The idea of writing your first book can be seriously intimidating. Maybe even intimidating enough to make you stop before you start.
In my experience, a lot of that overwhelm comes from focusing on too much at once–especially for the first draft of your first novel. The reality is, there’s A LOT you shouldn’t be focused on at this stage.
To help you get away from some of those sources of intimidation, I put together my top five things you don’t need to worry about.
So with that in mind, here are five things NOT to do:
5 Awesome Writing Tips for Writing Your First Book
1) Don’t focus on the end result
The big picture concept of A Finished Novel (and all of the work it would take to make that happen) can be one of the more intimidating hurdles to get passed.
The whole idea gets so much more manageable if you keep your focus on what you can reasonably accomplish within a single day. If you can write 100 words, do that. If you can write 500, go for it. Be reasonable and focus on today’s task only.
It may not seem like much now, but every word you write gets you a step closer to completing your book.
2) Don’t focus on how long writing your first novel will take
There’s a quote by Earl Nightingale that I love: “Never give up on a dream just because of the time it will take to accomplish it. The time will pass anyway.”
I think this is particularly true with writing a book. It’s a massive undertaking and it will most definitely take time. It might very well take years. But seriously, so what?
So what if it does take years? If this is something you want to do, why does it matter how long it will take?
Even if you only write for fifteen minutes a day on your lunch break and it takes you two years to finish a draft, you’ll have a finished draft in two years! Those two years are going to pass whether you’re writing your book or not.
If writing a book is something you’ve always wanted to do, not writing isn’t going to get you closer to that goal. Writing for fifteen minutes a day will.
And if you start today, you’ll be one day closer to the finish line.
3) Don’t try to make your first book perfect
I get it. Staring at the blinking cursor when you have a story to tell can be daunting. You want to make sure you’re picking the right words and saying exactly what you mean.
But those expectations are enough to hold you back when you’re writing your first novel.
I challenge you to give yourself permission to be imperfect and just start writing. Put your characters on the page and let them run. Have fun with your story.
Your only concern at this point should be to put words on the page. They don’t have to be the “right” words. You can find those later. (For more on this, I’ve got a whole post on Why Writers Should Embrace Imperfection in Writing.)
And while you’re at it, don’t feel like a chapter has to be perfect for you to move on. Your only goal of a first draft is to finish it. Don’t let yourself fixate too much on what you’ve already written.
Once you finish a chapter move on to the next. If you don’t like a chapter or section, make note of it somewhere, but don’t try to fix it now. That’s a revision problem, not a drafting problem.
4) Don’t think of your readers
Another super intimidating element of writing is the idea of someone actually reading what you write.
Your readers should certainly be considered and there will be time for them down the road. But now is not that time.
Now is the time to be selfish. Think about yourself. Don’t write to be read, write to be happy. Write to tell yourself a story you want to experience. Odds are, if it’s a story you want to experience, there will be readers out there who like the same things you do and who will love to read it.
But don’t worry about them now. Worry about yourself. Write for you. Write to be happy.
5) Don’t put pressure on your first book
It can be hard to get started if you’ve decided you need to write the next bestseller. You may start writing, read over what you’ve written, decide it doesn’t read like your favorite bestseller, then delete it all and try again another day (or not).
Not only does that make it difficult to write, but it’s also squashing your voice. I would argue that the highest compliment isn’t to have your work compared to anyone else but to create work that others are compared to.
In order to make that happen, you first have to let your voice exist on the page. So allow yourself to write with no pressure or expectations. Write the story your heart is begging you to tell. It doesn’t have to be anything while you’re writing it. It just has to get written.
Bonus tip: Repeat regularly and build a habit.
Books get written when writers show up at their computers or notebooks on a regular basis. It doesn’t matter how bite-sized your daily goals are or how limited your time frame is. It’s all progress, and progress adds up.
So start writing your book today. The sooner you type those first words, the sooner you’ll reach THE END.
I hope this gets you writing!
Now it’s your turn: Got a tip that helps you start writing? Tell me all about it in the comments below and follow me on Instagram!