Story Magic
Hey fiction writer! Want your readers to stay up until 2am, so engrossed in your story they just can’t put it down? Want to build a successful, fulfilling, and sustainable writing life that works for YOU? Story Magic is the place for you. Every week, professional book coaches and editors Emily and Rachel from Golden May dive into writing craft, community, and mindset tips, tricks, and advice so you can write and publish books you’re damn proud of, again and again. We cover craft topics like story structure, character development, worldbuilding and ‘show, don’t tell’; we dive into how to grow your writing community of readers and writing partners; and we’ll talk about all those mindset challenges from imposter syndrome and perfectionism to fear of the blank page. Story Magic has all the tools you need to become the author you’re meant to be. You’ve got this, let’s go!
Story Magic
84 - 4 Pillars to Author Success with Emma Dhesi
Today, Emily & Rachel talk about the 4 pillars to author success with guest Emma Dhesi.
What you’ll learn from this episode:
- A full breakdown of each of the 4 pillars
- Why each pillar is so important
- The cyclical nature of the writing journey
Join Emma's (totally free!) Be a Bestseller 6.0 event: www.BeABestseller.net
Check out Emma Dhesi's website: https://emmadhesi.com/
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Hey, writers, welcome back to Story Magic, the podcast that will help you write a book you're damn proud of.
Rachel:I'm Rachel.
Emily:And I'm Emily.
Rachel:And today we are talking about the four pillars to author success with our very good friend, Emma Desi. Welcome, Emma.
Emily:Hi, Emma.
Emma Dhesi:Hey, ladies. How are you?
Emily:Oh, we're so excited to have you here again.
Emma Dhesi:Again.
Rachel:We had you on the podcast last year, year before. I can't believe we've been doing this for so long now, but we had you on the podcast a while ago. It was episode 21. We talked about theme and story and character and it. And the story point. It was a wonderful discussions. We're so happy to have you back today.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, no, me too. I'm really happy. That was a really good conversation. I remember that. I really, really enjoyed that. So, yes. So if that was episode 21 and you guys are on at least 80 something now, so be 84.
Rachel:Yeah.
Emma Dhesi:So you're old timers. I think now in podcasting, old timers.
Rachel:We'Ve got some episodes under our belt coming up. Two years almost.
Emily:I know, it's crazy.
Rachel:This podcast is older than your child, Emily.
Emily:I know. I was just thinking. We managed to maintain it through. Yeah, we really have Bailey being born. So fun.
Emma Dhesi:Teamwork for you. Teamwork.
Rachel:Well, anyway, we are so glad to have you. Emma is one of our great friends. She's another book coach. But, Emma, would you tell us a little bit about you and the work you do and the people that you serve?
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, I'd love to. So I am, I guess, first and foremost a writer. I would say that's how I came into this in the first place. And I suspect, like a lot of your listeners, I'd always been writing off and on since childhood, through the teen years. No angsty poetry, however, but very angry young adult novels. And then in my 20s about what was going on then, and then in my 30s, but I never really finished anything. And, you know, I'd sort of get very excited about a story idea and then it would fizzle out. Then I'd do another course, I'd get all excited again, and then it would always fizzle out. And the itch kept coming back, kept coming back. And then I was getting to my 40th birthday and the itch came back and I was sort of like, oh, this is ridiculous. You either do this or give it up. Like, move on with your life and do something else. So I made a decision that I would write a full first draft, like the beginning, the middle, and finally the end as well. And it didn't matter how long it took, I just had to do it. And then, then I could decide from there, did I enjoy this experience? Was it lots of fun and I'm going to continue revising it or was it just hideous? And I hated every minute and I never want to do it again. And then at least I'd know one way or the other. And so it did took me about, I would say, I'd say it took me about two years to write it and then what, another four years to revise it?
Emily:Something like that sounds about right.
Emma Dhesi:But I got there and I do remember that feeling, I think it was when I published it. I do remember that feeling of wow, I can't believe I've actually done this. And I remember thinking, I wonder how many other I would have described myself as middle aged by that point. I know some people get a bit cross with me for saying that, but I thought, I wonder how many other women of my age who had been stay at home mums as well had thought they'd left it too late, they'd put it behind them. If they were meant to have done this, they would have done it in their 20s. And so I thought, I just, I want to, if there are, I bet there are and I want to help them do it. I want them to see that they've still, still got a lot of life in them yet. And so if they still want to write a book, then it's absolutely within their, within their remit and they can certainly do it. And so, you know, I worked on my craft and kept going and kind of found out a way that worked for me. And then I started sharing that with others and then the sort of coaching grew from there. And then I'd say about three years into coaching I came across Jenny Nash, who runs Author Accelerator. And I was humming and arring. I thought, do I need to do that? And I thought, no, probably don't need to do that. But I got curious about how could it help my own writing kind of improve my own storytelling. And so I decided to do the course and then decided to go for the accreditation and became an Author Exceller certified coach a year ago, just over a year ago. So it was nice actually. And it gave me some new language to talk around book coaching and storytelling and it gave me a new, I'd say actually it gave me a new level of confidence as well. And it probably fits in quite nicely with what we're going to be talking about later today. But just that Idea of it was a new bit of growth in my own coaching and professional development. And. And so that's brought me to. To where I am now.
Rachel:Yeah, I love that. I think we get to a part in writing and in coaching where we're like, I think I've learned. I think I'm doing okay. You know, do I need to learn more? But in both writing and in coaching, like, yeah, there's always more things to learn. That's just life. Like, literally, we just have to keep growing. But it's so important because you look at the world differently and you have a new language to use and you connect with other people, and I love that. Congratulations on the certification.
Emma Dhesi:That's awesome. Thank you very much. Thank you. Yeah, it was quite rigorous training, actually. So there was three practicums we had to do. Jenny has, you know, this blueprint that she likes her clients to work through, which is really useful. And then revising manuscripts, looking at manuscripts, how to critique manuscripts in a more thorough way. And then the other, the sort of third practicum is about helping people find an agent, if that's the route that they want to take, putting together that agent list for them. And that was really interesting because that's not something I've chosen to do. So. So that was a new skill that I could add into. Into my repertoire. So what? It was pretty rigorous, and I felt pretty proud of myself, and I came out the other end.
Rachel:Yeah, that's awesome. So today we're talking about pillars to author success. What does that mean? What are we talking about?
Emma Dhesi:Well, that is a good question, isn't it? Because success. What is success? Of course, that's different for absolutely everybody. And I don't know if you caught it, but I know that one of the service providers, FFS Media, I think it is, they've just launched or released the results of their survey. And it was interesting. They asked. One of the questions they asked was, you know, why do people. Why are people writing? And it was a real nice mix. A lot of people were doing it just because it was fun and they enjoyed it. But there was obviously a large proportion of people who did want to eventually make money from their books as well. So really interesting. And there was another proportion of people who. For whom writing a book was a business tool. You know, it was something that they wanted to use to grow their business. So our definition of success is so, so different for everybody. And, you know, a friend of mine was telling me about a woman she coached to. To write a memoir, and it was it took them a good few years. And it was about a very, very sensitive topic involving this lady and her brother and the family dynamics within it. And she was in her 70s by the time she wanted to write this. And they spent a long time on it and it was very deep, as you can imagine, very emotional. The book was finished. And so my friend said to her client, what do you want to do with it now? Do you want to publish it? And she said, no, burn it.
Emily:Wow.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, so they burned the book. But that was a successful book because it did what it needed to do for that particular lady. She needed to write about this experience and get it out of her system, make sense of it all and feel that she had put it somewhere, somewhere and work through it all. So that was success for her.
Emily:What a beautiful story.
Emma Dhesi:Most people. Yeah, but it. But then. So for others it is going to be about. I would love to earn either additional income, full time income with this, or, you know, I've just got this one burning story that I want to see out in the world. It's the one book I've been writing for the last 30 years. I just need to get it done. Or, you know, it's a family legacy. It's just something that is going to be shared within the family. So everybody's going to have their own somewhere within that mix, their own idea of what their success is. But no matter what that definition of success is, I think we do go through each of these four pillars.
Rachel:Yeah, that makes sense.
Emma Dhesi:And I think they're as relevant to the newbie as they are to somebody who's at the top of their game and is on the bestseller lists and getting the big advances. I've noticed. I myself go through it, clients go through it. And then from like on Facebook, seeing people's questions and comments, I've seen that they go through it too.
Emily:Yeah, I love that you're starting with this idea of like, what is success? And that's really personal for people because I think that's something that a lot of writers just don't even think about because there's like, there's this narrative out there that if you're successful as a writer, that means X, Y and Z. You know, that looks a certain way. And so nobody ever stops to think, like, what, what do I actually want out of this? Like, would success look like for me? So I think that's, that's a really fantastic way to start with the pillars conversation.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're right. I think a lot of people don't ask that question, what do I want? What was it? What do. What's good for me. But I would say that the first pillar then that we all go through is awareness. So at some stage, we start with that first short story or that first workshop or maybe that decision that we want to maybe publish these books and put them out into the world. And so we kind of have to have an awareness of where we are in this writing and publishing landscape. Have we literally just come through the door, in which case, exciting times ahead, there's lots of fun to be had, lots we don't know, lots we're going to learn, lots of friends we're going to make, lots of mistakes we're going to make, but lots of progress we're going to make, too, or our way further along. And we've written that first draft like I was when I did that all those years ago. And we can kind of look back and see, oh, look how far I've come. I've finished something that I didn't think I could do. And is the point at which most people stop. They don't even get to that first draft. Maybe you've published that first book. Maybe you've published five, maybe ten. Maybe you've got. We know some indie authors that have got hundreds of books. So no matter where you are, this is a kind of acknowledgement for yourself or an awareness for yourself of where you are on that and kind of looking back at where you've been and acknowledging and being good with that and then seeing, okay, this is where I've still got this way to go. And that. That is good, too. So just having a kind of awareness that, you know, it's like, I used to be an actor, and it reminds me of that a lot. You never know everything. You're always going to be learning more, whether it's in the same performance, in the same play, the same run, or it's a new production. It's the same for us with every book that we write, every podcast interview we do, every blog post we write. Whatever it is, we're somewhere on that. And it's nice to have just an awareness of where we are in that space.
Rachel:Yeah. Would you say so? One thing that's coming to mind for me is there's, like, in my past life, before Golden May, I worked in the corporate world, and we. There's all this chatter about identifying skill gaps. You know, like, you have to be aware of where are your areas to grow. Do you feel like that's part of this? Of Thinking like, okay, I know, I know I'm kind of new to this, but I want to be aware of where my quote, weaknesses are or like, what are my skill gaps or what do I need to learn. Is that part of this awareness conversation?
Emma Dhesi:I think it probably is for some people who, who have that kind of analytical approach to things. I wonder that they do and they, they do recognize and that, oh, I. I don't know how to do dialogue very well, therefore, I want to do better at it. Or I don't know how to market my books very well, so I want to get better at that. I'm really shy. I don't like doing podcasts. I need to get better at doing that. But I think I would wonder. I think it is for most people, though, or certainly the most of the writers I've come in contact with, it is a more organic thing. And it's maybe not a sort of stated out loud, but as they read their own work or they read the work of friends and other people and they admire what that person's doing, then they may be kind of unconsciously are trying to sort of stretch themselves a little bit. But for sure, I mean, I'm thinking about myself right now. I'm revising a book right now, and I just want to make the beginnings better. My beginnings tend to be a bit slow, and I know that I need to pick those up. So I'm consciously going out and looking for either the blog post or the training or the workshop I can do that's going to help me with that. And I think that there is. I think it does depend on your, your personality type, whether you're going to be okay. I actually see the gap and I want to make it trickier. But if we don't see it, it's probably something bit more organic that we work towards and feel our way through.
Rachel:Yeah, that makes sense.
Emma Dhesi:I wonder if there's a correlation between planners and pants.
Rachel:I'm a total pantser. So I'm like, I am not planning this at all, but I'm thinking in my head like, okay, if I'm going to. If I'm stepping into the writing space and I want to build this awareness, how what does that look like? To be more aware of myself in my current experience? You know, that's what I was thinking of. Like, okay, if I want to build awareness, where do I start?
Emma Dhesi:I'm not. Do you build awareness? I think it's, yeah, maybe you do, but just sort of slowly over time as you realize, you know, the more output that you have. The more that you write, the more you're aware of what you're doing well. And then you also become more aware of what you're not doing to the standard that you want it to be at. So certainly within the writing itself, I think if it comes to the things that are around the writing, the publishing and the marketing side of it, that's probably where we can be less emotional and less in our heads and can kind of see in a more objective way. Okay, I need to figure out how to do these Facebook ads or these Amazon ads. I need to figure out how to create a podcast, if that's what I want to do. How do I work out these aggregators? How, you know, what, what does that look like? How do I get my book to Europe or to America or to wherever. So that would be, I'd say, a more objective level of awareness, but in terms of the writing, I would suggest that that is a bit more organic.
Rachel:Yeah, yeah, yeah. Sitting down, looking at yourself, what am I doing?
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And I think that feeds into the second pillar, actually, which is acceptance. So it's one thing to kind of be aware of where you sit, but if you're anything like me, you're always chomping after the next thing. What's next, what's next? What's next? Trying to chase that next. The grass is always greener, right? I'm always like, okay, I've written this one, quick, get it out, let's get on to the next one. And this is something I'm having to learn as we speak. But just that acceptance of where I am, it's where I'm meant to be right now and that's okay. So sort of similar to the idea of, you know, you stay in your lane or avoid comparisonitis. So kind of you're where you're at because you've been doing writing for how this length of time, and you've been able to devote this amount of time to it for the last five years or whatever it might be. Or maybe you've shifted genres, you're having to learn something new, or maybe you're writing as well as doing author services, so you're being stretched out a bit further than you would ideally like to be. So all of these things come into play, but this is where you're meant to be right now. And that is okay because I sometimes look at some of my friends and how well they're doing, and I think, you know, why can't I get that deal? Or why Can't I get that review or wish I'd written that, or I wish I'd appeared on that podcast or I'd appeared on that summit, or I'd been a guest here? But I just have to know that if I keep doing my thing and I keep doing the work and keep plodding on, I will get there, too. And I think that's something I just want to kind of highlight about the acceptance pillar that's not about sitting back and going, well, it'll happen when it's meant to happen. I'll just sit here and wait. We do need to do the work, and we do need to keep thinking about it and keep going forward. But rather than berating ourselves for not being as advanced as we thought we might be five years ago, that, well, this is. This is the way it is, and I just need to keep going, and I either accept it and be happy with that or accept it's not where I want and then I get to change something as well.
Rachel:Yeah.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah.
Emily:I feel like I see authors struggle with this a lot when it comes to goal setting because there's so much like, there's both the sort of external expectations, right. Of, like, how. How fast are other people writing books? Or, like, how many books do they have out? Or how successful are their books? Right. By XYZ standard. But then there's also that inner pressure of, like, we write books because we want them to be in the world. We want people to read them and like them. Right? And there's like. But books take a really long time, especially if you're new to writing books. You have to learn how to write one while you're writing one. And so people get impatient, I think, and, like, the acceptance of not only where are you? But also, like, how fast can you, like, do you actually want to write this book? Like, how fast are you capable of writing this book? How fast is your life going to let you. Right. Like, those types of acceptance things, I think can be really difficult just because we're so passionate about the projects and fighting external hustle expectations.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah. Yeah. It was Crystal Hunt. I think it was C.J. hunt who kind of helped me have sort of crystallized this. And, you know, she was talking about how if you want to write, you know, if you're the type of writer who has three or four projects on the go and you love that variety, there's nothing wrong with that. That is great. You go for it. But then there has to be a level of acceptance that it's going to be Slower, then it's just going to take you longer to get where you want to go. But if you are like these really, you know, very determined writers who are in one genre, they know exactly how that genre works. And they are publishing, what, ten books a year. They've got so, so many books that they're publishing. They're further ahead because they're absolutely focused and they're writing for eight hours a day, and they are doing the marketing that they need to do and all the things that come with that. And so, of course, it looks like they're having this success that is coming out of nowhere, but it's not coming out of nowhere. They've accepted, okay, this is what I want to do. This is what. This is my driver. And often it is a financial driver. I need to earn this amount of money to pay my mortgage, support my kids, and so I have to take this path in order to get there. And that was a really clarifying moment for me because I feel a bit scattered quite often. And so it's like, oh, okay, yeah, that's fine. Then I can. I can accept that it's just going to take me a bit longer, but if I keep doing the work, then I'll. I'll get there.
Rachel:Yeah, yeah, I. I like to think of those things. Okay, so there's a class that we teach about developing a sustainable writing life. And part of that class is that there are parts of your life that you just can't change. Right. Like there. And we call them practical disruptors. Like, practical disruptors to the routine, such as, I have a mortgage, so I have to work. You know, like, you can't change that reality. You have. Some people have kids, you have kids, you have to take care of them. You're a caretaker, you have responsibilities, or you have chronic illness or, you know, whatever. It looks like there are parts of your life that. That you cannot change that are going to interrupt your writing. And I see so many parallels to this of, like, you have to. There's. You just have to accept that to some degree. The other part that we talk about in that class is like, then there's like the belief disruptors, like, the mindset that if you dealt with those, the practical disruptors would be less disrupting. And, like, then you can start to get some movement going. So there's so many different pieces of this, but you're right. Like, there are. There are parts of our writing lives that we just have to accept, and parts of our lives that we just accept. And you build the pillars to success. Like you build the path to success around those things.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, 100%. Yeah. And that mindset, you're right, that is such a big part of it. And if we find ourselves getting frustrated by these disruptors, then we're going to get more and more angsty and more and more closed down in our creativity. But if we can find a way to embrace it or accept it, we'll come. When we do get to the desk, we'll be so much more relaxed and open and creative. Yeah. Oh, I love that you teach that. Yeah, yeah. So our third pillar then. This is the hardest pillar and probably the pillar we stay in the longest, which is the growth pillar. So this is where you, you have to sit down, get your bum in the seat and do the work. And it's the bit that nobody really wants to do. We want to have done it already. And I, I think this is where a lot of people fall down. Because it is hard work, isn't it? You know, we have to get down and write even when we don't feel like it, when we don't know what we're going to write, when we've been up all night with kids or there's a million and one distractions during the day. But we've got to stay on track because maybe we've got a deadline, whether that's to an editor or whether that's because you've got something in pre order and you've got to get through it. But the growth comes in all of these phases. And if we're thinking about, say a writer who's right at the beginning, I mean, there's just growth all over the place, isn't there, that you cannot escape it. Everything is about growth in that. How? Even the small things like punctuation and grammar. How does that work? Because some of my clients come in who are earlier on in their careers and their writing and they're still getting some of the fundamentals, you know, not quite there. So we have to do a little bit with that. But then, you know, how do you structure a written sentence that's got dialogue in it then? Not to mention how do you then structure a whole story and the beats that you're looking for? And how do you have that character arc as well as the plotline? It's a loss of growth in those early years. But say you are a bit further down the line as well, and you've been writing a series in one of the many romance subgenres, but you decide, okay, I want to change or actually I want to change altogether. And I'm thinking of Alessandra Torre, who started off in the romance market, but she'd always wanted to write thriller. So then she took a new pen name and made a big switch and learned this whole new genre. So she had a growth period to go through, then the other end, when the book's out, and then you've got that growth of learning how to reach out to people, whether it be to agents, because you want to go traditional, whether it be to other indie authors, you want to do a blog post with them or do a collaboration with them, and figuring out all the tech that comes along with that. So at every stage that we go through, from the writing to the publishing to the marketing, there's a lot of growth. And I too, that a lot of people will. They get that fear of finishing the book and paralysis. Yeah. Because then, oh, my gosh, well, then I'll have to market it and then I'll have to go and talk to people about it and say, and sell it. Gotta ask. And that can be a real hindrance to people. So for me, the growth is like the biggest part. It can be the most fun part as well. Like, there's a lot of achievement that comes out of that. You know, if you've had a, you know yourself and you've had a difficult scene that you've been trying to figure out, how do I get this person either into trouble or out of trouble? And you nail it and you're like, oh, that feels good. And it gives you that. That buzz to keep on going. But for sure, I find I find growth the hardest as well as probably the most beneficial.
Emily:Yeah.
Emma Dhesi:And then the final pillar is fun. The fun pillar.
Emily:And I think I love that that's a pillar.
Emma Dhesi:We forget, don't we? We forget, celebrate little tiny wins. Like, I finished the first draft. I nailed that difficult scene. Two characters had to have a difficult conversation, and I didn't know what it was going to look like. But I've done it. I've found an editor that I like. That's a win as well. Okay. I've published the book, done my first podcast interview. I've set up my first ad. I have made my first sale. All of those little things, we want to take a moment just to acknowledge them. And even, you know, a book launching, it doesn't have to be a big fanfare. It can be a small thing, but just as long as you as the writer acknowledge it and kind of go, well done. Yeah, I've wanted to do this all my life. And finally I have go, me. I'm going to have that extra piece of cake or I'm going to take my family out for dinner or buy that bottle of champagne. But acknowledge the work that you've put in and the growth that you've been through in order to get to that fun pillar.
Emily:Yeah, yeah, yeah. The journey of starting a book, writing a book, publishing a book, then marketing a book forever. Right. It just feels like it's never ending. And so every time you reach a milestone, it's like, well, there's, you know, the next one's immediately in front of you to strive for. And I think, yeah, the reminder to, like, stop and celebrate is so important. It's so important. And reflect. Reflect on how far you've come. Because it's so easy to be like, you know, you're on your third book and you're starting the first draft, and you're like, I don't know how to do this. How did I ever do this before? You know? But, like, looking back and saying, no, you. You can do it. It's just the process. So important.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, it is. It's a process, isn't it? I like that. And I went to a conference recently, an entrepreneurial conference. And again, it was the same thing there. You know, she was. The lady was talking mostly to people who are brand new. And now that I'm a few years in, some of the things she was talking about, I was like, oh, no, I've been through that phase. I've nailed that. Oh, okay. I'm not quite the beginner that I once was. And just to myself, to be able to kind of go, that feels good. That feels nice. Okay. I am learning. Even when it doesn't always feel like it, I am learning, and I am progressing and moving forward.
Rachel:Yeah. Oh, go ahead.
Emma Dhesi:No, I was just gonna say, I just. I wonder if people are listening to this and they're thinking, oh, but this is just for newbie writers, all of this. It's not for people who are more established. And so I thought I might just give two quick examples of people who are at the top of your game who are taking on the growth pillar. And so one would be Harlan Coben, thriller writer. He's just rocking it right now. All of his Netflix adaptations, his book sales are amazing. He's just having the time of his life, and he could just kind of sit back and never have to pick up a pen again. But he's now, I don't know if he is in the States but he's certainly in the uk. He's part of the master class or my school series. He's teaching. He's teaching how to write a psychological thriller and going through all of that. So that will be a new skill for him, learning how to take what he knows out of his head and put it down on paper and then say it to camera and kind of give examples and share what he's doing. So I'm sure he's having a lot of fun with it as well. When I follow him on socials, and he seems to just be having the best time. So there's that fun. And then another thriller author that I love is Lisa Jewell. And she's so good. So good. She's been writing standalone fiction for 20 years, and she's made some changes. She started off in Rom com, and then she's made that switch into the psychological thriller suspense area. But now Marvel asked her, will you come in and write a book from our franchise? One of our franchises? And she thought, oh, that sounds fun. That'll be new. That'll be a stretch. And so she went in and she did it. And I saw at the Edinburgh Book Festival this year, and she was like, never again.
Rachel:It again.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, it brought its own challenges. So even though she's an experienced storyteller going into someone else's world, and she was saying that the. Because it's in a sort of multiverse superhero world, there's no limits.
Rachel:Yeah.
Emma Dhesi:So actually, that was a struggle she had, was a, where do I cap this? Where are the boundaries? So she found it very hard and she said, yeah, no, I'll go back to what I know. So it's good to try these things, stretch yourself. And it's okay if you find. Actually, that's not what I wanted in the end.
Rachel:Yeah. I'm actually glad that you mentioned that, because one of the things I'm thinking is it sounds like these pillars can be very cyclical. So for, for example, like these, you know the. The author you mentioned first, Harlan Cobin. What is that his name?
Emma Dhesi:Yeah.
Rachel:I'm sure he did not wait to reach the fun pillar until he hit his most recent. You know, like these. We don't need to put off celebrating our successes. Your success is probably going to change. Your measurement for success is probably going to change and probably going to shift. And the more that you change it, the more these. The more that they change, or the more we can go back to square one of. As soon as you move that. That milestone, go back through the pillars you know, where are you? How close are we? What does it look like? And what is my life going on and what do I need to accept in this period? And then through growth and back to fun. I've seen plenty of writers shift their measurement of success subconsciously without being aware of it, and then forget to ever recognize and have fun throughout the process, recognize how far they've come, and then have fun with it. They're just always chasing the next thing without being, oh, all of a sudden I wanted to write a first draft that was my biggest measurement of success. And then all of a sudden I want to be like a best selling author. There's a big gap between those things, right? Like, we don't just skip some. If you want to start with that goal, great. But I mean, like, there's steps that go, go through this process too.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah. Oh, for sure. I think we can go through all of these pillars in one day, depending on what we're working on.
Rachel:They're there.
Emma Dhesi:It's just a part of our psyche. But the reason I kind of want to share about this is because I, I think a lot of writers will feel that they're the only ones going through this, particularly the growth period and maybe even that kind of acceptance or lack of acceptance of where they are. I know that that has certainly been me a lot of the time. And so, you know, I've found, certainly when I see something written down, I've gone, oh, okay, someone's put this down on black and white. That means that other people go through it too. And it's not just me. I'm not, I'm not the failure that I keep telling myself I am. And if I hadn't made it, and I'll tell you what, I go through this in my entrepreneurial life all the time. If I haven't reached this level of what I'm deeming to be success by this point, then, oh, I'm a failure. Or, you know, it's all on me. If it's, it will be the same with some with their books. But actually this is something that we all go through and, you know, we, that's why we have coaches, because we, we need to be reassured by them and we need to be reminded by them that this is part of the process. If you give up now, you'll never get through it. And up to that next one where those goal posts change because you've stretched yourself, you stretched your comfort zone, you're ready for that next milestone. And so we need those coaches to help us Stay on track and keep going and pull us back off that ledge. So that's really the main reason that I kind of wanted to shout this out loud is so that people know we all go through it.
Rachel:Yeah, absolutely, we do. And I think I love how this is incorporated into your coaching practice, because I think on our side, it's pretty easy as a coach to recognize when your writer needs some acceptance. Right. When we're in the growth phase. But it's not always easy to see that in yourself. So it's really helpful to have that coach alongside the journey with you to be like, hey, we need this right now. Let's try to get to this spot. Or, hey, I think we should. We're in the growth category. Here's some resources that we can grow together, and I can help you grow and show you. And I also think, like, having someone to. To challenge you to have fun is really important. I can't tell you how many times, like, my clients will finish something, and I'll be like, so what are you doing to celebrate? And they're like, I don't know. No, you have to tell me right now.
Emma Dhesi:I have some tea.
Rachel:Exactly. I had some tea. I went for a walk. I'm like, these are great things, but what are we doing to celebrate? I think that's amazing that you're able to keep your eye on these pillars for your clients and guide them through them.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, it's the gift of having a coach, isn't it? And I need that as well, for my own entrepreneurial side and also from my own storytelling side as well. You know, I'm as human as the next person. So I, you know, every coach needs a coach. So I. I reach out to people.
Rachel:Well, awesome. So that we've got, like, you've got some things coming up as far as, you know, what. What's on your schedule? How can people find you?
Emma Dhesi:How?
Rachel:Where. Where do we get through the growth category?
Emily:Where do we learn more?
Rachel:Where do we learn more?
Emma Dhesi:Well, thank you very much for asking. I have an upcoming summit called be a bestseller 6.0. Back to basics. So, as the title suggests, this is the sixth one of these summits. I can't believe it's been going this long.
Rachel:That's awesome.
Emily:Amazing. We've been in a few of them, and they are fantastic.
Emma Dhesi:You have. I think you've been in two of them, and you are always a big hit. Always a big hit with our listeners. So, yeah, I've got 27 people coming in, experts of various different topics coming in to talk about. We're looking at story fundamentals. We're going really going, trying to get back to basics here and thinking about what's at the heart of storytelling. So we're looking at simple points of view. We're looking at story structures and story types. I've just been talking to an amazing woman called Rochelle Ramirez who's been talking about story types and I love that we're talking about this because I don't think it's something that's discussed very often. A lot of people talk about genre and they talk about story structure, but actually story types is something a little bit kind of in between those two and covers all the different genres. So we're looking at scene structure. What else are we looking at? We are looking at coaching. You know how a coach can help you, especially at the beginning when you kind of maybe needing a little bit of hand holding along the way. We're looking at mindset. Of course, as you guys know, that is a huge, huge part of any author's success. However they deem that talking about time management because that is something that everybody is battling with all the time. And towards the end, I think I'm going to put this towards the end we're going to have just a little bit about just to get people excited that when they're either finished or getting towards the end of that first draft that they can start maybe thinking about their author platform, maybe start thinking about revision, start thinking about mailing lists and finding readers. Not that they necessarily have to jump into it. But I do think it's important even for our back to basics that it's in the zeitgeist that we have an awareness about it. Because at some stage we are going to have to step into that if we want people to read our books at the end of the day. So yes, that's going to be be a bestseller 6.0 back to basics. And I will be providing a link for that for the show notes when the time comes.
Rachel:Awesome. Yeah, we'll have that in the show notes. And then what about you? What's you know, your website, how can we find you on social media?
Emma Dhesi:So the easiest place to find me is at my website, emma desi.com but honestly, if you google my name you will find me. I'm just about the only one that I think there's about seven of us. So you'll find me Emma Desi and books or author, you'll find me. And I work with authors in two ways. I work either doing a 12 month mentorship program where I take women who have got a story idea and we put it all together and so by the end of our time together, they've got that finished first draft, beginning, middle and end. So working on the same story for 10, 20, even 30 years and you want to get it finished. You're a gal. And the other way I help writers is if you've got a manuscript and you're not sure what's working, you're not sure what's not working, then I do a manuscript review for people to give them that structural overview and look at what plot wise is going on, character wise is going on, let you know what is working. Because there's always things that are working and then where can we out level that manuscript as well? So those are the two ways I help. I help writers. I love it.
Rachel:We're going to have links to your website, all the details in the show notes. So go check it out and join be a bestseller. We love that event. I think that's amazing. I can't wait to see all. All the speakers lined up and tune in.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, it's going to be exciting. Exciting times.
Rachel:Exciting.
Emily:Thank you so much, Emma, for, for coming and chatting with us again. We always love chatting with you and it's been such a pleasure.
Emma Dhesi:Yeah, it's been good fun. I love seeing you guys too. So thank you.
Rachel:Thank you.
Emily:Of course, if you want to build a successful, fulfilling and sustainable writing life that works for you, you've got to get on our email list.
Rachel:Sign up now to get our free email course, the Magic of Character Arcs. After seven days of email magic, you'll have the power to keep your readers flipping pages all through the night.
Emily:Link in the show notes. We'll see you there.