Stephanie Morrill is the creator of GoTeenWriters.com and the author of several young adult novels, including the historical mystery, The Lost Girl of Astor Street (Blink/HarperCollins). Despite loving cloche hats and drop-waist dresses, Stephanie would have been a terrible flapper because she can’t do the Charleston and looks awful with bobbed hair. She and her near-constant ponytail live in Kansas City with her husband and three kids. You can connect with her on FacebookTwitterPinterest, Instagram, and sign up for free books on her author website.

“When you set goals for your writing, do you write those down anywhere?” my husband asked as we drove to Colorado last week.

The conversation that ensued is one that I’ve been thinking about ever since, because it reshaped the way I’ve thought about goals for years.

When Ben asked me this question about goals, I started talking to him about plans. I rambled about how I used to make elaborate outlines for how I intended to spend my year, but something always came up that I didn’t anticipate, so now I focus more on daily and weekly tasks to accomplish my goals.

To offer him an example, I said, “I have a goal to get my manuscript turned in on time, but I don’t have that written down anywhere. I just have a daily and weekly plan for how I’ll get that done.”

Ben said, “No, I’m talking about big goals. Like, ‘I want to be on the New York Times bestseller list by the time I’m thirty-five,’ or whatever your goal is. Those kinds of goals.”

I told him I didn’t believe in making those kinds of goals. My philosophy has been that a good goal is something I can do on my own. I’ve even talked about that on Go Teen Writers a few times, including here:

(Two Ways To Make Effective Writing Goals, January 5, 2015)

When talking to my husband, I even cited the widely used “SMART” goal system to back up my beliefs. In case you aren’t familiar with SMART goals, it means you should create goals that are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Results-Focused (in a lot of places they say Relevant, but I like results-focused better), and Time-Bound. But even as I was saying this to Ben, I could see that there was nothing in any of those words that specified, “And you must be able to accomplish this with your own human strength.”

Huh.

The more I’ve reflected on this, the more I’ve realized the flaws in my thinking. As Ben said to me, “Just because JFK couldn’t put a man on the moon by himself, should he not have had that goal for our country?”

I thought about when I was a writer longing to be published. My goal was to be a traditionally published young adult author. I made choices about how to spend my time, energy, and money based on that goal. I plugged away at that goal every weekday, and sometimes on weekends too. I read books, I took classes, I networked with people, I told those around me that I wanted to be a published writer. And I wrote. I wrote every day as if it was a job I was being paid to do.

I worked as though becoming a published author was entirely up to me, even though I was acutely aware that it was not.

I knew I couldn’t control industry trends, or if an agent would like my writing voice, or what kind of mood the editor was in when my manuscript landed on their desk. I knew I needed many other people’s approval if I wanted to achieve my goal, but I worked daily as though only my efforts mattered.

I know that’s why I achieved my goal of becoming a traditionally published young adult author. Because when the right circumstances presented themselvesan agent who loved my voice, an editor who was looking for hopeful but realistic YA fiction, and a flourishing YA marketI had done the work and was ready.

When I knew what my goal was, my daily decisions became obvious. Not easy, but obvious:

  • Should I watch this Gilmore Girls rerun, or should I write my next chapter?
  • I’m frustrated that a few agents and editors have rejected this book. Should I try self-publishing it, or should I try to rework the first chapters and see if that helps me get more requests?
  • I have an idea for an adult book. Should I write that?
And yet somehow after my initial accomplishment of being published, I got it in my head that it was stupid to have goals about bestseller lists, awards, or publishing houses because there were factors I couldn’t control.
When I told myself that I shouldn’t have goals like that, what I unintentionally did was let myself off the hook because I didn’t want to face disappointment. If I haven’t allowed myself to have Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Results-Focused, and Time-Bound goals about how much money I make or what kind of bestseller lists I hit, then it’s easier to shrug and pretend like I don’t care if those things happen or not.
I’m still mulling over what my goals are, and maybe you are too. That’s fine. If you know yours, and you’re comfortable with it, share them in the comments. 

If you don’t know yours, I encourage you to spend some time thinking about them like I will be in preparation for next week. Next week we’re going to talk about personal writing guidelines and how to build them. Which is something I’ve been working on, but hitting a wall each time. Not until my conversation with Ben did I realize my struggle came because I’d failed to do the first step. I’d failed to make big goals.