I have procrastinated long enough and I need your help!


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I have to push past all my fears and doubts, which I think hold a lot of aspiring writers back from their dreams of getting published.

Well, I want to get published!

I have a massive Fantasy world that I started creating when I was 14. I worked on it for a few years at a time. There were times, of course where I stopped working on it, there were some significant upsets in my life. So I wrote during my teens, then again in my early 20's and in my late 20's and in my early 30's. I am now at the end of my 30's and it is starting to feel like failure!

Before I slip gently into the night, those dreaded words and thoughts in my head of "I am too old now to make a difference." I say pish to that!

I have been delving into the subject of motivation, procrastination, mindset, perception and all of that good brain-witchery to understand why it is that I think and feel a certain way and let's be honest - all of us do.

You are going to need to tolerate my focus on this topic as I will be immersing myself into this knowledge and mind frame to maintain my own motivation. But, for the good of the community of writers on Scholar and Scribe and all of Hive, I reckon that the discussion of the topic of motivation will help others too.

I do not intend to post about that topic here on Scholar and Scribe all the time. THIS particular post has more to do with writing and story building... which I will discuss soon, below.

But I wanted to highlight the brain-wizardry. Understanding the mechanics of your consciousness and fine-tuning it is as much part of becoming a successful writer as an athlete who goes to the physiotherapist, doctor and gym. They might be a javelin thrower, runner, jumper, horse rider, rock climber, heck even a race car driver. They all need to spend some time doing maintenance on the body and strengthen and increase endurance.

Writing is the same and like the above list contains different sports then the focus on maintaining the brain, the cognitive skills, creativity, motivation, et al - so will these benefits be shared by a variety of persons who need the same treatment. So Writers, editors, artists, animators, musicians and so much more.

Meanwhile, let me get back to this thing of writing, publishing and timing.

Many of the greats only published their first books when they were older:

  • J.R.R Tolkien published his first major title, The Hobbit at the age of 45.
  • George RR Martin sold a short story published when he was 21, but his breakout series Song of Ice and Fire's first book was published when he was 48. It took another 15 years for Game of Thrones TV series to really push Martin up to another level of fame. He was 63 by then.
  • David Eddings published Pawn of Prophecy at the age of 40.
  • Steven Erikson published Gardens of the Moon at the age of 49
  • Robert Jordan started publishing stuff at 31 but only published the first book of the Wheel of Tine, Eye of the World at the age of 41.

The list goes on and these are my greatest influences!

All in their 40s and up when they published their main works of writing.

I too have written other stories and published them bravely here on Hive. So that is the same as that "first taste" of letting the world see your writing work. For everyone here on Hive that writes and posts your work on Hive - it is a noteworthy step! Well done!

So... What have I got?

What does Zak Ludick have to publish?

I have a massive collection of series and stand alone novels either written or planned. A world that has something like 400,000+ words of publishable content but with another 400-600,000 words of worldbuilding built into it with a potential for so much more!

I have left it alone for a while again, due to some of those life upsets that stopped the creative juices and stopped my world building further.

So... the plan is now to start writing and publishing in earnest. I will need some time to re-immerse myself into World of Kedra once more.

But I also have other work that CAN be published: Maledictus Terra which I co-author with @lex-zaiya!

I have looked into it and there are many successful authors that have managed the blog-to-book transition with their content and stories. This includes Fiction Authors.

So this will be the first port of call. Lex and I are busy writing and publishing Book 3 on Hive in parts.

But Book 1 and 2 of the series are written and now need to be turned into novels.

Things will change and there will likely be much more content, scenes and world building added on to this book. So... that is the plan! Let me get cracking!

I am also not going at it alone, besides doing Maledictus Terra with @Lex-zaiya, I will have @clairemobey on my side to help me with marketing and administration!

But I need YOUR help too! With motivation, with comradery, with community!

Keep your eyes peeled!

More about this is coming.

Cheers!
@zakludick

Hive South Africa



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27 comments
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You are still very young, but take hold of the creativity you still have left.
The interesting thing today is that every niche seems to be completely saturated
and yet completely devoid of content.

You might as well give publishing a try.

Enjoy your weekend^^

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Indeed. The saturation seems to come from low quality content which is because of two reasons: Some people have an no ethical problem with putting in low effort or using AI generation in writing. Ironically, even AI tools will tell you that they are not as good at writing relatable stories as other.

The second reason is because all the intelligent people generally have crippling anxiety, self-doubt and/or depression!

The Dunning-Kruger effect is in full effect with confident morons producing content into all the vacuums within niches.

I already cringe at how bombastic and arrogant that makes me sound and my reflex is to delete all this and say "thanks" and go hide myself and my work.

But I am literally fighting my Amygdala with my Frontal Cortex! Which us difficult. But I have to understand why...

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You're in your late 30's and worried about time running out ? Psh, youngster 😜 I'm a lot further along with my hundred million heartbeats, and still haven't published my first book (although I'm slowly working towards it).

The two things I'm finding are first, that Hive works with writing to a "sweet spot" of about a 4-6 minute read. I tend to edit down or skip a lot of detail (particularly scene-setting and location descriptions) to get it down to that, but if I add it back in it'll work for a novel and can easily double the word count without adding useless fluff.

Second is that to convert to publishable book format, I need to remove or change some elements (often key parts) that have been kicking around since before IP was a thing. Most of the ideas I came up with for the Allied Imperiae came from exactly the same sources of inspiration as GW used, and about the same time in the same bit of the world. It's just that back then they had the money, time and network to turn it into a multi-million pound empire with expensive lawyers, and I didn't !

The most important thing is.... go for it ! Otherwise you'll be saying the same thing in your late 40's.

!BBH
!PIZZA <--- all good authors need snacks to keep the brain working at optimum pace 😁

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Thank you. Yeah, I definitely do not want be saying the same thing in my late 40's about getting started. But, by that time I need to have published quite a few books!

Yeah, I understand about the IP thing, but surely a bit of slight rebranding and it should be OK? Names and whatnot?

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Names is definitely a thing that would need to be changed, but it's worth also looking at why each thing is what it is, and seeing if it can be refined and improved (original IP's aren't always the best, just the ones with the best lawyers !). I suspect having a "Space Worg" called "Lodan Grimnose" might still attract the attention of a certain company with lawyers who are defined as a profit centre....

It's one reason why I tend to lean heavily on historical sources when cooking things up. The baggage that comes with something historical can be a slightly cheaty way to add depth by implication. But I still modify enough that it's not just a case of a reader going oh look, it's "Julius Caesar in Space" 😁

!BBH
!PIZZA

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I've gone the other way creating entire fictional histories and all manner of depth.

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Nice ! You'll have to tag me in when you start publishing it on Hive. Or link me in it you turn it into a proper book 🙂

!BBH

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So (and I will be posting an article about this topic soon) the plan shall be to publish what Lex and I have been doing on Hive as well as my World of Kedra series... I have quite a bit of work cut out for me!

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I'll recommend you to read 400 weeks by Oliver Burkeman.
This will make you stop procrastinating and makes you focus on the things you want to achieve!

Go for it!

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Bud I'm so impressed. A brain for creative writing is awesome, music lyrics also I bet he he.
Legendary is your legacy. Publish it so that your kids can access it.

All my stuff goes obvious Hive. Other options exist.

Best wishes from garden route.

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Thanks man! Much needed encouragement!

I shall focus on hitting some daily goals and I am all fired up!

Cheers from the West Coast!

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You are phenomenal at world building and character development which are unique skills and are hard to come by. You've been working on this project for over a decade and it definitely deserves to be shared. Also, there is no reason to believe you will not achieve success with aa good game plan and support, which you have!
!Luv
!Hug
!Lady

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Thanks my babe. Let's continue working together and get things done!

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absolutely my love. We will get through this as a team
!Luv
!Hug
!Indeed
!Pizza
!Sloth

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Keep up the good work and motivation buddy. Always here if you need encouragement or a kick on the behind. All you need do is ask and i shall answer.

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Indeed! Well in that case yeah! Keep checking in on me!

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Finally got around to reading this post.

Zak, I wish you luck. I think you have it in you to get published. It takes persistence, quality, and of course, luck. Now, you need all three, unfortunately, but if you never try, then you'll for sure never get published. 🙂 Not sure how much you've researched, but trad publishing can be very cutthroat. It's a business after all. That's why a lot of people go the self-publishing route.

We plan on launching the Scholar and Scribe Discord where we can discuss such topics. You can add me on Discord now if you want. I offered editing services before, and I'm offering them again now. My name is the same as here.

Once again, good luck. You have my utmost confidence and support. 👏

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Thank you very much man. Yeah, definitely looking at Self-publishing.

I shall add you on Discord.

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