One year ago was the official publication date for my first (published) book: Get Out of My Head: Creating Modern Clarity with Stoic Wisdom. Twelve months on from that milestone, now seemed a good time to assess what bringing that book into the world has meant, and what it hasn’t, at least so far.
The Questions
Being the parent of an only child, the question I constantly receive is, “Are you having another?” Ignoring the inappropriate nature of this highly personal question, it does make me wonder just why so many people are interested in the number of progeny Katy and I produce.
Having now published a single book (ignoring a self-published children’s book Katy and I wrote with illustrations by her uncle), the question seemingly on everyone’s lips is, “Are you writing another?”
Maybe I am reading too much into it, but the striking similarity to the question about another child makes me think the question is less about me per se, and more about the mindset of our culture at the moment. In a world where we wear busyness as a badge of honor, none of us it seems has earned the right to stop and enjoy what we have done so far, but instead must constantly look to what comes next. Look, my personal #1 value is “Growth,” so I get it. But seriously, can’t a guy take a breather?
As this blog attests, I enjoy writing for its own sake. I wrote two novels, three children’s books, and one non-fiction book before writing Get Out of My Head, so yes, the chances are that I will write another book. For now, however, I am going to enjoy this moment, and do what I can to get what I believe to be a powerful message out to more people.
The Work
Having never published a book before, I naively thought the “hard work” was in the writing. Oh, how wrong I was. The writing has an end date. Once you publish, once the presses are churning out physical copies of the book you created, once you "release" your book to the public, that part of your job is done. The promoting part? That part of the work is just getting started.
In writing a book like Get Out of My Head the entire purpose is to positively impact people’s lives. Spending the time and effort required to put it together, rather than just a series of blog posts, is only justified, or at least was for me, by the belief that through the book I could and would positively impact more people’s lives than otherwise.
But the book itself of course will not and cannot impact anyone’s life. It is inert. The book must be read (or listened to as the case may be) by people for them to learn what is inside. This means that the work of promoting the book and its concepts never ends, nor should it.
The Impact
Going into pub date I didn’t have any clue how the book would be received. The lessons shared made a huge difference in my own life, as well as the lives of the people profiled, but what would others think?
The number of messages I have received over the year could not be more gratifying on this front. I believed “mental tenancy” was a thing many struggled with. The outpouring of gratitude and stories of the application of the concepts immediately into people’s lives with positive results were everything I hoped and dreamed for from the endeavor and more.
Continuing and expanding that impact is what makes the lesson above (The Work) one I really take to heart. That part of the writing/publishing journey is still just getting started.
The Same
As with so much else, the day of publication, and the day after, and the week after, and the year after, really is not so different than the days, weeks, or years before it. Sure, now I can say on LinkedIn that I am a “published author,” but I am not big on labels, and no one cares, nor should they.
I didn’t expect any wild changes in my life, nor did I want any. I love my life. I share this more for any reader who thinks that doing X will lead to some dramatic and immediate change. There is no such thing, at least that is lasting. Lasting change comes in increments, and compounds with time.
Whether it’s a book, a new job, a new relationship, or something else entirely yes, some things will change, but in the near term, likely less than you often think. In the long term, though, the change is likely to be even greater than you or I can conceive today.
I don’t know what lessons I will have in five years, ten years, or more from now, but I am sure curious to find out.