Dearest Author,
I've been thinking about worth lately.
What's your story worth?
At a recent writers conference I taught a workshop on how I saw publishing changing. Modern publishing, the only time in history when we've had separate "markets" for books, has begun to fracture and redistribute. I've shared several times about how The Shack has shifted things. It isn't just a book, of course, it's a bridge. And those bridges are inevitable because it isn't only spiritual people or Christians who recognize God as creator.
Blue Like Jazz came well before it and created connections between the Christian and secular markets. Lauren Winner's memoir Girl Meets God made some connection points before that, similar to how Eat, Pray, Love did more recently, from the other side of the spiritual divide. Several spiritual/worldly, secular/sacred books have become best-sellers as bridges in the long history of such books since the beginning of print, and some people have traced this line back to the best-selling book of all time: The Bible.
The Secret. The Purpose-Driven Life. The Alchemist. The Celestine Prophesy. The Late Great Planet Earth. Pilgrim's Progress. Books you've never heard of have sold over 30 million copies: Steps to Christ by Ellen White, In His Steps by Charles Sheldon, late-19th century Congregational minister and advocate of the ever-intriguing idea of "Christian socialism." Even Nikolai Tesla wrote about his life a true spiritual man and world-renouned scientist in My Inventions. The Canterbury Tales, The Odyssey, and The Divine Comedy by Dante, written in 1304, has "sold" more than anyone knows and we have no idea how it or any of these books have changed readers and the history of spiritual thought, becoming seeds for the trees of countless theologies.
But of course, we know this is what books are–seeds. And this is what they do: define life and defy death.
"So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, So long lives this, and this gives life to thee."
So this story that's a part of you, that is you, that defines your work and all of your effort and sacrifices to share it completely (or as completely as possible) for others to use–what's it really worth?
Don't answer. You can't. Simply try to see the fullness of the question clearly. Continue on…
Do you know where your worth is really found?
Yes, in God's ownership of the life and love he's created you to embody (1 John 4:7-12). His ownership, creating, protecting, guiding and infusing of his great, unchanging spirit into us. He dies that we might live (parents always understand this principle). And we die that others might live through our sacrifices. This is the daily work of writing.
Do you know what that is really worth?
Intimately known and held, seen and heard and helped in every way, this knowledge is invaluable, isn't it? We can talk of worth and value, and shift our understanding of that from copies sold to readers influenced, but it's the knowledge a reader will have by the end of your story that makes what you're doing truly valuable. And this understanding of how God fills us and dies for us is the greatest wisdom, the most valuable in the world. And if you are practicing that, that makes what you're doing invaluable.
I want to give you, as a witness of your discovery of that unchanging love, my invaluable opinion on it, my affirmation that you've been seen and heard and that what you've written down is completely worthy. And with your assurance that it's been well established and others will see it and respond, you can continue, knowing it's incredible and invaluable.
So do you see what your story is really worth?
Because there's no true price tag you can put on it. There's no proper estimating the value of my work, my seeing it, or others' receiving it either. It's in-valuable. We have to simply trust together that whatever comes of it is just a small piece of its fullest value as a seed for God to use, and not at all connected to the worth of what you've written, or what I've done to help. I know you've sacrificed and given for your story, and I've been brought into the processing of it, but regardless of how it will be published and the realities of our modern marketplace, you must know:
What's your story really worth?
I remain your solid co-laborer in the process of delivering these invaluable words. Never assign its worth to money, public perception, publication, or anything else. Your heart is here, and that's established and it's something you have written definitively, and just as we have agreed together at the outset here, others will when they read it.
We don't know how it will all play out. But I'm on your side and not looking for specific outcomes big or small. Don't think in terms of what's "fair," but decide you will pay with your life what's necessary to give to this project. What you give is directly proportional to what that seed will be able to produce in readers. And in terms of return and profit, I believe Cohelo is right: the universe will conspire in our favor.
So what's your story really worth?
Your Loving Editor,
Mick
Thank you, Mick. How I needed to read this! You’ve encouraged my memoirish heart. I am writing my caregiving story, of the ten years spent honoring my mother in the only way I could define honor. If my words see the light of day, they may serve as nothing more (or less) than stones of remembrance for her, for me and my siblings and our children to cling to and wet with our tears when we happen upon the stories unaware.
If the memoir is distributed no further than my family members, It has the worth of my mother’s life as collateral.
Thanks for the link!
Thank you for this, a timely encouragement. I just received a call from a 25 year old woman that was a girl I mentored in high school in a small girl’s group. Back then my stories were just oral and not yet published, but I shared them with this group. High school came to an end and all the girls but one or two chose the way of the world to my heartache. Yet now, years later, those seeds have come to life, and this girl-now-woman called to say thank you. She has come through a long prodigal journey of bipolar, drug use, many sexual partners, abusive men and more, but she told me that I had planted seeds and she has now turned whole-heartedly to the Lord. I hung up and wept. So yes, our stories, whether spoken or written have worth…and now my job is to get more of them in print. Thank you Mick…
My favorite part is, “yes, but then you would have missed the pyramids. Weren’t they beautiful?
Thank you for this post. Words of encouragement never go to waste.
Lovely. As ever.
Thanks
Thank you, Katharine. Appreciate your kind words. Praying for yours…