My latest mistake and what I learned from it

Earlier this year, I decided to hire a writing coach.

My decision came after a year of working on my book alone. A year of filling notebooks with scenes and anecdotes. Of making no real progress. I was tired of trying to figure it all out on my own, so I went looking for someone who could help me get a manuscript written.

After some Googling and asking around, I found a coach who seemed like the right fit. She was friendly, engaging and professional – a twenty-year veteran of the publishing industry with a string of published clients who say she’s amazing. After an initial consultation, I got a good feeling. I signed up to work with her for two months.

Things started well.

First, she told me to draw up a book structure. I did, and it got a big thumbs up. Then I wrote my first two chapters and sent them to her for review. I anxiously waited for her feedback, not sure if what I’d written was any good. I needn’t have been worried.

‘Your story is compelling and well told,’ she replied. I relaxed, overcome with relief. I got straight back to writing, producing a mind-boggling two chapters, or 10,000 words, per week. Her positive reviews kept coming, peppered with some minor queries and suggestions.

‘This is a solid draft,’ my coach told me about a third of the way in. She assured me that my manuscript would require only one round of minor revisions before it was ready for publication.

I was thrilled. After a year of doodling in notebooks I was finally making progress. When we hit the halfway mark, and my coach asked if I wanted to keep going, I gave her a big thumbs up. I could see the finish line now and I didn’t want to stop.

Which may explain why I ignored a few red flags.

The main one concerned my story, which was turning out to be more of a travelogue than a memoir – a chronological account of what I did and saw with no real storyline. I began to wonder if perhaps I hadn’t thought this book structure through enough. When I raised my concerns with my writing coach, she told me not to worry.

‘Your book can be both a travelogue and a memoir’, she told me. According to her, all I had to do was insert a few pages here and there telling the reader how I was feeling, and I’d have myself a memoir.

I wasn’t entirely convinced. But after a year of working on my own and getting nowhere, I figured I should keep an open mind. Did I also mention how thrilled I was to see the finish line?

The closer I got to the end, the more wildly those red flags began flapping in my face. My story had no narrative arc. No character development. No tension to resolve. No ah-ha moment to get my readers fist-pumping into the air. I started wondering what I’d paid my writing coach thousands of dollars for.

When I finished the draft, I sent it to a friend to read, just to be sure I wasn’t being too self-critical. When her feedback arrived, my heart sank. ‘Sorry to sound harsh,’ she wrote. ‘I’m only reading this because you’re a dear friend.’

Things didn’t end well with my writing coach.

She was fine when I told her I was cutting our time short because I needed to go find someone else to help me get a handle on my book. She wasn’t so fine when I asked for a partial refund. All of a sudden her tone changed from ‘I just want you to be satisfied’ to ‘I fulfilled the terms of the contract.’

For a while I felt terrible – mad at myself for wasting money, upset at how our relationship had ended, and disheartened by the thought of starting my book again from scratch. I took some time off to lick my wounds and come up with a new plan.

I also reflected on what had happened and what I’d learned from the experience. Some of the lessons were so obvious I kicked myself for not realising them sooner.

For a start, I should have chosen a writing coach who specialises in memoir.

When I’d asked my writing coach about her experience with memoir, she told me she’d worked on several ‘memoir-like’ books. I realise now that that wasn’t good enough. I should have chosen someone who knows the genre inside out.

Before I agreed to work with her, I should have read her clients’ books. Instead of just taking her word for it (and theirs too) I should have checked out their final products and judged for myself.

And I should have chosen a coach who publishes with major publishing companies and whose clients do too. Don’t get me wrong. I’ve read some good self-published books. But most self-published books out there wouldn’t make it past a publishing company’s slush pile. Which possibly explains why my coach, whose clients mostly self-publish, let me get away with mediocre.

A few months after the bust up, I enrolled in a writing class – an introduction to memoir with a teacher who satisfied all of my new criteria. It was time to go back to basics, I decided. To stop trying to rush to the finish line. To slow down and learn my craft.

This time, I wasn’t disappointed. I found a teacher who challenges her students to see past the particularities of their lives; to tell a universal story that others will want to read. I’ll write more about that in a future post.

By no means was my first coaching experience a complete waste of time and money. Like most relationships that go sour, there were good bits too.

I’d wanted someone to help me get a manuscript written and that’s precisely what I got. I have a first draft, which is a start. Finally, a score on the board.

Even though I won’t use much of it, my first draft is far from useless. Sometimes you have to try the things that don’t work to find the things that do. I gained a whole lot of clarity and it will show in the second draft.

I came out of this experience with a strong sense of certainty too. After I picked myself up and dusted myself off, I asked myself a question.

Do I want to keep doing this? Do I want to keep writing a book that has already taken longer than I expected it to and may take years more?

The answer came easily.

Yes.

6 comments

  1. Roger says:

    Whew, what a story. A friend here in California is also a fledgling writer. He went through several “rough starts” and after 2+ years finally published his first book. Quite good read I might add…”Raising Blackbirds” by Ed Moncrief. You’ll finally “get it”, you’re young! (Ed’s 77 years old!) It’s always nice to read your words. It’s like you’re speaking to me. Lots of love…Roger

  2. Louis Molloy says:

    Diane, I have always believed deeply that the word ‘mistake’ is a very negative one, and better not being part of our vocabulary. I do believe very strongly that they are always our steps along the way – steps to learning, They are part and parcel of the fabric of our lives and are precious. You have approached your experience with so much wisdom and insight – congratulations!! Louis

    • Jim Barnes says:

      I fully agree – ‘mistake’ is not the right word. One learns a lot from the paths we try. Writing is hard. I’ve been working on my book for five years now, and while superficially it resembles the outline I first made – eg, some chapters have the same name, time has allowed to explore various ways to write, reject them when end up not being right and moving on. It is close to finished now, and wouldn’t be anything like it is if I had rushed it. As for coaches, I’ve shown drafts to friends who I respect, some writers, others not, all of whom have provided good advice along with empathy.

      • Diane says:

        Thanks for your comment, Jim. I toyed with the idea of not using the word ‘mistake’ in the blog post but a mistake is exactly what it feels like at the time. For me, anyway. It takes me some time and reflection to start showing some self-compassion and looking for the lessons. And yes, time is so so important. Congratulations on getting close to finishing your book. You’ve had such an interesting and influential career and life. I’m looking forward to reading about it!

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