This is a blog you’ll enjoy if you like writing! I write for magazines in the UK and abroad and I am also the Agony Aunt for Writers’ Forum magazine.



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Guest Post from Peter Jones, author of How to Do Everything and Be Happy

With the new year just days away, Peter Jones shares his passion for personal Goal Setting, and explains why failing them is a good thing.

So, in three days it’ll be 2012. And for the fifth year running I’ll be setting myself personal goals.

A lot of my friends dislike the idea of setting personal goals, like it somehow takes the ‘private’ part of their life – the part that is supposed to be about relaxing and having fun – and turns it into ‘work’. And work, as we all know, is the mortal enemy of fun and relaxation.

Perhaps you feel the same way? I know I did. Having read and listened to more than my fair share of self help books I thought I knew all that I needed to know about Goal Setting – enough to know that it wouldn’t work for me. And as I sat in traffic on the M25, morning after morning, listening to those Tony Robbins CDs, I’d start to wonder whether I’d enjoy them more if I wound down the window and tossed them, Frisbee-like, over the edge of the bridge and into the River Thames far below me.

That was, until I went out for a curry with my old friend Denny.

“I’ve set myself 5 goals for next year,” she told me one winter’s night in January.

“Goals?” I said

“Yeah,” said Denny as she mopped up some sauce with a strip of naan bread. I was stunned.

“Why?”

“Because I’m fed up with my life being like it is.”

“But, setting yourself goals – it’s a little extreme though, isn’t it?” She shrugged.

“Not really,” she said.

“But what if you don’t achieve them?” I asked.

“Then life will stay pretty much as it is, I guess. From that perspective I can’t really lose.” I thought about this for a second or two.

“Maybe I should set some goals,” I said.

“Maybe you should,” said Denny. “What would they be?”

And that was five years ago.

I like to set my goals at the start of each year, and review them at the end. This might make them sound a little like ‘resolutions’ but resolutions are something entirely different. “I will give up smoking” – that’s a resolution. “I have given up smoking (December, 2012)” – now that’s a goal.

Take for instance one of my goals for 2010:

My Happiness Book is published
(Dec 31st 2010)

At the time I set that the Goal I’d hardly started writing How To Do Everything and Be Happy, let alone given much thought to how I would publish it. I didn’t even have the title.

Did I achieve the goal?

No.

That’s the not so funny thing about setting goals – some of the time, perhaps even most of the time, you fail!

But then I’m not particularly motivated by ‘easy goals’ – goals that I know I have a good chance of achieving. They don’t even feel like goals – more like boring items on my to-do list. I had a friend who, on January 1st, set herself the goal of joining a gym. By the end of the first week she’d achieved it. Was that really a goal? Shouldn’t joining the gym have been part of a much larger goal to improve her health and fitness? In my mind a goal should stretch you. A goal should be ever-so-slightly out of reach. With most of my goals I know that my chances of success are extremely slim, though the chance is there.

So my revised Goal for 2011 looked like this:

“How To Do Everything and Be Happy”
is available in three formats,
and selling really well (to be defined),
whilst I bask in the success (to be defined)
of the seminar(s)
Dec 31st 2011

And will I achieve that Goal??

No.

But I’ll come darn close. The book was released as an ebook back in March, and as a paperback a few weeks later. Both are selling better than I could have ever hoped. An audio version is planned for this coming year, and whilst I’m not exactly basking in the success of my one workshop, two more are being planned for the coming weeks.

Most important of all though, by identifying why I achieved or failed my goal I’m equipped to write smarter, more specific, or maybe utterly different goals.

Working with goals – that is, having them in your life – is something that gets easier the longer you do it. You develop a habit, or a mindset – after a while you start to look at everything you’re doing in relation to how it sits with your goals. In a very real way, your goals force you to decide what’s important to you and move you in that direction. They give you purpose and vision.

And it’s true what they say:

“Without vision the people perish.”

So, people of the interweb – what are your Goals for 2012. Drop me a line or use the comments box below – I’d love to hear from you.

Wishing you a very happy New Year

Peter Jones
Author of How To Do Everything and Be Happy

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Posted in Guest Posts | 6 Comments

Win a signed copy of my new book! Moving On – Short Story to Novel

Want to win a signed copy of my new book?

Available for pre-order from Amazon, price £9.99

Just for fun – I am having a short story competition.  All you have to do – she says gleefully – is to write a 250 word short story on the subject of,  The New Year Resolution That Went Wrong.

Come on, you know you can do it. And who needs a long Christmas holiday anyway! Don’t let your brain go to sleep.

There is no entry fee. Just put your story in the body of an email and send it to me.

I will publish the winner on 5 January, 2012, which is also publication day. You can send your entry any time between now and 10.00 am on 4 January. What are you waiting for!

 

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Posted in competitions | 6 Comments

Nutella

Ha ha – I finally found a decent sized jar of Nutella!

I shall be OK for Christmas, now!

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Posted in Nothing to do with writing! | 4 Comments

Prize winning story in Scribble

I have just heard that my short story, In Search of a Hero, which was published in the autumn edition of  Scribble magazine has been voted the best short story of the issue and hence I have won first prize £75.00 – yay!

Scribble is a small press magazine edited by a very nice man called David Howarth and they run ongoing short story competitions. How it works is that you submit your story, along with your entry fee of £3.00 and he prints the best of these (in his opinion) and the readers vote on them.  Then in the next issue, they announce the results of the vote and also – and this is rather nice – they print readers’ comments in the back of the issue on all of the stories in the previous issue.

My story was a male viewpoint story about a guy returning home after his brother had been killed. I was rather fond of this story. Woman’s Weekly nearly published it once, but decided against it in the end.  It wasn’t really quite a magazine story, but I didn’t want to leave it mouldering in a drawer – well on my PC anyway – so it was lovely to find a home for it, and even lovelier to discover that other people liked it and thought it was the best.

I haven’t seen the issue of Scribble it’s in yet, so I don’t know if I had any nice comments, a friend of mine told me about it.  But a nice way to start the day!

Link to Scribble if anyone would like to take a look.

http://www.parkpublications.co.uk/scribble.htm

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Posted in competitions, News | 3 Comments

Update on my favourite mug!

Hah!

Have been in touch with the chairman of Swanwick, Xanthe Wells, well she is the secretary now, but she is just as lovely and she is going to send me another mug. So all will be well.  And I did manage to write a story yesterday, although I’m not convinced it isn’t rubbish!

I have a niggly feeling that it needs something extra – more work probably – oh why can’t they just come out fully formed and be perfect. I ignore these niggly feeling at my peril. Because I have come to realize that they roughly translate as, “Editor will send back”.

I wonder if there are any shelf stacking vacancies at Tesco. Am sure that would be easier than writing stories!

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Posted in Nothing to do with writing!, Writing conferences & schools | Leave a comment

My favourite cup is no more

I Just broke my favourite mug.  It was a present for being on the committee of Swanwick Writers in 2010 (An excellent summer school for writers by the way, see link below). It was white with Swanwick 2010 written in blue on it and it was exactly the right size for coffee and I had to have it by me when I wrote – otherwise my stories would be rubbish.

And now it’s broken. And what if I can never write again?

Yes, I know, I am mad. I thought that was a qualification you needed to be a writer!

Mind you, thinking about it, I did used to have a lucky gold-coloured two inch pixie who stood on my desk and without whom I couldn’t write a word and I haven’t seen him for ages. And I still seem to have been writing. So maybe it won’t matter about the mug.

http://swanwickwritersschool.co.uk/

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Posted in Writing conferences & schools | Leave a comment

Lapdogs and Nutella

Seamus, my lapdog

I have decided to ban Nutella from my cupboard – especially the really big jars that you can fit a really big spoon into. It’s all very well my Slimming World consultant saying that a teaspoon of nutella is only a few syns, but how about a heaped tablespoon – I mean dessert spoon obviously. I am not that much of a pig. Actually I am. So much for my plan to lose weight before Christmas – it is comfort food all the way around here.

And while we’re on the subject of comfort, I thought you might like to see a picture of Seamus making himself comfy on my lap. And yes he is heavy – 13 stone heavy. And the “tiny” dog curled up next to him is a Staffordshire bull terrier cross.

When people tell me they have a large dog I have this urge to say, “That’s not a large dog. This is a large dog.” Like Paul Hogan did with the knife on Crocodile Dundee!

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Posted in Nothing to do with writing! | 16 Comments

Dear Della Questions

Had some great questions today in Dear Della, including one from a writer who was despondent because she’d had quite a few rejections for her first novel.

We all know how that feels, I know I do.  Maybe writers are masochistic. How many professions are there that involve working flat out for a year, pouring your heart and soul into something, and then trying to sell it and finding that the rest of the world doesn’t share your passion?

Out on January 5 but available to pre order now. A late Christmas present perhaps!

And we don’t just do it once, do we? Oh no, we carry on, year in, year out with this impossible dream. I wrote four novels before I found a publisher for number four.

On a happier note – my brand new non-fiction book is just about to go to print.  Here is the cover. I am so thrilled with it.

I don’t think there is anything else like it on the market because while there are heaps of books aimed at writing your first novel, not many of them show you the actual ‘differences’ between short stories and novels.  I discovered via painful experience that there were lots.

 

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Posted in Writing | 17 Comments

Writing Retreat – Day Five

Thursday 1st December

Hell, it’s my last day and I haven’t done anywhere near as much as I planned.  Get up at crack of dawn. Open laptop. Write and write and write.  Finish Chapter Three. Edit late chapters.   End with total word count of 7,000 words. But more importantly, feel that my novel has legs. Am beginning to fall in love with the characters and story.  Think I will carry on with this when I get home, which is one of the things I wanted to establish. One of the reasons I came away.

Things I learned

If you can possibly bear it, don’t have internet access. (wish I hadn’t succumbed)

Writing first pages (stream of consciousness writing) in the morning does work.  (will continue to do this)

Don’t take anything else to do. It’s just another excuse to get distracted. (wish I hadn’t taken competitions)

Don’t think you have loads of time. If you usually work to deadlines – as I do – then set some. Interesting how on the last morning I wrote loads.

Take chocolate. (you might think you won’t want any – but you will and it’ll save a lot of time going out to get it 😉 )

Would I do it again? Definitely!

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Posted in Retreat, Writing, Writing conferences & schools | 5 Comments

Writing Retreat – Day Four

Wednesday  30 November

Must do some more writing. Back to Chapter Two. Delete lots of what I wrote.  Force myself not to edit later chapter in novel.  Finally get going on chapter Two, even though I delete more words.

Wed afternoon/eve

Haven’t even read the three competitions I brought with me to judge. Must, must do that. They all have deadlines. Spend entire afternoon and evening reading them and making notes.  Have the shortlist of 6 in the one I am judging for Wimborne Literary Festival. (This is flash fiction so not too long). Great entries. Hard to decide.

Have the shortlist of 11 in another and the shortlist of 7 in another.   Make decisions on these two, but not the Flash Fiction. Must agree to judge fewer competitions. They are a wonderful displacement activity. Like blogging!

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Posted in Retreat, Writing | 2 Comments