Where Are You On The Writing Trail

by Lynn H. Blackburn @LynnHBlackburn

One of my family’s favorite things to do is to ride the Virginia Creeper Trail. Built on an old railroad bed, the Virginia Creeper Trail offers a unique biking experience.

Seventeen miles. Downhill.

Really.

It’s an amazing ride.

The scenery is stunning and the trail is open to cyclists of all experience levels. As you head down the mountain, you see professionals wearing their padded bike shorts, wild little boys on their 20” bikes peddling as fast as their legs can go, infants snoozing in their bike seats, and parents cruising along with their toddler behind them on a tagalong.

Same Trail. Different Experiences.

For the most part, the cyclists are respectful of the trail and their fellow cyclists. There’s a real sense of camaraderie. After all, we’re all on the same trail, headed in the same direction. We all want to achieve the same thing—to get to the bottom safely and have a great time doing it.

With such a variety of skill levels, it would be boring if you had to start down the trail and ride in single file. Fortunately, that’s not how it works. There may be a bit of bunching up at the top, but before long everyone finds their own rhythm.

The faster riders start calling out the standard warning…

“On your left!”

…as they pass the riders taking the trail at a more leisurely pace.

A few years I rode the trail with my 4-year-old on the tagalong. It didn’t take long for me to hear someone behind me call out, “On your left!” moments before they sailed past me. Over the course of our ride, there were plenty of cyclists who passed me and I never saw them again.

Some passed me, and then I passed them, and then they passed me and we went back and forth like that the whole time, depending on whose kids needed a break or how long we paused to check out a waterfall or take pictures of some red barns.

I heard, “On your left!” a lot on the ride and that was okay.

I wasn’t in a hurry. I wanted to enjoy the experience. My family was with me, and the pace had to work for all of us.

When I heard, “On your left,” there was no sense of frustration or jealousy. I felt no aggravation at the pace the passing cyclist had set or the progress they had made. I harbored no secret desire to swerve over and block their progress or impede their journey.

Why? Because it wasn’t a race.

Sometimes we hear, “On your left,” a lot during our writing journey.

You know what I’m talking about, don’t you?

Those writers you started out with? They are signing with agents, signing with publishers, and signing books with their name on them.

Or you see the pictures of authors at national conferences while you’re at home in yoga pants with your hair in a ponytail, no makeup, and a sink full of dishes. You watch an awards ceremony and see names of people you know flash across the screen. You clap and cheer for them and you really are happy. For them.

But for you?

You start wondering when it will be your turn.

If it will ever be your turn.

(This is all hypothetical of course…)

So, hypothetically, should this happen to you, maybe it would help to remember . . .

It’s not a race.

Your journey down the trail won’t look like anyone else’s.

Some of the people on the trail, well, they are going to leave you in their dust.

That’s okay. Let them go. Realize that they are writing at a pace you cannot sustain. Not yet. Maybe when you’ve been on the trail longer you’ll build up the endurance and expertise to keep pace with them. For now, enjoy reading their books and tell your friends to read their books. Send them emails and leave them great reviews.

Most of the people on the trail are people you’ll be experiencing this ride with for years.

You’re going to see them at conferences and hang out with them online. And sometimes they’ll pass you and sometimes you’ll pass them. And if you’re very blessed, they’ll become friends and your journey will be sweeter for them. Show up at their book signings and help them brainstorm. If they get tired or life forces them to take a break, don’t forget about them.

And whatever you do, always remember that there are kids on this trail.

They are fresh and young and they have no idea what they are doing. They need advice. At some point, you’ll have an opportunity to call out, “On your left!” — or pull over and help them pump up a tire (or plot line). Don’t forget what it was like during your first years on this journey. Every now and then, take the time to help the newbies out.

Finally, take a deep breath and look around.

Is there anywhere else you’d really rather be?

No?

Then keep pedaling.

It’s an amazing ride.

Grace and peace,

Lynn Blackburn

 

 

 

BRMCWCLynn H. Blackburn loves writing suspense because her childhood fantasy was to become a spy—but her grown-up reality is that she’s a huge chicken and would have been caught on her first mission. She prefers to live vicariously through her characters and loves putting them into all kinds of terrifying situations—while she’s sitting at home safe and sound in her pajamas!

Her Dive Team Investigations series kicked off in March with Beneath the Surface. The second book in the series, In Too Deep, releases in November with the third book to follow in 2019. She is also the author of Hidden Legacy and Covert Justice, which won the 2016 Carol Award for Short Novel and the 2016 Selah Award for Mystery and Suspense.

She lives in South Carolina with her true love and their three children. You can follow her real life happily ever after at www.LynnHBlackburn.com and on FacebookTwitterPinterest, and Instagram.

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4 Comments

    The Conversation

  1. Teresa A Moyer says:

    Oh my gosh…I loved this! Oh so true in all aspects. I am friends with established writers that are cheering me on as a newbie and I am cheering on other new writers I am just meeting. This is an adventure that is safe for all levels for sure!

  2. Tim Suddeth says:

    Great post. Writing is a journey to enjoy, not a fight to win. Thanks for the visual.

  3. Dr Deborah Maxey says:

    Wow. Excellent!

  4. Dennis L Oberholtzer says:

    Thirty years of researching many subjects has left me with more knowledge than I know what to do with. One book is printed on Amazon. Do not expect many readers, but is most important for correcting some Biblical names of Breastplate stones.
    The one I now want to publish tells where, when, and who had the Shroud of Jesus during the 150 years it was missing. New an agent to maybe format the genealogical tables better.