By
Tina Ann Forkner
When
I visit my sister in Tennessee, I love spending time browsing the shops in
Franklin. Not only are the shops adorable with flowers spilling over on the
sidewalks and air conditioning to welcome you inside, but the people make you
feel as welcome as a cool glass of lemonade on a hot day. You just can’t hang
out in the South without being blessed by all that Southern hospitality.
What
if the writing world were the same way? What if we showered fellow authors with
something that would look a lot like Southern hospitality? On the most part I
think we do, but I wonder how often we who are farther along in our careers
forget what it’s like to be a new writer. Of all the professions a person could
choose, being a writer can be the loneliest.
I
remember being that person who sat alone on the first day of her first writing
conference. The first time a published writer sat at my table, I thought I
might pass out. She even wanted to talk to me, which made me feel welcome and
like I might really belong at that conference. I’m still grateful for that
author who showered me with hospitality at her table, much the same way the
folks in Nashville shower visitors with Southern hospitality.
Here
are five ways that all writers can practice a little bit of Southern
hospitality and raise each other up:
Offer Encouragement: Southerners
always say the nicest things, even to people they don’t know. Whether you are
far into your writing career or brand new, there is always somebody who could
use a word of encouragement when it comes to writing. This could be as small as
a kind reply to a social media status or as big as reaching out to them in an
email. Face to face, it might mean sitting at a table of less experienced
authors instead of with our usual groups, or asking another author how their
writing is going. These things all seem small, but to another writer, they
might mean the world.
Invite Someone to
Your Writing Group:
Southerners love to invite you over for supper. We can do the same in our
writing communities. Writing Groups are complex and most of us resist shaking
up that chemistry, but you never know when someone new will infuse life into
the group, or what kind of writer that person will turn out to be. I wrote
poetry in college, and I will never forget when a group of published Sacramento
poets invited me to be part of their critique group. Being part of that group
didn’t make me a famous poet, but it grew me as a writer and affects my fiction
even today. Invite another writer to your group, or just offer to buy them a
cup of coffee.
Don’t Step On Someone
Else’s Dream: I
can’t even count the ways in which I’ve witnessed other writers inadvertently
stomp on someone else’s dream. In today’s publishing world, there are so many
different ways to succeed as a writer and no way is wrong. Even if their
publishing journey is not your glass of iced tea, listen to what the other
writer has to say about it and try to say something nice about their goals. If
I listened to some of the advice from naysayers in my writing life, I would’ve
quit years ago.
Promote Other
Writers:
People in the South are always bragging about how great Southerners are. They
are just so proud! Writers need to do the same thing. We can brag about other
writers and the writing world. This is something I feel very passionate about.
I’m part of a group called Tall Poppy Writers and we actively support each
other. We don’t only support other Tall Poppy Writers, but we support and
promote writers who are not in our group. Take a look at the writers you are
connected with in life and on social media. How can you lift them up?
Introduce Writers
to Other Writers: Southerners
don’t know a stranger, so be a friendly writer and make sure all your writing
friends know each other. Sure, we writers sometimes have connections we don’t
want to share with anyone, but we can look for times when introducing one
contact to another would be a good idea. One of my best writing friends
introduced me, via email, to my publisher. If she’d been stingy with her
introductions, I might still be looking for a publisher.
These
are just a few of things we as authors can do to enrich the lives of other
writers and spread a little Southern hospitality. I find that the writing world
is by and large very accepting of others, but it never hurts to add a little
more sweetener here and there to brighten another writer’s day and give them a
step up.
Happy
Writing!
________________________________________________________________________________
Tina Ann Forkner is a substitute
teacher and award-winning author of multiple novels including her newest
release The Real Thing. Her novel, Waking Up Joy, is a recipient of the Virginia
Romance Writers HOLT Medallion Award of Merit for Romantic Elements. Tina is
also a proud member of Tall Poppy Writers and Women’s Fiction Writers
Association. Learn More: www.tinaannforkner.com
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