I just released a heartbreaking gay romance short story. Click HERE to read it.

I just released a heartbreaking gay romance short story. Click HERE to read it.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a sucker for a dark brooding romantic interest. (Team Edward forever.) But I’m also a survivor of multiple abusive relationships, some of them legitimately dangerous. As a romance writer, I’d like to look at the problems with these fictional relationships, and how we can address them in future stories.
Here are the three main issues with dark romance:
As writers, we can change these toxic narratives.
We can still have some of the dark traits in the love interest, but we have to include accountability, working on themselves, and the main character should set and enforce boundaries that need to be met for the relationship to continue.
I know, this doesn’t sound as sexy and fun as the usual dark romance relationships where sometimes the danger can be the spark of it, but fiction is a powerful medium, and we should try to be more careful what we write and the repercussions it might have for our readers.
I have mixed anxiety and depression, so almost anything can make me anxious. However, there is one thing that cripples my mind and my writing more than anything else.
I only recently started working on this fear, and so far it’s been going well. I’ve been writing and posting more, and I’ve felt more creative and more like myself lately. But even so, this fear still sits heavily on my chest.
So what am I so afraid of?
It’s NOT bad book reviews, or rejection letters from agents.
I have a fear of success.
It comes at me from both sides: part of myself believes I shouldn’t bother trying because I will fail anyway, and the other part of myself believes that even if I did succeed it wouldn’t last long, or I wouldn’t be able to handle the big change in my life that success might cause (like quitting my day job and becoming a full-time writer).
So, I sabotage my own career.
I stop myself from writing, I delete posts and stories that I write, and I trash email submissions of my work.
Is it because I haven’t been successful before?
No.
During the free giveaway weeks for two of my novels, they both were downloaded between 2 to 4 thousand times and reader number one in their categories on Amazon.
I’ve had short stories published through my university, online journals, and one that will be published in an anthology in the UK sometime in the next year.
But, I’ve also had some traumatic publishing experiences, including my family’s attempt to silence my writing career when I published my first debut novel. I was so excited to share my stories, but now I have to write in secret and stay silent around those closest to me when it comes to my stories.
How have I been working on my fear?
By writing something small every day. I set out a schedule for myself that consists of small posts or writing only a page or so a day. The more I check off that list, the more confident I become.
Seeing that nothing bad happens, and celebrating small wins has boosted my confidence and my creativity.
If you suffer from the same fear as me, I highly recommend setting up a simple checklist so you can grow your career one step at a time.
If you have found some of your recent characters to be flat, or maybe they just don’t feel as real as they do in your head, here are 5 tips to help your characters become the best versions of themselves!
I hope these help you in your writing journey!
Happy writing 🙂