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                    When I sit down to write an article for my ezine, WriteSuccess,
 and draw a blank as to what to write about, I reread my ezine's mission 
 statement for guidance: "Ideas, information and inspiration for writers who 
 want to launch and/or maintain SUCCESSFUL freelance careers"
 For this article, I narrowed the scope by asking myself: "What is THE 
 ONE MOST IMPORTANT TRAIT that a writer needs in order to succeed at 
 freelancing?"
 The answer came to me with lightning speed. We must have discipline.
 Repeat after me: When it comes to freelance writing, the single most 
 important character trait needed for success is discipline. 
 Bummer, isn't it? The word "discipline" hardly sends one dashing to 
 the keyboard or searching for one's pen in a heady, heated burst of 
 inspiration. Wouldn't it have been great, even romantic, if I had 
 said that we writers possess a golden, rare gene with which only a 
 chosen few are graced? Or that, in order to succeed, we need to tap 
 into our personal Muse? Follow our calling? Develop the God-given 
 talent that is our birthright?
 Okay, maybe not. Maybe you thought I was going to 
 say "talent," "skill," "power of observation," "imagination" or even 
 "self-confidence." After all, talent certainly helps, and the ability 
 to write clearly, powerfully, creatively and/or concisely is 
 important. Even in the wake of rejection, or especially then, we 
 need to believe in ourselves enough to try again and again. And the 
 best writers not only observe, but seem to *absorb* the world around 
 them, then set these observations free in articles, stories, scripts 
 and poems.
 But without discipline, all the talent, confidence, creativity and 
 ability in the world won't get you published. 
 I can almost hear you say, "Okay, Mom, I get your point" (followed by 
 a roll of the eyes and an expression that says, "Now get off my back, 
 okay?!"). And maybe that's how the word discipline got its bad 
 reputation in the first place--from Mom, or other authority figures 
 in our lives. After all, "discipline" has a somewhat negative ring 
 to it, doesn't it? It reminds us of being sent to our rooms when we 
 were children, or of school detention, or getting a warning from our 
 bosses at work. And yes, that happens to be one definition of 
 discipline--"treatment that corrects or punishes"--but in my trusty 
 Webster's New World Dictionary, that is not the primary definition. 
 In fact, it's listed at number five!
 Discipline primarily means "training expected to produce a specific 
 character or pattern of behavior, especially training that produces 
 moral or mental improvement." Isn't that what we writers really want, 
 to develop the habit of writing daily, submitting regularly, and 
 pursuing our writing dream consistently? To constantly
 hone our skills and increase our successes? In that regard, 
 discipline is our ally, not our enemy. While our imagination may send 
 us into idle daydreams, and our observations may distract, dismay or 
 entertain us, our discipline is the one trait that will assist us in 
 turning our daydreams into goals, and our observations
 into finished pieces of writing.
 Here's to your writing success!
 
 
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