Friday, I taught a workshop on publicity here at ACFW. I prepared, I recited, I gathered stories and refused, absolutely refused, to be nervous about teaching.
I started to teach, and then it happened. I looked up at the eyes trained on me and froze. My thoughts scattered. I forgot the point I was making. Later, it happened again and I had to stop, smile, and just come out with it. "I'm sorry, I lost my point. I'm a little nervous here." Everyone laughed, and for me, the ice broke. I went on to express my passion for teaching them publicity, as I know it really does make a difference in book sales.
I wish I could say everything went perfectly smooth afterwards. It definitely got better, but the amount of information I wanted to communicate didn't translate necessarily the way I wanted it to.
Afterward, I felt tempted to cycle through all the things I meant to say, or wish I had stressed, or could have done better. I had to mentally give myself a shake and think differently. No, it may not have gone exactly the way I wanted, but I took a step in the right direction.
I recall how nervous I felt the first time I sent out my writing to be critiqued, and how hard it was for me to critique someone's work. I remember the first time I pitched my book, it didn't go that well, but by the time I went to the next conference, I was able to speak freely and without tripping over myself. Then, there was sending out the first proposal and manuscript. That was excruciating, but now I've dealt with agents and editors long enough not to even think much about it after I hit send.
I also recall my first days of learning publicity. I had to crawl before I could walk. I remember my hands were cold as I dialed the number for a small town newspaper—and like going up a high dive—the only way to figure out how to do this was to jump in. Now I could board a plane to New York and meet with national media without feeling as shaky as I did that first phone call.
So, in the end, I'm calling the class a success. Maybe not a success as we like to define it—I wowed them, left them inspired, and can't wait to hear the CD. But, it was one more step in the right direction. One more path taken on this journey. And who knows, maybe someone reading this will remember it the next time they step out of their comfort zone and have that icky feeling that too often follows.
Friday, September 21, 2007
Home »
» Stepping Up to Bat – From the ACFW Conference
Stepping Up to Bat – From the ACFW Conference
Friday, September 21, 2007
5 comments
Related Posts:
3 Elements of a Good book by Michelle Griep As I was just about dozing off to sleep last night, hubby elbows me and asks, "Hey, how do you write a good book? What are the top 3 elements?"I replied with a snore, hoping he'd think I was sleeping.He n… Read More
What To Do When You Don’t Think You’ll Ever Get Published by James L. RubartFor you non golf fans, nine days ago, Sergio Garcia won The Masters—one of the most longed for titles in all of professional sports. It was his first golf “major” after 18 years and seventy one tries.That’… Read More
There Really Is Nothing New Under the Sun by Pamela S. MeyersI’ve always wondered if there was a good reason for including a section in a novel proposal where a list of currently available novels similar to yours is provided along with explanations as to how they a… Read More
That One Moment… by Erica Vetsch Thank you for inviting me to visit today. I have been a longtime reader and fan of Novel Rocket posts. Last week, I was in ‘Deadline Mode.’ I had a December 1st deadline, and I was sweating finishing th… Read More
When Writing is Like Riding a Horse by Marcia Lee Laycock I’ve always been horse crazy. It took many years of begging before my mother let me learn how to ride a horse and many more after that before I owned one. I remember the day I woke up and looked out my… Read More
jessica rocks! i was in her class and she did a great job! Go jess, go jess, go jes...
ReplyDeleteWay to go, Jessica - I've been there! And sometimes when we think we've bombed, God does amazing things in the people who are sitting in front of us.
ReplyDeleteBless you for being there.
Marcia
I don't think I have ever made it through a teaching situation without loosing my train of thought at least once. There have been a few times that the students were not aware that I lost my train of thought, maybe even most of the time, but I figure that it is just part of the territory. I like to have a lot of class participation when I teach and I make it very clear that I expect it. Getting class participation requires giving the class members time to speak. Losing my train of thought is often beneficial with my teaching style because it gives the students one more place to chime in with something that they have been chewing on in their heads or to ask a question about a previous point.
ReplyDeleteI was there too, Jessica. You did fine.
ReplyDeleteLook at it this way:
All you did was show us how brilliant you are at 90%. Just think how great it's going to be when we see you at a 100%.
Keep in mind what Jerry Seinfeld said:
Public speaking is the #1 fear in America. Death is #2.
This means that if most people have to go to a funeral, they'd rather be in the casket than giving the eulogy.
LOL-- too funny Dayle!
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate the comments, guys.
My sister gave me this quote after I called her after the class:
"I've missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I've been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed." -Michael Jordan
I love that quote!