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Is Perfectionism Killing Your Career? By Jenny
Williamson "Perfect" is like the Tooth Fairy. They're both pretty
stories, but neither one exists. And no matter how much you try to make your
writing perfect, there's always something you could have done better. Once you
reach a certain level, some improvements become a matter of taste, not dogma--
and then you enter into some very subjective waters. Believing in perfection
means believing that there is one absolute perfect way to write something, and
that just isn't true. Chasing after perfection is like chasing after a mirage. Now that I write for a living, I have to be careful of how
I spend my time. If I'm not making a certain hourly minimum and charging a price
that's in line with how long I take to do a job, I can hurt my finances. As a
freelancer, it's best to work as efficiently as possible. However, I know I am
fully capable of spending hours trying to get a simple how-to content article
exactly right-- even though the amount I charge is based on an hour-long
completion estimate. I'm not advocating sending a client something that's not
good-- but sometimes chasing after perfection just isn't financially worth it. The biggest risk I ever took was in leaving my full-time
job before conventional wisdom would have said I was ready. I didn't have a
year's worth of savings in the bank. I didn't have a bunch of lucrative leads
for freelance writing. All I had was the belief in my own writing ability, a
copy of Peter Bowerman's The Well Fed Writer, and a lot of impatience. It
was the first time in my life I went against my own perfectionistic tendencies--
and if I hadn't, I might still be working for The Man today. I struggle with perfectionism every time I sit down to
write a novel-- which I do when I don't have client work or marketing work to
do. I want my novel to be absolutely perfect, so I obsess over each line and
paragraph. The problem is, when you're trying to write a 100,000 word document,
you can't afford to be that picky about each word. Maybe that's why I've been
working on novels since I was in grade school-- but I've never finished one. I
know that if I ever really want to be a novelist, I have to learn to turn the
nit-picking off while I bang out the first draft. The problem with perfectionism is that it makes you judge
your own work quite harshly. And nothing kills creativity like over-harsh
criticism. I face this sometimes when I'm doing more creative work for clients.
I sometimes find myself thinking of ten different ideas and discarding each one
as not good enough before even writing them down. If I'm not careful, I could
find my harsh inner critic shooting down every idea I have before I get a chance
to explore it.
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