Nothing About This Is Safe
Host: Jaime Buckley đ Guest: Lisa Norman (Deleyna Marr)Topic: What actually keeps authors trapped in the nearly-done stage, and what truth are they avoiding about themselves?Music: âFeel Goodâ by raspberrymusic [https://pixabay.com/users/raspberrymusic-27759797/] Subscribe now [%%checkout_url%%] Finish The Book. Stop Worshipping âAlmost.â âNearly doneâ feels like progress. It feels safe. It feels responsible. It can also be a holding pattern that keeps your book out of readersâ hands for years. In this conversation with Lisa Norman (also writing as Deleyna Marr), we talk about why writers get addicted to endless polishing, why fear disguises itself as âcraft,â and what a real publishing pipeline is supposed to do for you. This one is for every writer who has a manuscript âso closeââŚand a drawer full of them. Episode Overview In this episode, I sit down with Lisa Norman (Deleyna Marr), publisher, author, and longtime advocate for getting books across the finish line. We break down the psychology of the nearly-done trap, including why writers confuse revision with safety, why perfection is often just fear of judgment, and how the editing process exists to catch what you cannot catch alone. We also talk about the reality gap between what unpublished authors think âdoneâ means and what âbook in handâ actually requires, plus the different types of editing and why timing matters (developmental, copy, post-typeset). This Episode Covers ⢠Why ânearly doneâ can become a creative trap⢠The mismatch between âdone to meâ and âdone for readersâ⢠Fear of judgment and the addiction to re-revising⢠Legit revision vs creative stalling, and how writers fool themselves⢠The editing pipeline explained: developmental, copy, typeset, post-typeset⢠Why bad editors exist, and why great editors are story technicians⢠Reviews, emotional derailment, and why one 3-star review can wreck a new author⢠Crowdsourcing edits through readers, and when that actually works⢠The uncomfortable truth: you never know what timing will make a book take off Highlights ⢠âDefine what done looks likeâ for pantsers, including word count and arc decisions⢠The map/timeline reality check: when a story breaks because the author never measured distance or time⢠The best finishing metric you never wanted: âWhen you hate the book, you are done.â⢠The emotional payoff of discovery, and why some writers love writing but not having written⢠A brutal warning about identity judgment: when people judge the author based on the characters⢠âDonât die with your music still in you.â One of the best creative gut-punch stories I have heard in years Key Quotes âYou have a voice, you have a story. People deserve to hear that.â â Lisa Norman âThe editing process is part of the fun.â â Lisa Norman âWhen you hate the book, you are done.â â Lisa Norman Episode Goal To expose the real reason writers stay âalmost finished,â and replace it with a sane definition of done plus a realistic view of how publishing actually works. Listeners should walk away with permission to ship, and a better mental model for revision that does not become avoidance. From Jaime Most writers think âalmost doneâ is progress. It can be.It can also be the safest place to hide, because no one can judge what you never release. Your book cannot help anyone from a drawer. Quick Favor Please take 10 seconds to leave a 5-star review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. It helps more writers find these conversations. âReal writers. Real conversations. No masks. No ego. Subscribe.â Subscribe now [%%checkout_url%%] Get full access to JaimeBuckley.com at www.jaimebuckley.com/subscribe [https://www.jaimebuckley.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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