Devon Ellington

    I have dealt with the “not enough”/”too much” quite a bit over the years. It caused a lot of pain.

    With the pitching fears, I do my research, I trust that I have enough craft and creativity to come up with something interesting. I let it go. My perspective (for the moment) is that it has a 50/50 chance. Either they’ll buy it. Or they won’t.

    Since I made that adjustment, more pitches are hitting the mark.

    Pain and betrayal — I’ll spare the “there, there” and simply agree it sucks.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I suspect my post-pitch fears stem from school. I was one of those weirdos who always performed best under pressure — sometimes extreme pressure. If I worked on a paper meticulously for weeks, I’d do so-so. If I waited until the night before to draft a word, I’d ace it (like when I aced a book report without ever reading the book LOL). When I realized that worked out best for me, I started doing it more intentionally. But when I’d submit something, I’d always be terrified the moment the paper left my hands. Absolute panic until I’d get the inevitable top grade possible. So stress + post-submission-panic = things work out well for me. So while it makes me batty in the moment, on some level when I get those fears, it feels like my gut’s giving me the “you shouldn’t have done that, but it’s all going to work out” sign. I don’t recommend it! ๐Ÿ˜‰

      I like your 50/50 mindset. After all, the worst any client can do is say “no,” right? (Now nobody share your horror stories with me to prove otherwise!)

  11. Trease Shine Hinton Avatar
    Trease Shine Hinton

    Thank you for sharing this. I found myself in so much of it. I suffered an aneurysm on July 21, 2009, so on the surface, I shouldn’t even be here to comment on this post. Since I did survive, however, and since the cause of the aneurysm was domestic violence, I chose, that day to share my story. I have a personal blog and am an honors graduate student majoring in English and Creative Writing, but I’m here for more than that.

    In all honesty, I allowed myself to get side-tracked more than once because even after my divorce, that man still tried to control me through our son, but here I am. Evil never rests. Recently, I lost someone who was closer to me than my own mother so I’m reeling, but here I am.

    What you’ve done for me, though, is light that fire inside so that I can get out of corporate work and become the freelance writer I was put here to be. Thank you for your transparency.

    1. Jenn Mattern Avatar
      Jenn Mattern

      I’m so sorry you went through all of that. It sounds like you deserve for some good to happen in life. And I hope the move away from the corporate world and into freelancing gives you some of that and helps you find what you’re looking for. ๐Ÿ™‚