Finishing The Writing Projects We Started – A Challenge For 2019

I have about 25 million unfinished cross-stitch projects. They are designs I picked up with deep engagement but then set aside at some point because of life . . . or because a new pattern came along that caught my eye . . . or because I got to a place where I needed a new color or had to blend flosses or just got bored.

2019 is the year I am committing to finishing as many of them of them as possible. It’s time. I need to clean out my various baskets and drawers, but more, I need the sense of completion, the energy that comes with finishing something and feeling good about a job well done.

The same is true for writing projects. So many of us – myself included – begin projects only to abandon them because we get to that awful middle (the middle is awful for most of us, right?) or we need that one fact that we can’t track down or we just get bored or we think of a new idea and get drawn away.  Our drawers and computer hard drives are chockfull of half-written books and article, ideas that were so intriguing when we began but became too much or too little partway through.

What if we all made 2019 the year of finishing projects OR simply declaring them “done” and sending them to a file that archivists will recover when we become famous and big libraries want every jot we over wrote? 

When to Push On and Finish

Most of the projects I’ve started are worth finishing, and I KNOW that’s true for you, too.  It’s simply far more easy to let something go than it is to actually finish it because finishing requires some deep delving into our reserves of creativity and stamina and good, hard-won perseverance. There’s nothing sexy or shiny about sticking to it. It’s just daily.

But writing – mostly, it’s just daily . . . and that’s the beauty of it. 

Here’s how I decide if something is worth finishing: I figure out why I stopped working on it.

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, then I know I need to go back and finish. Period. None of these is a good enough reason to abandon a project.

The Big Trick of How to Finish

Alas, there is no trick. There is only the hard work of sitting down, butt in chair, and committing to the work. Just like the writing life. . . every day. . . forever.

That said, there are a few things that I’ve found help:

I am a firm believer in goals, schedules, and public accountability. Hence, my newsletter where I announced my schedule for the new Steele Secrets book. If I say it out loud, it’s much more likely to happen.

But sometimes, rarely, we do need to put aside something and move on.

When to Let Go

If you are like me, you may actually struggle with simply abandoning a project. My shelves of half-finished reads and the aforementioned cross stitch projects testify to my unwillingness to leave something incomplete, even if it stays that way for decades. (Chickadee cross-stitch from 5th grade, I’m looking at you.) I tend to think that I might want to go back to that later when it’s more fitting or I have more time (HA!) or because suddenly chickadees will be on trend or something.

The truth is, though, that sometimes, we have to abandon projects. Maybe they really are not worth our energy anymore, even if we devoted a lot of energy to them earlier. Here’s how I make that evaluation in my own writing:

Sometimes, I have to just know that a project isn’t for this time, though, and so I created a “Maybe Later” folder. There, I store two types of pieces:

I have to be careful though because I can trick myself into thinking the “Nevers” are really “Maybes.” The truth is that I have a lot more “Nevers” than “Maybes” if I’m honest.

For me, I need to abandon or set aside a project maybe once every two to three years. The rest of them, those I need to finish. . . because here’s the thing – one of the central tenets of writing is momentum. If I keep writing, if I keep finishing projects, I’m more likely to finish more, but if I make a habit of quitting, of setting things aside, then my momentum quickly becomes inertia.

So in 2019, want to commit with me to finish the things we’ve begun or to take those rare few and let them go? If so, commit publicly (see what I did there) in the comments below. We’ll all be better for it as writers . . . and cross-stitchers, too.


This year, for the first time, I’m taking Modern Mrs. Darcy’s Reading Challenge

I made my picks and shared them on Instagram this morning. Care to join me?

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