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My Past Writing Year

Before sharing my goals for 2023, I’ve been looking back on what I achieved in 2022 – which was rather more than I expected! 

At the turn of the year, when I sat down to set my writing goals for 2023 – more on those in next week’s post – I decided first to list my writing-related achievements in 2022, on the principle that writing a “what I did today” list always makes my next day’s to-do list look less daunting.

Here’s what I came up with (I’ve typed the numbers in figures rather than words to make it easier to follow):

If I’d written those items down as objectives at the start of 2022, I’d have found the list impossibly daunting,

But looking at the list in  hindsight makes me more confident about setting my goals for 2023.

What Helps Me Achieve

Friends and relations might describe me as driven, a self-starter, resilient, hard-working, and curious. These are all qualities I inherited or learned from my parents and grandparents, who are the best role models.

Another advantage is my strong support network. I’m no Thomas Chatterton, scribbling romantically, hopelessly, in his cold lonely garret.

The Death of Chatterton by Henry Wallis (Public domain)

I’m lucky to have my parents, brother, sister and nephews within half an hour’s drive away, and a supportive husband and daughter at home.

I have a terrific network of friends all over the world, including wonderful author friends in the Alliance of Independent Authors, the Romantic Novelists’ Association, and the Society of Authors, plus fellow authors published by Boldwood Books.

Closer to home, I live in a vibrant, pretty but not posh or elitist Cotswold village, where I’m able to play a very active role in community life.

I’m very lucky to be relatively secure financially, having paid off my mortgage (and yes, I do realise what a privilege it is to have been able to take out a mortgage to buy my own home). I’m not rich, but for the most part I’m able to live by Mr Micawber’s maxim:

 

Mr Micawber from Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield, drawn by Phiz (Public domain)

“”Annual income 20 pounds, annual expenditure 19 [pounds] 19 [shillings] and six [pence], result happiness. Annual income 20 pounds, annual expenditure 20 pounds ought and six, result misery” – Mr Micawber in David Copperfield

(I confess I also subscribe to his optimistic catchphrase: “Something will turn up“.)

Other things that help keep my spirits buoyant is an estalished set of hobbies that I love, including:

These activities provide plenty of thinking time and allow my creative mind to wander. They “fill the creative well“, as the saying goes, providing ideas for new stories. I’ve lost count of the number of ways my bell-ringing chums have told me you can murder someone with a bell!

This is not to say I leave a charmed life. I have significant chronic health conditions, including asthma and rheumatoid arthritis, which reduce my energy. I can no longer use a conventional keyboard. But it’s in my nature to light a candle rather than curse the darkness, and I’m thankful for ergonomic keyboards and voice recognition software.

I’m sharing these thoughts not to show off, but to encourage you when setting your goals for 2023. Aim high. Believe in yourself. Give yourself the chances you deserve.

Whatever you plan to do in 2023, I wish you a happy, safe and fulfilled new year. Next week I’ll be telling you how I plan to spend mine. 


IN OTHER NEWS

The eighth Sophie Sayers Cozy Mystery is due to launch on 15th March 2023 and is now available to pre-order

AND FINALLY…

As I set this post up the night before it is due to go live, I’ve just discovered my latest book, Wicked Whispers at St Bride’s, the third in my Gemma Lamb Cozy Mystery series, is currently an Amazon bestseller, at #264 in the UK Kindle charts. The first in that series, Dastardly Deeds at St Bride’s, is also currently sporting a bestseller sticker. Not a bad way to start my new writing year!

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