
So, if you’ve been following my end-of-the-year writing wrap-up posts, I think we can all agree that I ended on a little bit of a downer at the end of 2025. Between the looming creative apocalypse that is genAI and my own personal odyssey of submission, I will readily admit that I came into 2026 floundering and a little hopeless about the prospects of my writing career.
So, I set my focus for 2026 to make myself slow down, search for balance, and re-center on my joy of the craft. My Fantasy Horror manuscript went on sub in February, and then I took to writing craft books. I was lucky enough to stumble upon Ray Bradbury’s Zen in the Art of Writing, and it was honestly the perfect book that I needed to shove me out of my mental spiral.
Somewhere along the way, I’d gotten caught up in the idea of “author career success” defining the worth of my words. I’m sure if you’re reading this, that probably makes sense to you as well. But when my mind was slanted in that direction, all I could think of was the need for a manuscript to succeed on submission. But when that thought consumed me, every day without a new book deal felt like a failure. So to try to escape that negative mindset, I tried to shift my thinking to assume that all my submission would be failures. That way, I figured if I was perpetually prepared for the worst, then I could be inured against rejection.
Honestly, it was a step forward, but it was still kind of a hopeless mentality. It was only when Zen in the Art of Writing really reminded me that success, big or small, isn’t the point at all. But rather the joy and honesty of it. The point is to mine the originality of our own experience to more fully perceive the world around us.
And you might look at that, and think, “well, obviously, Hayley.” But knowing a thing and your bones knowing a thing are two different beasts entirely. Only when I’d accepted the inherent worth of my own words and the exercise of writing—two things that no rejection could ever steal from me—was I able to relax again. I felt free to write what I *needed* to write. To take my time. To soak it in. To enjoy creation and the truths it reveals to myself. To, as Ray Bradbury put it, get “busy loving and hating.”
Once solidly in this new headspace, I then felt weirdly confident. Because I knew, naturally, that I’ve survived hundreds of rejections, and that any matter of hundreds more would not blow my ship over. That I didn’t have to bow to the pressures of industry to burn my little free time to attempt to be a prolific social media marketer first. Because I’d re-found the “why” of my writing. And if we want to get into a Nietzsche quote here, “He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how,”—the same goes for writing.
Some come what may of our ‘how’—rejections, genAI slop, traditional publishing follower-requirements—I have my ‘why.’ And if you’re a creative struggling with these same realities, I hope you’re able to take a moment to re-center yourself and your work as well. Highly recommend.

Thanks for reading!
Thanks for sharing, Hayley, and I think you are so right! The why is the most important part 🙂
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Thanks Valinora! It’s definitely been helpful to bring my mind back to it this year! Hope you’re doing well!
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All good, thank you! 🙂
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Hey Hayley 🙂 I love your post and it touched my heart. While I haven’t had any big goals and haven’t submitted much, I’ve had rejections and have been struggling with imposter’s syndrome at times. I remember feeling SO happy when I became published for the first time (one of my microfictions got published), but the very next day, I had imposter’s syndrome. And, while I was able to move past that, I’ve felt the overwhelm that can come with writing. Specifically, there are so many things to consider – worldbuilding, character development, pacing, etc. Even when I focus on one element, I can get overwhelmed and feel a strong internal pressure.
But, what you said really resonated.
“It was only when Zen in the Art of Writing really reminded me that success, big or small, isn’t the point at all. But rather the joy and honesty of it. The point is to mine the originality of our own experience to more fully perceive the world around us.”
That is why I write. The joy of it. To be able to bring my perspectives out, to share a part of myself (even if no one or just a few read it). Thank you for writing and sharing this, my friend. It helped me put things in perspective.
Also, I’m really sorry to hear about how things have been rough for you. I’m sorry to hear about the spiral. But I’m really glad “Zen In The Art of Writing” helped so much! And I’m really glad that you’re accepting the worth of your own words and that you found the why of your writing.
I’m happy for you. I’m proud of you (always have been) :). It’s a joy to be a fan and friend of yours. 🙂
You rock, my friend. And your blog is wonderful and so are you. take care :).
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Thanks so much, Alex! While struggle and rejection can be tough, I do think they do make us stronger as we strive to find the balance. Hope you’re doing well!
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Anytime 🙂 Awww I agree. They definitely strengthen us and help us become better writers and build up resilience.
I’m okay, thanks :). How are you?
How’s your weekend?
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