- The fear of failure.
- Being rejected.
- Being ignored.
- Hard work with no payoff. (Does this ever really happen? It always “pays off” somehow.)
- Query letters. (I don’t know about you, but I still haven’t written mine yet.)
- Writer’s Block. (Which isn’t a real thing, but whatever.)
- Admitting they’re good at what they do.
- Being told they’re not good enough, and never will be. (Anyone who thinks this about you doesn’t deserve your attention anyway. Every writer is good at something.)
- Loved ones not supporting their ambitions. (It happens — it sucks.)
- Trolls. (The Twitter kind.)
- Not being able to finish what they start.
- Never being able to start at all.
- Taking too long/wasting too much time.
- Having their ideas stolen. (Depends on the context, really.)
- Accidentally stealing someone else’s idea. (!)
- Never making it.
- Making it, but totally hating it. (If you find your true niche/method, you won’t.)
- Being judged for giving up. (Let’s face it, sometimes, you just have to walk away and start over.)
- No one ever appreciating how hard they work.
- A really, really terrible client. (They are plentiful.)
- Contracts. (Why so much legalese?!)
- Accidentally getting a fact wrong.
- Negative feedback.
- Losing all your work, e.g., your laptop’s hard drive crashes, there is no hope, there is no light, only darkness.
- Losing all your work, e.g., your laptop’s hard drive crashes, there is no hope, there is no light, only darkness.
- Listicles.
Meg is the creator of Novelty Revisions, dedicated to helping writers put their ideas into words. She is a freelance writer and a nine-time NaNoWriMo winner with work published in Teen Ink, Success Story, Lifehack and USA TODAY College. Follow Meg on Twitter for tweets about writing, food and nerdy things.



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