Welcome to WriteOnCon, Molly O’Neill, an associate editor with Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Children’s Books. She is a force to be reckoned with on twitter, where I stalk, er, follow her delightful insights into the publishing world. She’s here today to motivate you to give yourself permission.
Give Yourself Permission
Welcome to WriteOnCon!
If this were an in-person conference, you’d probably be drinking really bad hotel coffee right now, listening to microphone checks, sitting in a less-than-comfortable chair, and wondering why they insist on keeping it so darn cold in the room.
Instead, I hope you’re sipping your favorite kind of caffeine in a comfy chair at home, or, if it comes right down to it, kinda getting paid to be here, since you’re sneaking peeks at this site during your day job (but don’t worry; we’ll never tell). There are definite perks to this whole online conference idea, and we owe enormous thanks to the masterminds behind WriteOnCon for creating the kind of conference that people can attend while in their pajamas!
Speaking of conferences, last month, I was on the faculty of a week-long writers’ conference that makes daily, one-on-one dialogues between faculty and writers a prominent part of its schedule. The writers I spoke with each day were united by an interest in writing for children/tweens/teens, but they came from immensely varied backgrounds and levels of experience with the craft and the practice of writing. Over and over in these conversations, I found myself giving the same piece of advice, no matter who I was talking to. At first I was worried that all the writers might compare notes and think I only had one piece of wisdom to offer! But over and over, this idea really seemed to resonate for the writers I talked to, albeit in about 50 different ways, and I hope it will do the same for all of you. I guess some advice truly can and does apply to nearly ever writer—a nifty sort of one-size-fits-all-but-means-something-different-to-everyone-who-tries-it trick. So what was the magic suggestion?
Simply this: Give yourself permission.
Being a writer is a solitary act of will—it can only happen in the first place if you actively choose to do it. Your writing depends entirely on you for existence. And your life as a writer depends on you, too. If you grow as a writer, it is your doing. If you remain static as a writer, it is your doing. You are boss and worker and teacher and student and coach and cheerleader all rolled up in one writerly self, in a sense. And you know yourself as a writer better than any outsider could. So ask yourself—what sort of permission do you need as a writer, in order to make yourself a better writer today than you were yesterday, and in order to help your stories become all you hope they will be? And then—give yourself that permission. Today. Now. Before you write another word, give yourself permission:
- Permission to call yourself a writer.
- Permission to collect sparks of inspiration from even the unlikeliest of encounters.
- Permission to wander your way into telling stories completely unlike those you perhaps once thought you would write.
- Permission to start writing something new—totally, gloriously new—even if the thought terrifies you. Especially if the thought terrifies you.
- Permission to admit that a story you’ve been trying to write isn’t working, or isn’t actually something that you love writing anymore, and to liberate yourself from it. And then, to start something new. (See above!)
- Permission to stray from your outline.
- Permission to keep writing, even if it feels like you may never “get there.”
- Permission to steal the parts of a story that ARE working out of a story that mostly isn’t, and to use those parts to make something fresh.
- Permission to change your manuscript from first-person to third (and possibly back again). Or to change tenses, or settings, or main characters, or any other part of your story, once you see a way to make it better.
- Permission to let a character become someone totally different than you originally expected him/her to be.
- Permission to kill a character. (And to cry a little when you do so.)
- Permission to hire a babysitter, or to blow off some homework, or to order dinner in, or whatever it takes, to give yourself a little more space in your life for writing.
- Permission to write a scene or story that might make certain people who love you shocked and surprised.
- Permission to submit something.
- Permission to fail, maybe more than once. (Because you can’t fail unless you’ve tried.)
- Permission to feel things deeply as a writer—disappointment, grief, doubt, jealousy. But then to balance those negative emotions with more positive ones: ambition, determination, persistence, hope.
- Permission to be where you are in your path as a writer. Right now. Even if you think you should be farther along.
- Permission to write in the oddest of places—on the back of kleenex boxes and receipts; at ballet lessons or soccer practice or with a car full of groceries going warm; on napkins in restaurants; in the bathroom of a friend or relative’s house when you’ve gone to visit—in order to capture an idea, or images, or words that flash into your mind, already strung perfectly together.
- Permission to ignore all the conflicting pieces of advice, and simply to write the story within you that wants to be told.
- Permission to step away from measuring yourself against other writers.
- Permission to be inspired by EVERYTHING.
- Permission to be uninspired…but to try to write through it anyway.
- Permission to mess up. Possibly many times. Every day.
- Permission to do what you need to protect yourself as a writer—to turn off the internet, or to stop reading blogs for awhile, or to avoid Twitter—and enable yourself to do that thing which writers must do—TO WRITE.
- Permission to think of your characters as real people (and to perhaps actually like them better than some real-life people you know).
- Permission to delete.
- Permission to write things that perhaps no one but you will ever see.
- Permission to write things that perhaps many people will see.
- Permission to…Write On!
So take a minute, here and now, before visiting the forums, or going on to the next post. Ask yourself what kind of permission you need today—in the story you’re working on, or in the bigger picture, in your life as a writer. And my list of permissions is only a beginning—what other kinds of permissions do writers and stories need? Share your own ideas and words of permission in the comments below. You never know who else you may inspire!
Molly O’Neill is an Associate Editor at Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsChildren’s Books, where she edits all kinds of books, from picture books to middle grade novels, to books for young adults. She blogs about publishing, editing, and the convergence of life and art at http://10blockwalk.blogspot.com and you can find her on Twitter as @molly_oneill.



I’m thinking to print the list and put it in the mirror to read them every morning.
I have been submitting and getting rejections, so a permission I need right now is:
Permission to believe in my writing.
Wow. Adored this post.
I’ve been working on giving myself permission to take my time with this rewrite, to take longer than I’d expected. It’s hard to give up the rush and take a little time absorbing/thinking, but sometimes you have to give yourself permission to do just that.
(or so I’m learning)
Thanks Molly and WriteOnCon crew!
I. Love. This. What a perfect mission statement for any writer out there. Thank you!
Thank you, Molly! I really needed this post.
Molly, you’ve just made my day. Thank you so much for this awesome post, and for participating in writeoncon.
This is so perfect. Thank you.
Thank you for this wonderful post.
As of late my rejections have hit double digits. Reading the list reaffirmed that I am a writer and the only way my dream will come true is me believing that it will happen, nothing last forever and that includes rejections. One day we all will get the yes and then the whole process starts over again.
Printing and posting by my computer. Thank you!
Thanks for this list, Molly. There are a few of those permissions that I have been reminding myself of lately. A couple of permissions I (sometimes) remember to give myself that were not on the list: Permission to be the weird one, the out-of-place one; permission to use the words you know now and replace them later when you can figure out something better; permission to everything else as well as the thing you’re working on; permission to be a wonder, to amaze everyone, including yourself. And a reiteration: permission to be a beginner and feel all the awkwardness and uncertainty of not knowing. Hard to remember as after half a century of knowing stuff.
This was so inspirational. Thank you. The only chance of success is if we writers keep writing, revising, and putting ourselves out there.
What a great list! It’s easy to forget so many of those things when you’re running around, trying to fit writing into an already full life. I’m going to keep that list handy so I can refer to it when things are not going the way I want them to.
I give myself permission to take my time writing my book.
Thank you.
Wow, Molly. This is an absolute, hands down, incredible list. Thanks so much. I really needed it.
Thanks Molly for the reminder to stay creative–with the whole darn process:)
Thank you so much for that advise Molly! Giving permission to call myself a “writer” was definately one of the hardest things I’ve ever done.
Thanks for the permission!
I think there are times we all need to give ourselves permission. I will remember your advice the next time someone says, “What do you do?” and when I reply, “I’m a writer,” they look at me like I’ve just announced I’m an alien from Pluto.
Wow! What wonderful, on point advice.
I know it’s the moments when I’m the most terrified that I do my best work. It’s risky, and it’s wonderful to give yourself permission to take those risks. Guilt-free.
Thank you!
I give myself permission to be part of this wonderful community of writers! Why? Because I am a writer as are all of us! It is great to feel “safe” to reveal ourselves, not only to each other but to ourselves.
Thanks!
Thank you. Thank you. A hundred times over. You’re absolutely right: that is the one-size-fits-all bit of advice, because it does mean something different to each of us. It means several things to me…I tell myself that often, but boy does it make a difference to hear it from someone else!
Thank you so much! This validated so many things I do (and sometimes feel guilty about), and gave me others to think about. I needed this!
AWESOMENESS. This list hit me right in the heart. I needed this so much! Thank You.
Thanks! Some of us need a reminder. Guess I should hang this list on my office and have a peek at it every now and then.
I need to give myself permission to move on and come back to this scene when I’m ready to write it, instead of laboring over it and hating it.
Thanks for the permission, and I love the list (and what everyone else has added, too!)
Thanks Molly. I’ve often given myself permission to delete large chunks because they were off-track, and I’ve wondered if I should do it again. To delete almost one-half of the manuscript and make it shorter, is very time consuming, but it might be necessary. I also need to give myself the permission to stop reading blogs for a while. That’s such a time thief! Right after WriteOnCon, of course
Can I have permission to print off Molly’s picture, puff paint hearts around it, and hang it up in my office? No? Too stalkerish?
OK. I’ll do it here.
I <3 Molly. Thanks for the inspiration.
Fabulous post, Molly. I agree with everyone else here.
Thanks for this. It’s the best advice!
* Thanks so much for this, Molly. You put things into perspective for me today.
Permission to stay in bed a little longer because a story is forming behind closed eyes…
What an inspirational list. Thank you, Molly.
Thank you so much for this post. I’ll add that I would like to give myself permission to not have to strive to be a “perfect mom” (according to society) to my two-year-old and five-year-old sons and allow them to watch a little more television, hang out with Daddy more, eat less Mama-made food, and have a messier house (albeit with A LOT of books) so that I can focus on my life as a writer more.
Just writing those words helped me to really feel more free. Thank you again.
Thank you Molly
Your list is liberating and inspirational
Thank you so much for this wonderful advice. I am giving myself permission to follow it!
I totally need this. I do need to give myself permission to call myself a writer. I feel like I don’t get to have that title untill I see one of my books at B&N. This post actually made me choke up a little. It was really timely for me. I have to give myself permission to keep going, even as the rejections keep rolling in!!!!
Thanks Molly! Wow! I give myself permission to not be as great as other writers I know and still call myself a writer. I give myself permission to take the time I need to learn and grow as a writer instead of being awesome now. And I give myself permission to write works that oppose each other and accept them all as parts of me. I’ve been struggling with writing a religious novel in contrast to an incredibly dark fantasy piece that won’t let go of me. I love them both! And now, with MY permission, I can keep them both too!
Again, thank you!
This is beautiful. Thank you.
[...] Molly O’Neill reveals why she is one of the most inspiring humans I know with her call to “Give Yourself Permission” as a part of the free online writing conference WriteOnCon. (WriteOnCon is going on right now, btw. [...]
This was wonderful. So many of those things on that list, I have knocked myself over the head for but now, I can just give myself permission! That makes sooooo much sense. Thanks for giving me permission to give myself permission!! LOL
What wonderful writing advice.
What wonderful LIFE advice.
I’m a counselor and permission seems to be the constant that takes us to our next step.
Thanks so much for getting it out there.
[...] Give yourself permission. This is some lovely advice from editor Molly O’Neill, written as part of a virtual writing conference. [...]
This is really, really fantastic. Thank you.
Catching up on the stuff I missed over the past couple days (yet another benefit of an online con!
) I’m so glad I came back to this one! We all need to give ourselves permission sometimes. For me, I think it’s giving myself permission to experiment and not box myself into a brand, platform, genre, or whatever the heck people call it and. just. WRITE.
Thank you.
This is great! I give myself permission to start!
[...] Give Yourself Permission by editor Molly O’Neill [...]
[...] Molly O’Neill : Give Yourself Permission [...]
[...] were two articles in particular that spoke of this, Give Yourself Permission, by Molly O’Neill, and Keeping Your Chin up in the Face of Rejection, by Crystal Stranaghan. [...]
[...] Give Yourself Permission by editor Molly O’Neill [...]
Fabulous advice Molly!
I got the start of my current YA work-in-progress from a writing exercise in a workshop led by Han Nolan. She gave us “permission to lie”. That opened up a well of imagination that day!