Success
with
Writing

$uccess

Your Path to a Successful Book

Our $uccess blog will feature writing, marketing, and publishing tips we continue to learn since writing our 2009 INDIE Finalist workbook $uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book keeping our readers abreast of the everchanging skills required to write, publish and sell a successful book. We will also have guest commentators. Achieving your goals as a writer is what matters. Anything we can do to help you get there is our goal. We welcome your comments and hope you will sign up for our bi-monthly (or whenever we have enough material) newsletter.

Archive for the ‘Workshop’ Category

Wishing for Motivation by Jean Moroney

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

As our regular readers know, I frequently have permission to republish part of my friend, Jean Moroney’s, newletter.  This  month’s article that I particularly liked is “Wishing for Motivation.” Since I’m a firm believer in the power of thinking positive, this reaffirms what I think from a different approach. Naturally, I enjoy those articles that affirm what I believe.

Jean Moroney teaches managers and other professionals how to tap their own knowledge bank to solve problems faster, make better decisions, and communicate more effectively. Corporations hire her to train their managers in “Thinking Tactics” to help them get more done with fewer resources.  This article originally appeared in her free email newsletter. Subscribe at Thinking Directions or email subscribe@thinkingdirections.com.

Wishing for Motivation

Wishful thinking doesn’t solve problems. But it can transform your
motivation when you are not “in the mood” to do the next task on
your agenda. I stumbled upon this fact while on a long trip.

At a certain point, I thought I should dig into four annual reports I
had brought along. But I felt, “Ugh. I don’t want to.” As I paused
on that depressing note, I felt a little wistful. I said to myself, “I
wish I were motivated to read those reports. I’d really like to clear
that backlog.” (They were the last from a large pile.) Suddenly, I
wanted to finish. I reached for a report, and read them all through
without stopping.

I was surprised by this painless about-face, so I reflected on it later.
Let me explain why it happened and how to replicate that success. I
call the technique, “wishing for motivation.”

Wishing “worked” because I was not in serious conflict, just feeling
a little lazy. In that low-key state, I could sense a wisp of desire at
the back of my mind. By “wishing,” I gently turned my full
attention to that desire, which in turn triggered good reasons for
reading the reports.

Emotions follow from values. Once those values were front and
center, desire followed.

Don’t get me wrong. I wasn’t passionately excited to read the
reports. I didn’t need to be. Mild interest can overcome
sluggishness.

I turned this observation into a technique: If I notice I’m delaying
getting started on something, I know I need a  nudge. I immediately
set a timer for 3 minutes and do some “thinking on paper” using
these words as prompts:

–I wish I felt motivated to …
–I would like to feel the way I do when …
–I wish I were motivated because …

These prompts ensure you wish for the right thing–to be motivated.
If you wish for the task to go away or for someone else to solve the
problem, you won’t trigger a desire to start.

Chiding yourself with “I should want to do this” also won’t work.
That’s more likely to trigger resistant moans and groans and
contrarian stubbornness.

Once I feel some desire, I’m willing to consider a microscopic step
I could take toward starting.

Here’s a literal example, transcribed from my notebook. I went to
lunch in the middle of writing the draft of this article. When I came
back, I knew I should resume writing. But I was feeling post-pizza
lethargy. Ugh. I hesitated, and then I chose to start a timer, open
my journal, and write the following:

“I wish I were in the mood to finish this draft. It’s so much easier
to come back when you’ve reached a definite end point. I wish I
still had that easy feeling [from when I worked on it earlier] of
enjoying telling the story. [I paused with the pen in the air.] I could
spend the rest of these three minutes re-reading.”

When the timer rang, I was already hooked. I finished the draft
without delay.

Note that I used an act of will to get started. The timer didn’t turn
on by itself. The journal didn’t fly to my desk and magically start
recording prose. But I needed only a wee nudge of willpower to
start, not the mighty heave I’d have needed to overcome true
resistance.

This “wishing for motivation” method won’t succeed when you
have a serious conflict about starting. Then you need more powerful
thinking tactics to help you identify the conflict and resolve it so
you can move forward.

But what’s the downside of the method? The next time lethargy
strikes, spend three minutes wishing for motivation. Your wish may
come true.

For those interested, Jean has a “Thinking Tactics” workshop coming up in San Francisco, September 25, 2010.

THINKING TACTICS
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Hampton Inn San Francisco Airport
9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

In the morning session, Concentrating the Power of Your Mind,

you will learn:

–How to use small chunks of time for big thinking tasks
–How to break through the two most common thinking blocks in
three quick steps
–How to spot when you’re floundering, then get your work back
on track fast

In the afternoon session, Making Complex Tasks Fit in People-
Sized Brains, you will learn:

–How to survey your own mental databanks to get yourself started
on a complex task
–The secret to making large, amorphous projects fit in limited
schedules
–The #1 thinking tactic that helps perfectionists turn in good work
on time
–What you need to take the strain out of thinking and make it flow

This is an interactive workshop. During the day we will work
through exercises and processes in the 70-page workbook using a
combination of lecture, discussion, group exercises, and individual
exercises.

Detailed Brochure:
http://www.thinkingdirections.com/TTSept2010.pdf

Questions? Sign up for the free “Jump Start Your Thinking” Q&A
session:
http://www.thinkingdirections.com/jumpstart.htm
or email Jean Moroney: jm@thinkingdirections.com

Testimonial:

“I use Jean’s methods on a daily basis, at work and in my
personal life. They help me work through my hardest problems
and get control of the most stressful situations. I wouldn’t
be as effective or efficient as I am without them.  I highly
recommend Jean’s course.”
–Jason Crawford, Co-founder & CTO, Kima Labs,
San Francisco, CA

Maralyn D. Hill, President
International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association
Books By Hills Success With Writing Where & What in the World
Member: Society of Professional Journalists

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, ”$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”

Don’t Let Pressure Sabotage Your Thinking by Jean Moroney

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

My friend, Jean Moroney has granted us permission to share her article, “Don’t Let Pressure Sabotage Your Thinking.” I enjoy her writing style so much, I like to share it. I consider her someone who thinks outside the box and is  problem solver. She is rational and creative, a great combintion.

Just so you know a little about Jean, here is a very brief capsule.

Jean Moroney teaches managers and other professionals how to tap their own knowledge bank to solve problems faster, make better decisions, and communicate more effectively. Corporations hire her to train their managers in “Thinking Tactics” to help them get more done with fewer resources.  This article originally appeared in her free email newsletter. Subscribe at <http://www.thinkingdirections.com>http://www.thinkingdirections.com or email <mailto:subscribe@thinkingdirections.com>subscribe@thinkingdirections.com.
Don’t Let Pressure Sabotage Your Thinking

Pressure can sabotage your thinking. By pressure, I mean an issue

weighing on your mind as you try to concentrate on something else.
Perhaps it’s an imminent deadline or a desperate desire to do a
fantastic job. Maybe it’s a highly-charged emotional situation you
haven’t had time to resolve. Or maybe it’s just that other project
you’re working on. To keep the issue from distracting you, you
heighten your vigilance, redouble your effort, and try to plug ahead
anyway.

Unfortunately, this well-intentioned strategy is sabotaged from the
start. To hold an issue at bay takes up valuable mental attention.
You must split your mental resources, with only part focused on the
task at hand. The rest is devoted to holding the weighty issue in the
limbo of peripheral awareness.

There are very few thinking tasks that need only part of your brain.
You need to clear that pressing issue off your mind so you can use
your full intelligence on the other topic.

How do you do that? One way or another, there is always some step
you need to take to address the issue for now, so you are free to
drop it from your mind.

For example, suppose an undone chore is pressing on your mind.
Write down a reminder to yourself–that’s usually enough to clear it
off your mind.

If a more complicated task is distracting you, you can get if off
your mind by thinking it through to the next *physical* action (as
David Allen teaches), and then putting that item on your to-do list.

Here are some other ways to address an issue that is weighing on
you:

–If you are worrying about something that might happen: Make a
contingency plan for how you will handle it.

–If there is a decision that needs to be made: Identify the
information you need to make the decision. If you don’t have
enough information, plan how you’ll get it, then let go for now. If
you have all the information, make a list of pros and cons, and give
yourself the instruction to percolate in the background on the
decision for now.

–If you feel deadline pressure: Identify the kernel that you can
complete in half the available time, and focus on that. (I teach this
as “Planned Evolution,” an approach that also helps with pressure
from perfectionism.)

–If you are feeling an intense emotion: Introspect it. Ask, “What do
I feel?” and “Why do I feel it?” This calms the emotion and puts
you back in control. (I teach this as “Introspection 101.”)

–If you have a problem that you need to solve, plan precisely when
and how you will devote time to address it, and explain to yourself
why you are right to put it off until then.

The key in each case is to use just *a few minutes of targeted
thinking* to address the weighty issue.  Maybe you can settle it in a
few minutes. Or, maybe you will use those minutes to figure out
how you’ll deal with it later. In either case, you resolve the issue
for the time being. You eliminate the urgency to think about it more
right now–which means you can devote your full attention to
whatever you were trying to concentrate on in the first place.

It helps to know specific tools to quickly address each type of issue.
A large portion of my class on Thinking Tactics concerns such
tools. But common-sense logic will get you rather far. Just keep in
mind that the goal is to clear the load off your mind in a short time.

Pressure is an important warning signal. When you feel pressure,
clear the load; free up your mental resources so you can concentrate
100% on your main task. There is no better use of your mind at
that moment.

===========================

II. San Francisco, September 25, 2010 Thinking Tactics

THINKING TACTICS
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Hotel TBD (near San Francisco Airport)
9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

This workshop is a “go.”

There are no cookbook solutions to real-life problems. To tackle
life’s challenges, you need a mental toolkit to help you tap your
own knowledge bank to solve problems faster, make better
decisions,and communicate more effectively. Such a toolkit is what
you get from Jean Moroney’s all-day workshop on Thinking Tactics.

Detailed Brochure:
http://www.thinkingdirections.com/TTSept2010.pdf

Testimonial from Mary Ann DeRaad:

“Jean Moroney’s classes in thinking contain essential material for
anyone who seeks to live successfully. The techniques offered in
both the Thinking Tactics workshop and the subsequent monthly
teleclasses are remarkable.

“Her language is fresh and her approach is clear and concise.  Not
only does she attack problem solving for all kinds of work-related
projects, but also for ‘living life at its best possible’ related
projects.

“Through her insights and with her encouragement, I have launched
and continue to improve a new career, a new home, and a new
marriage.  These take thinking — serious, important planning and
review.

“Her teaching style is so precise and goal-directed that it is
impossible to feel clumsy or silly when asking for advice. NO
question is uninteresting to her!  The teaching goal, for all her
students, is the effective application of the techniques discussed.

“As a successful teacher of piano for 40 years, I look eagerly for
fine teaching.  It is not so easy to discover!  But I have found it in
Jean Moroney’s classes. Fine teaching requires a sincere effort to
understand the student, to approach the problems and questions with
every possible consideration toward finding a solution.”

–Mary Ann DeRaad, Tucson, Arizona

Questions? Call or email Jean Moroney at 212-972-9495
jm@thinkingdirections.com or print out the 8-page brochure:
http://www.thinkingdirections.com/TTSept2010.pdf

===========================

You may forward part or all of this newsletter by email,
if you include this copyright & contact notice in its entirety:

” Copyright Thinking Directions. All Rights Reserved.
To subscribe to the Thinking Directions Occasional Update,
email: subscribe@thinkingdirections.com or visit
http://www.thinkingdirections.com

Contact Jean for permission to post to a blog or website.

Maralyn D. Hill, President
International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association
Books By Hills Success With Writing Where & What in the World
Member: Society of Professional Journalists

Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book,”

Success Tip – Ideas Strike at Unusual Times

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010


Maralyn and Brenda teach writing workshops in Florida, Arizona and Add Imagethis month at Mexico’s Rancho La Puerta, February 27 – March 6.

One of the tips they recommend is to keep a note pad and writing instrument on the bedside table. H.J.Brown, Jr. ,writes that “Million-dollar ideas sometimes strike at 3 a.m.”

They also stress that their “overnight success” with their Success book took about five years.

Brenda C. Hill
International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association
Books By Hills Success With Writing
Where and What in the World


Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards, “$uccess, Your Path to a Successful Book.”