How To Push Past The Fear of Never Getting Published

“What If No One Ever Publishes My Work?”

If you’re worried that no publisher will pick YOUR novel, you’re not alone. This is a fear I’d venture 100% of authors have … and of course, it may even come true. Most of us will have at least one book we query that does not sell!

However, rejection is frequently most painful at the beginning of our writing careers. Not getting off the starter blocks straight away can feel awful, or even like an omen. After all, if we were ‘meant’ to be authors, then agents and publishers would snap up our books … right?

WRONG! Just because your book does not get published does not mean you’re automatically doomed. Plus acknowledging that literally every writer has this worry can help. Normalizing it and talking about it can only help us. Ready? Then let’s go …

Tip # 1: Name The Fear!

The worry you will ‘never’ be published comes from self-doubt. That’s why we need to crush self-doubt wherever possible. We can do this by identifying common thought spirals and rejecting them, such as …

���I���m not talented enough.��� ��Seriously, how do you know this? Authors are notoriously bad at running themselves down. Besides, you may have someone’s favorite book of all time inside you. ���I���ve already failed.����� Authors frequently skip ahead and tell themselves they’ve failed already. They do this because it seems ‘realistic’ and might help ‘manage expectations’. But guess what? This tactic won’t make rejection hurt any less, so you might as well hope for the best outcome! “The gatekeepers are against me”. ��Some authors like to imagine the industry is against them to help fend off disappointment. Whilst the industry is hierarchical, ultimately it wants great stories, well told. That can be YOU, no matter your background.

Naming the fear stops it from controlling you in the background. Don’t let it suck you under and hack your brain.

Tip # 2: ��Redefining What ���Published��� Means

In ye olden days of just 15-20 years ago, publishing was very much a closed shop. You had to get a literary agent, who in turn would take your book to the Big Publishers and a small selection of Indies. That was the only route in.

Yet nowadays, authors have more options than they’ve ever had. The digital revolution with the Kindle, Kobo, KDP etc has changed everything. There are more indie publishers, digital-firsts, micropresses and self-publishing than ever.

This means that in real terms, it’s actually impossible not to get published … because you can learn how and do it yourself!

This fear often comes from a narrow definition of ‘success’, especially when authors see self-publishing as a last resort.

In real terms, self-publishing can be amazing. You can have more control and even make more money than a traditional deal!

Instead of looking at the industry the ‘old’ way, look at it with NEW eyes. Instead of thinking, ‘I want a traditional publishing deal or I am a failure’, think how can I SHARE my writing with the world?

Flipping that mindset switch can make all the difference!

Tip # 3: Building Resilience as a Writer

Persistence is the key skill in any author’s toolkit. Various things will happen in not only writing, editing and submitting your novel, but in the publishing of it as well.

There will even be times you do everything you’re supposed to, but someone else drops the ball. That is inevitable. Cultivating resilience is all about creating strategies to help you keep on keeping on:

Rejections as data, not verdicts.Tracking small wins (shortlists, personalized feedback, finished drafts).Building a writing practice that is not solely outcome-based.

Keep your feet on the ground any way you can. As the saying goes, novel writing is a marathon, not a sprint!

Tip # 4: Community, Not Competition

It’s true that many of our loved ones don’t truly get what it’s like to be a writer. This is why finding peers who do can really help ease the loneliness of the fear.

Writing groups, events and online communities can be great places to share the struggle. Knowing that others have to face climbing the same wall helps you keep climbing it!

Tip # 5: Action Beats Anxiety

Fear can make you stand still because it thrives in stagnation. In contrast, movement shrinks the fear … which is why it’s a GREAT IDEA to keep going! Here’s some ideas of how to do that …

Make submissions, often. Whether you’re sending to agents, contests, anthologies, writing websites, magazines or journals, keep at it. If it’s scary, then it’s working.Keep on learning!��Be a student of the craft. Keep going to workshops, reading books, getting feedback.Take back your power.��Publishers and agents love autonomous writers. Build your platform. Start small with your own blog, TikTok, IG, email list, book club or similar. Create a following by having fun, doing what you love.

The progress you make will help give you confidence … and take you where you want to be. What’s not to like?

Last Points

Fear is part of the writing journey, but it doesn���t have to dictate it. Your only job is to keep writing, keep submitting, keep showing up. Publishing may take longer than you want, but every word written is proof you haven���t let fear win.

Good Luck!

The post How To Push Past The Fear of Never Getting Published appeared first on WRITERS HELPING WRITERS��.

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Published on September 16, 2025 00:00
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Writers Helping Writers

Angela Ackerman
A place for writers to find support, helpful articles on writing craft, and an array of unique (and free!) writing tools you can't find elsewhere. We are known far and wide for our "Descriptive Thesau ...more
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