The Premise

The Premise Trailer Bonus Episode 95 Season 1

Dennis James Sweeney - Author - Teacher

Dennis James Sweeney - Author - TeacherDennis James Sweeney - Author - Teacher

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In this episode, Jeniffer and Chad Thompson sit down with the insightful author Dennis James Sweeney to discuss his book, How to Submit: Getting Your Writing Published with Literary Magazines and Small Presses. Dennis shares his journey through the often daunting process of getting published, emphasizing the importance of community and personal connections in the literary world. With practical advice and heartfelt anecdotes, he inspires writers to embrace their unique paths to publication. Don't miss this conversation filled with empathy, creativity, and actionable insights!

In this episode, we talk about Dennis's wife (also a writer) Thirii Myo Kyaw Myint—you can learn more about her work here

Creators & Guests

Host
Jeniffer Thompson
Writer. Reader. Interviewer. Cohost of The Premise Podcast. I help authors build brands + websites. Cofounder of the San Diego Writers Festival. Chicken-mama.
Producer
Chad Thompson
Chad Thompson, co-founder of Monkey C Media, offers professional photography and videography services. He has an eye for detail and a command of lighting that gives him the ability to show his subjects at their very best. You can count on seeing Chad around South Park on his bicycle with a camera slung over his shoulder. If he has never taken a picture of you, chances are good you have never met him.
Guest
Dennis James Sweeney
Dennis James Sweeney is the author of How to Submit: Getting Your Writing Published with Literary Magazines and Small Presses, a guide for writers. His first book, In the Antarctic Circle, won the Autumn House Rising Writer Prize and was a Debut Poetry Book of 2021 in Poets & Writers. You’re the Woods Too, his second book, was a Small Press Distribution bestseller and a finalist for the Deborah Tall Lyric Essay Prize. Most recently, The Rolodex Happenings won the Stillhouse Press Novella Prize. His fiction, nonfiction, and poetry have appeared in Ecotone, Ninth Letter, The New York Times, The Southern Review, and Witness, among others. Formerly a Small Press Editor at Entropy and Assistant Editor at Denver Quarterly, he has an MFA from Oregon State University and a PhD from the University of Denver. Originally from Cincinnati, he lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, where he teaches at Amherst College.

What is The Premise?

Here on The Premise Jeniffer and Chad Thompson talk to storytellers of all types. From authors to musicians, poets, screenwriters, and comedians we get down to the tiny grain of sand that becomes a pearl—getting to the story behind the storyteller.

>> Jeniffer: Hey there. I'm Jennifer Thompson.

>> Chad Thompson: And I'm Chad Thompson.

>> Jeniffer: And this is the Premise where we get to the

story behind the Storyteller. This is our

sixth season, folks. Six seasons.

It's so exciting. Can you believe it? We've got a really

amazing season lined up for you, so

let's dive in.

Hello and welcome to the Premise. I'm

Jennifer Thompson. I'm Chad Thompson. And we are here today

with a pretty incredible author. I'm super

excited. Dennis James Sweeney is the

author of how to Submit Getting your writing published

with literary magazines and small presses,

which is a wonderful guide for writers. We're going to dive

into that today. I'm particularly excited about

today's conversation because of how much I enjoyed this book.

It was so inspirational and practical.

And as I was reading it, I kept thinking how every one of my clients

and all of my writer friends need this book. I want to buy, like, 50

copies and, like, mail them out to everyone I know. but

we'll get into it and why.

Dennis James Sweeney's books also include the

Rolodex, Happenings, you're the Woods Too,

and In the Antarctic Circle, as well as

several chap books of poetry and prose,

including Ghost Home A Beginner's Guide to Being

Haunted. His writing has appeared in

Ecotone, the New York Times, and the Southern Review,

among others. He has an MFA from Oregon State

University and a PhD from the University of Denver.

Originally from Cincinnati, he lives in Amherst,

Massachusetts, where he teaches and has a one

month, one week old new baby. Is that right?

>> Chad Thompson: That is true, yes. We're coming from that state of

mind, right nowes.

>> Jeniffer: Well, thanks for taking the time. And Dennis, thank you so much. Welcome

to the premise.

>> Chad Thompson: Thank you so much for having me. Thanks for your nice words about the book, too. That

means a lot.

>> Jeniffer: Oh, my gosh, I love this book so much. So I'm a

writer. Of course. I'm in the business.

I think most of us are wannabe writers, right? And I was

so inspired to, like, get back in and make

a plan. And there's so much generosity and

kindness in this book. And I knew nothing about

you before. So I read the book and then I did a little research and I'm like, o,

I get it. You're a man of empathy and

kindness.

>> Chad Thompson: I think I try to be. I was thinking recently

about how in college I joined this peer

counseling group that had kind of this

training that we go through to sort of be on call if

anybody has, like, a mental health crisis or needs to talk or anything. Like that

it's a completely random thing from a random part of my life. But

I realized recently, oh, ah. That was

that thing that I was doing. I was having empathy and trying

to connect with people on that basis. So I think,

yes, I think you're. I think you're totally seeing me.

>> Jeniffer: Oh my gosh, that's. That's awesome. Well, I

read so many nonfiction books that are like, here's the facts now

go do something with it. But this was like

being gently guided to really think

differently about the process of

submitting and getting published.

And that's what we really need because otherwise it's so

daunting.

>> Chad Thompson: I totally agree. Yeah, that's the idea. You know, I think

that so many times when we come to this process of trying to publish

our work, it can be incredibly stressful and incredibly

daunting. And it's sad because that's part of

a process, writing as a whole that should be joyful

and should be inspiring. And a lot of us come to it because it's the

satisfying work that kind of fills up our soul. But there's

almost this wall between that work of writing. And then suddenly it's time

to get published and you feel like, oh, no, I'm going to be

rejected and I'm going to have these negative experiences is. It's going to be hyper

logistical. And I get why people go to that place. I go to

that place too. And I have in the past, but I've

realized finally after, you know, decade or so of doing

this, that if I can bring that sense of inspiration

from the writing process into the publication process,

then it's all a lot more fun. And I'm, more successful with

it because I have more spirit in it.

>> Jeniffer: Nice. Yeah, yeah.

And you're connected to the process, which, you know, we'll talk

about the process, but I kind of want to go back to the very beginning of the

book. And you are an MFA student

in Oregon, and a young writer came to tell you how

it really is. Can you take us back to that moment?

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah. So this writer came and really generously. I

feel almost bad starting the book with this because the writer came and really

generously told us her exact story. She came and

sat at the front of the classroom. We'd all read her book. It was pretty

famous. She was doing incredibly well. It was kind of living the

dream that we were all dreaming ourselves. She sat up at the phone

in front of the classroom and said, this is how it works. Or at least this is how it

Works for me and for her. She went to her mfa. You

know, one of the stories that she wrote was picked out by one of her

professors to be sent to, I think, the New Yorker. Published in the

New Yorker. She got an agent immediately. Wow. Then the agent handled

everything after that. I mean, that's, far and above the dream

even for people who end up with agents and end up with, you know,

having big five publishing deals and stuff like that. But

we were all kind of odd and horrified because we'like

that could only happen to one person, you know, and.

>> Jeniffer: Right.

>> Chad Thompson: How, what kind of role do we have in this? Do we have

any control over our own fate if somebody doesn't do that

anointing for us? So I was sitting there and I was like,

oh no. Like this is the thing that has to happen and it

hasn't happened yet, maybe it never will. But at the same

time I was engaged in these communities of small press

literature and literary magazine publishing that

I hadn't realized it yet, but they were actually

formulating the community that ended up being the place where I published

my work and where I found so much fulfillment and so much

positivity and I had a hand in my own publishing

fate. Like, it felt like more of a conversation than sort of

being anointed and selected from above. And that

conversational, more community aspect, I realized that's incredibly

fulfilling. And that's the thing that is giving back to me a lot.

And I think a lot of us walk that path too. So I wanted to trace it. I wanted to

give some credit to that path that so many of us follow. instead

of pretending like that singular dream is the thing that

happens for everybody. Because I think what I'm writing about is

the thing that happens for more people. And, it's something we can find a lot of joy

in.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah, yeah. Because if we think to ourselves,

well, that's never going to happen for me, we just give up.

>> Chad Thompson: Exactly. Yeah. You don't want to have that feeling of it being

out of your hands too. I think that's the other thing. If you feel

like it has to happen from somebody else giving it to you,

then it feels like it's out of your control, you know. And I think some of the fun of

writing is also when we have this sense of being able

to do it ourselves. Right. Being able to self determine

a little bit. I think publishing is like that too, because you build

yourself into the conversation and you don't know when that book'going to get picked up.

You don't know when somebody's going to invest in your work, but

you do know that you're there and you're present for it, right?

>> Jeniffer: 100%. Yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: That's the thing that has to happen before it all kind of

clicks.

>> Jeniffer: So one of the things that I think is so great about this book, you know, aside

from just the generosity and, like, it's a fun book to read

and a quick book to read, too. Right. Is you

literally set it up and you take us through your journey. You know

why? To submit, where to submit, getting set up.

I'm actually reading the table of contents, listeners.

>> Chad Thompson: Amazing.

>> Jeniffer: Y your strategy, the COVID letter, behind the

scenes. There's case studies that are all a little different

and, you know, their journeys. And you point out, like, your

journey needs to be your journey. You're not going to take this template and be

like, okay, I'm going to do it. Exactly. You're going to do it the way you need

to do for you. And you talk about intuition

and your own personal goals. And you asked this one question. In

fact, one of the things I love. Oh, my gosh, I'm going to talk too much during

this interview is how many times you have,

like, a writing prompt or like a little

journaling moment for the reader to get

us to put ourselves into the story, which I thought

was kind of brilliant. But why do

you want to publish? What are, you know, talk about why that's so

important.

>> Chad Thompson: Oh, my gosh. Me personally?

>> Jeniffer: Well, no, like,

>> Chad Thompson: Oh, for all of us.

>> Jeniffer: Yes, yes, yes. Y oay. I was like, too.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, yeah, yeah. My secret reasons that I will never

div. Boge. No, I think it's.

>> Jeniffer: It's about the money. Just kidding.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, it's all about the money. It's important because those are so vulnerable

to us. Right. I teach these classes sometimes on, how to

submit. And that's actually what the book bloomed out of. Like having this

discussion among small groups of about 15 people. And

it'd be an informational class at first, but eventually I evolved

it into a discussion class because I realized it was actually something people

needed to talk about, not something people needed to hear

me talk about for three hours. And those discussions were

so beautiful because they brought out that vulnerable side

of it. Right. It's all that stuff that's inspiring us

to submit. So some people are saying, I want to submit

or, publish my writing because I need validation

for, you know, to my story being important and being

important to other people. Some people are saying this is a story that hasn't been

told enough. And I really want to get it out there in the world. Some

people are like, this is an important mind. ###estone for me, I love writing,

and I want to have a time when I know that it's done. And

so everybody has kind of a different approach to it. But I

find that the reasons that people are trying to

publish their writing and trying to share it with people often do

bloom out of that writing process itself in that moment when

you're really invested in having a good

experience and doing something for your soul. Right.

And for me, those writing prompts in the book, I'm really glad

you keyed in on that, because I wanted there to be some writing in

a book about publishing. I wanted be able to keep circling back

to the page and keep asking themselves those deep

questions that we can often lose track of. Right. I give

some of these lists in the book, too, that rank

publication venues in terms of prestige. For example,

these, kind of p. Pushcart prize rankings, for

example, for literary magazines. And those are a really good

place to start for people who are looking up where to submit.

But it's so easy to get drawn into that narrative of I have

to go to the best possible venue and I have to submit to

the place that's going to look best to other people. Whereas

what really matters is what looks best to you and what gives you a good

experience as a writer and as a person.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah, I love how you tear.

You know, this whole process of submitting, you, you

created a strategy that makes so much sense, and part of it

is tiered. And I'd like you to kind

of walk people through what that means, you know, in terms of,

like, the big five are like the most prestigious

literary journals. If we're talking short stories,

you. And then how many you submit, how

long you wait, what it means to get it. There's so many things to dive

into, but, like, talk about why the tiered system is so

important.

>> Chad Thompson: For me, it's all about compartmentalization. The

process of submitting your writing, sending out

your work can feel so scattered because of the way the

Internet works. If you just Google how to submit, you get a

million articles, you get all this information, a bunch of different venues,

and you can feel like you don't know where to begin. Or maybe you start sending out your

work, but you do one place here, one place there, you freak out

for a couple weeks, another place, another place. Right. Freaking out

is a big part of that process. But if you can compartmentalize the

process and make it into something that's a little more, distinct, where you know when

you're doing what you're doing and why you're doing it. That can really help your

mental state a lot and help you have more success with achieving the

goals of publication too, I think. So.

Tiers are basically when you select a group

of venues that are roughly the

same preference for you in terms of your desire to get published in

them. You select maybe five venues and submit to them all at

the same time. And you know if one venue accepts

the piece that you've just submitted, that you won't

feel bad about withdrawing it from the other venues you've

submitted to.

>> Jeniffer: Right, right.

>> Chad Thompson: You don't want to have that situation where you've submitted to a highly

prestigious journal or somewhere you really love and then a place you love

less accepts it and then you feel weird about withdrawing it from the place

you really love. Right. So that's why you select tiers

of about five to eight venues usually, and

submit to those tiers as a unit. And then after you do that,

you can kind of let go of the process. You can just let the

responses come back. And after you receive know,

three, four or five responses from that tier, you can move to your

next year and submit another group

based on your preference of how much you want to be published in those

particular places. So it's just a way of compartmentalizing your

effort and making it so that you have

a little more feeling of being in touch

with the specific places and specific reasons

that you want to submit.

>> Jeniffer: Well, and one of the things you talk about is timing. You know, it

takes for those more prestigious

journals, it takes a long time to hear

back. So it's like, how long do you want to wait?

Right.

>> Chad Thompson: And it can take years. Oh my gosh.

And you don't want to wait forever. Exactly.

Sorry to interrupt you.

>> Jeniffer: No, totally. Please do, anytime. I mean, that's the

whole thing, right. Is in the beginning, like you

just want to get one acceptance. And you talk about

your first acceptance with such joy. I loved it so

much. Can you tell our listeners about that moment that

you got your first acceptance?

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, I think the one I key in on is my first

chat book acceptance, which was the first singular

unit of my writing that was going to be published with my name on it,

said Dennis James Sweeney on the front. It was a chap book called what they Took

Away that was highly influenced by these linked

flash fictions I was reading in a lot of small press

venues at the time. And I sent it out to several chatbook

contests. You know, I'd written it, revised the hell out of it. I

felt good about it. I felt like it might work, but I didn't

know. And so just like everything, I kind of expected to be

rejected for a long time, and then maybe it would get picked up

somewhere. And one of the first few contests

I sent it to, I got this email saying, congratulations, you won

the chatbook contest. We're going to publish your chat book.

>> Jeniffer: Nice.

>> Chad Thompson: And I definitely did not believe it. And I

sent an email back to the editor saying, no, it's not

true. I don't believe you. Can you

please confirm that this is accurate? I was pretty sure it was a glitch and

subitable or something like that. And they did

ultimately write back, and they confirmed that it was reality that

I was living. And, yeah, it was just such an amazing

experience, you know, to realize that somebody cares about your work

and they think it's amazing. And I ultimately got to do a reading with them,

awp. And I was still kind of new to the

literary world in that sense, the sort of awp,

like, literary magazine literary world at the time. And so I

went and I did this reading to, a room full of people.

And I felt like I was, like, coming out into the

world after being in this dark cave. For a long

time, I've been writing on my own. And then suddenly I was in front of a group of

people. I was like, do they like it? Am I really here? Is this

happening? So it was this kind of moment of magic

and acceptance, you know, in more ways than one.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah. That's so cool. I love that story.

You brought up so many things I want to talk about, but I

think the first thing is, you know, we have to remember that

there is someone who received that email from you. And I can't even

imagine how tickled they were to get this email from

someone who is one. And they're like, wait, did I really

win? Like, there's. There's a person on the other

end making these decisions and readting your work, and we forget

that.

>> Chad Thompson: Absolutely. And it's weird because later on, when I was doing

my Ph.D. this is maybe five or six years down the

line, I became one of those people, right, who was

judging, not the contests, but who was reading submissions for

Denver Quarterly when I was an assistant editor there. And

suddenly I realized, oh, the people who are reading these

submissions are not these gatekeepers that are standing

on top of a mountain passing down judgment on everybody

below. Right. It's actually a lot of times it's

students, it's people without a lot of literary

capital, as you might frame it. It's people who

aren't acting as gatekeepers or really thinking of

themselves as gatekeepers. It's just other people who really love

the written word and, are also writers themselves

and who really want to help kind of keep the literary world

running. So I realized when

I ended up in that position that it's actually more of a

lateral relationship, like a non hierarchical relationship

than I thought at first. I was talking to more

peers when I was writing that email bag than I was talking to somebody

who was at the top of that mountain. Right. But it took me a

while to realize that because it's really hard. It feels

really hard to break into these communities or at least

to break into the act of getting published. Right.

Suddenly when you do, you realize, oh, we're all in this together and

we're all kind of doing it together and contributing alongside

each other.

>> Jeniffer: And you talk so much about community too, and how important it is to

find your community. And that's when you start developing

relationships that open

doors and show you places maybe you didn't

know existed. One of the things you talk about is how you wrote

to. I'm forgetting her name now, but you

offered to be a reader for.

>> Chad Thompson: Oh, Janice Lee. When I was writing do reviews. HTML

Giant.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah, yeah, yeah, say it again. I interrupted you.

>> Chad Thompson: I was reading a lot of small press literature at the time and I

stumbled across this website called HTML Giant, which pret.

Big and like the alt lit scene at the time, the Internet literature

sign, scene. And I realized

that that was a place where I wanted to contribute to and be part of the

conversation. So I wrote to Janice Lee, who was the reviews editor

there, and I said, could I please review some books? I just

want to be part of the conversation. I know people need books reviewed so maybe

I can do this. I had no experience whatsoever doing it. but I

reached out and she sent me books. You know, she

engaged in this real act of trust in sending me books to review and

then publishing the reviews. And I did about a million of

those over the course of a couple years. And I think she

realized that I was a person with a lot of time in my hands and a lot

of excited energy about the literary world.

And so when she started a new website called Entropy, she asked if

I wanted to come on board, be an editor for the site eventually.

and that's actually what got me into this work around submitting, I

ended up helping to assemble this list called the where to

submit list, which was a seasonal list of all the places that

were open for submissions. And it was this kind of

snowball effect right, where I got involved and I started contributing

my energy. And then all of a sudden, to my surprise, I

had presses and literary magazines emailing me saying,

hey, can you put us on the list? We want to share our submission calls with other

people. And then I had writers being like, thank you. And even

years later, there are people who remember that resource and say, oh,

that was such a service that you compiled that. So it

was kind of this beautiful moment where just reaching out

and offering one thing and asking to be a part of the

conversation bloomed into a much bigger thing.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah, yeah. And that's

the piece that was so beautiful for me is like,

go out, find your people. And in most local

communities, I mean, here in San Diego, I'm the co founder of the San Diego Writers

Festival, because we wanted to build community. That's why we

founded that festival. And we get so many

volunteers and so many people that, like, meet each

other and open doors, opens doors, and it's such a beautiful

thing.

>> Chad Thompson: It really is amazing to get together, especially in person,

with folks. I was living through the Internet for so long, partially

because I was living abroad or I didn't live in

geographical locations where there was a lot of stuff going

on. But when I finally came together in those

physical communities, I was like, oh, this is the most amazing

thing I've ever experienced. And I. I did the same thing I did in that

email response to Cutbank, which was be a huge fan

and be extremely excited to the point where probably people thought

I was, like, maybe a little overexcited or maybe they thought

it was cool. I'm not really sure how they were perceiving me, but

I was bringing a lot of fanboy energy to the table. So I'd go up

to the tables where these small presses were

sort of sharing their wares, and I would say, oh, my gosh,

this press. I love essay press. I love to see what you all are

doing. Like tarpaulin, Skyp press. Oh, my gosh. You affected

my aesthetic as a writer so much. That's.

>> Jeniffer: It's so cool, though. They must have been so happy.

>> Chad Thompson: I think they were. Yeah. And that's the amazing thing about

the community for me, is that it's happening kind of quietly.

Right. Especially because we're doing literature. It can be this sort of

quiet thing, but simply by virtue of just Reading

books and sharing the same

conversations around pieces of literature that we're reading.

Sometimes there's maybe a hundred people who read a specific book or

there's, you know, a few people who read a specific issue of a literary

magazine and keyed in on one piece in that literary magazine.

And sometimes the smallness of that is

really beautiful because you become really tight by virtue of

having that shared reference point. So that's something that really

helped me a lot to come to the specific conversation around literary

magazines and small presses too.

>> Jeniffer: You recommend that, you know, find

the magazines or the online

journals that you love the stories and

then follow the stories. You know, the

authors whose stories you like the most, where else are they

writing? And then, you know, subscribe to those

and, you know, volunteer if you can get involved. And

this is such amazing advice. In fact,

Chad and I work with authors, so we help people get

published and we help build author platform. And

this book is really kind of a masterclass in how to

build an author platform. You know,

establishing goals and building community and why are you doing

what you're doing? And then, you know, make relationships and

it's so good.

One of the things I loved was you talking

about social media and

you know, it can become a vacuum and take away,

take away your joy, really. But talk about how you've

used social media and managed to keep it from like,

overwhelming what you really want to be working on.

>> Chad Thompson: U, I don't know. I think I have to ask you all about that

too. Right. It's a perpetual struggle. It's so impossible because these,

these algorithms that are made to

exploit your attention.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: And then even people's content that you ultimately want to see

feeds into those algorithms by virtue of how

it's organized and stuff like that. So to some extent

there's no way to get out of that. And you just have to limit your time

and yeah, be really strategic about how you engage with it.

But I think the leading ethic for me

really has to do with not seeing those

relationships as exploitative. Right. Like, even if

there's sort of money changing hands behind it and you

know, meta trying to make money off of us on Instagram or whatever it may

be to let your own ethic not

be about making a quid pro quo or

not making kind of a deal, not having it be a business decision,

but rather it being like a personal decision, a personal

relationship. That's kind of how I try to end conduct it.

When I hear words like platforms sometimes I'm like, ah. Because

that's the thing that people ask for in query letters and things

like that. And it. It makes people want to sell your

book. Right. They can sell copies. They can sort of move copies

of a book. Or networking is a word that

always felt, like, not super great to me. Yeah.

And I know y'all are doing it in super exciting, super interesting

ways. And this probably the same ethic I'm talking about

here. But sometimes I feel like that language

can become a little bit more like

money changing hands, or I'm getting something from you and

you're giving something to me. and I like to think about it really

on a human level. Like, I just want to connect with people.

I want to have a relationship. And the work

isn't. That's not a means to sharing

the work. It's actually sharing the work as a means

to getting to the connection with other people. So I try

to have the connection be the end rather

than selling the work be the end. And I think if you're on

social media, that's a thing that you can do that can make

you feel a little bit better about it. Like, hey, we're navigating

this weird quasi wasteland of

digital technology. And we can do it in a way where we

have a shared ethic and we have a, shared

investment and having relationships with each other instead of just

having everything be commoditized. But I'm super guilty

of it, too. You know, I'm always trying to hype my book and

share the message with people, and I want to do

that because I think the message is important and I want

to sort of celebrate myself. It's, like, important for

me. And I hope it's important to celebrate this conversation

for other people, too, because it honors so many of the communities

that have been influential to me in the past, and

it veers into hype so easily. And so, yeah, we

just got to be vigilant at those edges and always come

back to the place kind of where our hearts connect rather than, whatever

it is our pocketbooks or whatever is meant to be changing

hands according to the corporate overlords.

>> Jeniffer: The corporate overlords. And you're right. You're absolutely right. And I

couldn't agree more. People think of it as, you

know, a commodity when really, if you think of it as

a genuine relationship and sharing with people who

care about the same things you do. And, you know, my

branding work with authors isn't about, you know, how can

we get you, you know, how can we hype

you the most? It's more like where do we want you to

be, where you're going to find joy, what's really sustainable,

you know, and we talk about, budget. Like, budget isn't just money or

time. It's your emotional bandwidth. You know, you

don't have to do everything, but you need to choose something

that really provides. Joy is

sustainable. You know, that

you enjoy the process and you're meeting people and building

those relationships. And I think that's what platform is now.

You know, platform used to be you have 10,000 followers on Facebook.

Well, no one cares. And those people aren't buying your books

anyway. Right. Like it'keeping your visibility alive.

Yes. And it's important. But. But

really what's important is those relationships in

that community. And that's why I think your book is such

a masterclass on author platform. Because it's really not

a commodity. It's a relationship. It's a

process of understanding why you do things

and who is the person who's looking for that thing that you're

doing.

>> Chad Thompson: Wow. I love how you framed that and how you described your own

work within it. Because platform becomes community. Right.

It becomes like an end in itself, which is the thing

we're kind of all seeking. And I didn't think about it as kind of

like a deep connective work when you're helping people

work on that, but I love hearing how you frame it that

way.

>> Jeniffer: Well, thank you. I appreciate that.

so I want to go back to the writing.

One of the things you dig into is the

revision process. And, you know, when is it done

and when do you decide I need to shelve it

or do more work on. So kind of like, take us

through how the submission process can help. You

know, where you're at with the piece.

>> Chad Thompson: Absolutely. And maybe we can describe it as the rejection

process.

>> Jeniffer: There you go. There you.

>> Chad Thompson: Rejection process at the stage of the game. Right. you start sending

stuff out. I have a long history with kind of

navigating different relationships to rejection. Right.

And many of us start really taking those rejections

personally. And then they get a little less personal over time because

you realize you just get so many of them. It's not really a personal

judgment on your work. And more recently, I've evolved

into having a more dynamic relationship with

rejection that helps me figure out how much I care

about a piece. That's how I like to frame it to people is

if you can really pay attention to rejections and specifically pay

attention to your own responses to them, that can play

a huge role in how you respond to your own work. So

ideally, your work is extremely revised. When you send it out,

you've read over a million times. Right. But you can

always read over a million more times. So in my case, at least

I'll get rejections back and it'll help me realize,

okay, do I really care about this piece? Is this something I want to continue to

pursue in terms of revising it even more

and continuing to send it out and experience you, the

rejections associated with that and the difficulties of figuring that out

logistically? Or is it something that

I want to let go of? Right. And if it's something I

want to hold on to, that's really good information for me.

It really inspired me to stick with certain projects that have meant

a lot to me in the past. one example is I've

done a lot of writing about having ibd, Crohn's

disease, ulcerative colitis, which I feel is this

kind of undiscussed or under discussed

conversation, among chronic illness and disability

conversations, because it involves poop and it's

kind of gross and people don't know how to talk about it and

stuff like that. Right. and so I have this kind of personal

investment in making that a thing that people can talk about. And

so when I got rejections for that work, it was a moment

when I had to look at myself and say,

okay, do I care more about what this person

thinks about this work, or do I care more about what I think about this

work? And I realized I cared

more, cared about what I thought about that work.

So it allowed me to come back to it, keep

revising, keep looking at it, keep changing the framing of

things, and just keep doing that until the project

is successful. that's publishing with literary

magazines, like shorter pieces from that work, as well as sending out the

full book. Earlier on, I had written short

stories that I feel like were

fun and we're a little experimental and

me playing around with things, but after a certain number of

rejections, I got the information

that I felt like I needed to get, which was these

aren't that fun. And maybe they're not that fun for

me. Right. I don't need to continue dumping energy into them

because the particular narrative here doesn't mean that much to me.

So I think it can really help you figure out

what means the most to you as a writer.

>> Jeniffer: One of the things you talk about is journaling

your feelings about those rejections. So,

yes, this whole concept, you

know, I'm a big fan of spreadsheets and tracking data and figuring out where we

are and keep. We're not losing track or doing the same thing

over and over. And you talk about having

almost a journal for the

rejection process as a way to stay

connected, to know if the p. How important the piececes to you,

you know, where you are in your teier structure. Like it keeps you moving,

it keeps you doing something. And I loved

ablly, but. But it was more than data. It was like, how did

this make you feel?

>> Chad Thompson: Exactly. Yeah, because we can get into these Excel spreadsheets,

right? I don't even use an Excel spreadsheet. I totally think it's great

when people do. I think it's probably really organized, but I like to have a

giant messy Google document. This just kind of a bunch

of words and you know, I make the re the rejections red

and I make the acceptances green. And, and

then after I get a response from somebody that I don't like, you

know, I'll write a note that's, you know, it's far from journaling.

It's more like, what the heck is going on? I don't even know what they're

doing. Trying not to select this piece. You know, just whenever I need to

get out of my system or if I have an acceptance, you know, something I'm

really excited about, I'll kind of hype myself and give

myself a lot of positive self talk to keep myself going,

you know, and whatever I'm working on at that time. But I agree, it's a

really beautiful opportunity to reflect

on what you want to do and the reason that you're publishing.

Right. And to come back to that question of why that's

inspiring all of this work. Because again, it's so easy to just get

lost in the sauce and end up being like, okay, I got to submit

it to this place and I got to figure out what I'm going to do logistically with

this, that and the other thing. And if you can stay connected to that,

why and to the heart work of it,

you know, it'll make you a lot happier in the process and also

help you figure out what you need to do next.

>> Jeniffer: Exactly. So cool. I love it so

much.

Let's talk about positive rejections. What the hell

does that mean?

>> Chad Thompson: That was the other thing about rejections that I should have mentioned too.

Positive rejections are when somebody sends back a

note. Usually you get a rejection that just says, thanks so much

for sending this, but we can't publish it. Sorry, we don't have

time to Give you more feedback, but a positive rejection. This beautiful

thing is when somebody sends you a rejection

that says, no, we can't publish it, but we did really

enjoy it and, you know, we appreciate you sending it. We'd

love if you send more writing in the future, something like that. It usually

includes a positive comment on the work and invitation to send

more in the future. And these things come along every

once in a while. They're more common than acceptances. And there's

something to take really seriously as a writer. They give you a lot of information

about what's starting to stick with editors.

And it's a real investment from

editors on behalf of your work. Right. It's them saying,

we really believe in what you're doing here. This particular piece

didn't click, or maybe you didn't landy the ending or something like that.

But we really want to see more of your work, and we really like what you're doing. So

it's a really big encouragement to keep going. And if somebody sends

that to you, I think they're really serious about it. As an editor myself, when

I would send those letters, I was like, I really want to make sure

we see something from this author in the future. Because you're

seeing them at a moment in time when they're

still creating work and they're still making things, and, you know, the next

thing is going to be even more exciting and. And you get to sort of be a

part of that as an editor. So it's like the beginning of this

relationship. Right. The beginning of, like a sort of a small

community, relationship between you and an editor. When

somebody sends you something like that.

>> Jeniffer: You made it really feel so human,

I think, which is something that, you know, going

back to the beginning of this conversation, the process

of submitting your work and getting rejections does not

feel human. But when you think of that editor,

you know what they're doing and what their goals

are. We all have the same goals. It

becomes more of a community, a relationship. And

I think the journaling piece of it in the tiered

system, it like, brings it all together.

And that is so uplifting

in this way that I didn't expect,

like, oh, my gosh, I'm so excited. I want to start the process now. I

don't want to wait.

>> Chad Thompson: That makes me so happy to hear. I really appreciate that.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: Because I think the language, even in these positive rejections can

really ab. Obscure that sense of human connection.

Because they're form letters a lot of times, even when they're

positive and they'll have this kind of language that

says we're sorry we can't provide more detailed

communication around this, you know, and you can tell it was sent to

multiple people. And it's so easy to lose track of the fact

there's that human element in it. But I think if we can keep

track of that and just remember that there is somebody on the other end

who's super excited about language. You're on the other

end, you're really excited about what you're creating and what you're

reading. Then you realize, okay, all that language that

is between us, that sort of more standard

language, these sort of form letters, these are

just a passageway through which our excitedness

moves.

>> Jeniffer: Let's talk about submission fees Ca because you

talked about subitable and the fees

and you know, a lot of these literary journals, they are

not making money know, and they have to pay for subitable.

So can you kind of talk through how the process

works? So we, you, those of us

submitting to understand why am I paying fees to do this?

>> Chad Thompson: Absolutely. So in the old days people were sending

in mail submissions with

anssayse, a self addressed stamp envelope in which they

would send you back your rejection if you got a rejection. And

you know, it cost maybe two or three bucks, whatever postage was

at the time to mail that submission in. So you were kind

of paying for the process that allowed you to share your

submission with, with the place that you sent it to.

Now there's this organization, SL

platform called Subitable that charges

really a good amount of money to

platforms like literary magazines, small

presses, lots of other places now that

charges a lot of money to these places and that cost

often gets passed along to writers. So writers will often

have to pay submission fees. A lot of small

presses also use submission fees as a way to drum up money

for their publications. So

they'll charge you $20, $30 to submit

to a contest. The upside is if you win, you get maybe

$1,000 or $2,000 and a book publishing

contract. But if you don't win, you just gave them that money,

maybe you get a free book out of it, maybe you don't. and it's

something that as a thing that small presses sometimes

do. And some small presses

say absolutely what not, we're never going to do it. I

just gave a short talk with an organization called

Authors Publish who refuses to list

venues that ask you for submission fees because they don't

think writers should have to pay to submit their writing.

And when I was doing these interviews with small

presses for Entropy back when I was also assembling the where to submit

list. I Talked to like 200 and something presses

over the years. And many people were also very

vehement about not wanting to charge submission fees because they didn't

believe that that cost should be passed on to the writer. They thought

if you're a publisher, you should pay for everything and

that's the way it should work. I'm not sure

how I feel about that. I'm curious to know how y all feel about it. But it's

important to know that it's out there. Right? And it's important to

know that the reach of your submissions can increase if you

are okay with paying submission fees. And it's

important to know that it can cost a ton of money because

getting an acceptance can take a lot of

submissions and a lot of submissions can add up to

a lot of expenditure on those submissions.

>> Jeniffer: You know, this brings us to the conversation of privilege,

which I was very impressed that you brought up. The

this exists in publishing, whether it's, you know, can you

afford submission fees? But talk a little bit more

about why you decided to include, you know, privilege

and how that affects publishing.

>> Chad Thompson: Absolutely. I always start with my own self

when I'm talking about privilege and publishing and writing.

I think one of the things I mentioned in the book is my own submitting

practice was definitely affected by

growing up as a white, relatively

wealthy kid, raised as a boy, you know,

in Ohio and Cincinnati where I grew up, and having a lot

of confidence, feeling like my stories

automatically mattered. Right. Like I was getting a lot of

validation from the world that I deserve to tell my story no matter

what. So when I started writing, I felt like

whatever I wrote was probably going to be awesome and

I could send it out. I wouldn't be wasting anybody's time.

And I think I overs submitted quite a lot.

And I think it can be common for people who have

some level of privilege, you know, different intersections of

identities to have that sense of overconfidence and maybe send

out a lot of work. The vita count was this

important count of literary magazines and who's

published in them that identified how many men are

published in comparison to women and non binary people.

And of course found that way more men were published

because there's just this massive, privilege differential

and differential and kind of discrimination.

>> Jeniffer: But meaning, like, but I was just going to interrupt you and say but it's

meaning that they submit more like they

submit m their work even if maybe it's not ready like women

wait and polish. And so it's a self confidence

thing which I guess comes from this

feeling.

>> Chad Thompson: Of privilege that's kind of how I'm tracking it

in my own life. I, I don't want to say how every single person,

where that's coming from for every single person. I think it's also the editors

are disproportionately going to be white, and

disproportionately go going toa be men. Right. And so they're selecting things

that they personally resonate with. It's this incredibly

systemic thing that travels through, the entire

publishing industry. So I'm kind of talking right now about how

I see it in relation to my own past submitting practice and

how I kind of had to learn about that and realize myself

and pull back and have like a lot more humility about what I

was doing. But yeah, it's really pervasive in the entire

publishing landscape. And I think there have been conversations

about especially the racism of

publishing and the inequalities with regard to race.

Like in Big five publishing, there's been attempts to deal

with that and then failures to deal with that.

And because it's such an ingrain system,

it continues. But that

extends into small presses as well. Right. It takes a lot of resources

and it takes a ton of time to run a small press

or literary magazine. And not everybody has the ability

to give that kind of labor. Right.

And not everybody's chosen by the institutions to do

that. So it's really important to acknowledge that that's

real and to acknowledge that there's incredibly vibrant

communities of writers of color, editors of color,

for example, or women writers, women editors, trans

and non binary editors and writers. They have all

these great organizations that are collecting around

those identities and creating a lot of great work. So even as we

identify these shortcomings of the system as a whole, I think it's

really important to note and remark on

the communities where it's really dynamic, how

people are engaging with that. Right. And how there's a lot of safe

spaces out there.

>> Jeniffer: I think a lot of it has to do with reach too.

Like'it's hard to

reach the communities and say, hey, we want to hear your voice, we want

your stories.

>> Chad Thompson: You know, and who the we is and who

the who's being reached out to is is

also complicated. Right. in

big fiction, this book that was published by

Dan Sicin recently about the

way that big five corporations,

publishers, became conglomerates over the course of the

Years. I think he talks a little bit about the

strangeness of, you know, largely white editors,

like curating a sort of quote

unquote, multicultural list of

writers for their press. And I think it's a really

good mission, but it's also, you have to think about who's

publishing what and who you want to be in

charge. Right. Does that get at the

question that you're asking, too?

>> Jeniffer: No, totally.

>> Chad Thompson: The we. Who's the they?

>> Jeniffer: Ye.

>> Chad Thompson: And, is it about bringing people into a conversation you're

already having? Especially, you know, in my case, if I'm coming from a place of

privilege? Or is it about identifying the fact that there's

already a conversation out there that's happening and I'm

not at the center of it? I don't need to be at the center of it, and I

can just listen, amplify that conversation

and choose that as, like, a conversation that I

engage with, as opposed to needing to center

myself within it or something like that.

>> Jeniffer: Well, you brought up authors published earlier, and,

you know, I'm a huge fan of that organization, and I tell

all of my clients to subscribe to their

newsletter because they do put out a weekly

newsletter telling you places that are, you know, accepting

submissions, contests, they're

free. And a lot of them do, in fact, you know,

specifically seek out those

bipoc, Latinx, you know, diaspora

voices. and I think that's so

important because it's. If you don't

know your story is

needed, you're less likely or

wanted, you're less likely to try and find a place

to submit to.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, that's absolutely right. I mean, I come at it from

my own perspective, you know, in the areas of privilege I

was talking about, but also as a disabled writer dealing with, you

know, the stress of, chronic illness and. And Crohn's disease

and things like that. And it's meant a lot to me when people

have specifically made spaces for

that.

>> Jeniffer: Right, yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: Organizations for disabled poets, for example.

there's groups of, you know, kind of loosely

organized writers who have chronic illness that

share reading lists and are coming together to have

related conversations and things like that. And it's really

meaningful to find those communities and realize that there's a space

where you don't have to be the only person bringing

that perspective to the table. Right. It's a perspective that's

being shared amongst a lot of people. And then you can start from way

further ahead. Instead of catching everybody up on your identity

or catching everybody up on your experience, you're all coming from

the same place, and then you can just go from there.

>> Jeniffer: This comes back to community, right? Finding your

community and feeling part of a community and

lending your voice to the conversation. And I think that's a

beautiful thing.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, I agree with you. I agree with you. If we can find it. You know,

it's increasingly a struggle in life these days,

but I do think, for me, that's what

I want to find. Not just as a writer, but as a person. You know, I want to

connect with people, and I want to connect on the basis of

shared experience. I also want to connect by sharing

experiences that other people don't have. And I

want to have these moments where, you know, we're just talking, which is kind

of what we're doing right now. I think that's what's so magic for me about this book.

We get to not only, you know, have this conversation

that's pointing back to the stuff we're talking about, but we get

to enact it. You know, we get to say, hey, this is happening right

now. We're having this conversation, and we're getting

at some deep kind of soul stuff. And it's

hard to give language to that. Right. Because it's ethereal. But I

also think it's really beautiful when we try to do it in a collective

space.

>> Jeniffer: I want to talk about you and your

writing. I went and listened to some of

your poetry and, you know, read some of your work. And

what I found, the through line

for me, is that you really

share your personal, you know, very

intimate experience of life.

And I found that really, true to

how to submit as well. You know, that comes across in

a nonfiction book as much as it does in your. Your poetry

and your short stories. But let's talk about

how, you know, your disease, Crohn's disease, has affected

your writing and how you see

yourself in the literary space.

>> Chad Thompson: Oh, my gosh. Yeah. That's a really deep and awesome

question. You know, I think it comes from all the repressing that

I did of it for a long time. Right. I'm from

Cincinnati, and, the modus operandi

that I was raised with, I don't know if it's my family or

the larger culture or even beyond the

Midwest or what. But it's just if you have feelings,

if you haven't experience, like, you probably don't want to share it

too much because it's going to stress everybody out, and, you know,

it's probably better off repressing your thing and just keep your head down. And

work hard. Right. And, you know, I can

see why that sort of ethic developed.

But it was also a thing that led me to not

be super vulnerable in my life and

led me to, you know, just try to pretend like

everything was cool most of the time. So everybody I knew my whole

life thought it was this incredibly chill person. I have long

hair, you know, I used to like to wear tie dye shirts a lot.

I guess I still do. people thought I was really relaxed, and I

was like, no, inside I'm losing it

because, you know, I'm just not showing you. And so I think

for me, the process of coming to writing and coming

to the specific stuff I'm communicating about in

the old days, it really wasn't that vulnerable. And I think that's why those

early short stories, for example, the experimental stuff I was talking

about, wasn't that vulnerable and didn't click that much with

people because it didn't have that vulnerability. Right. But as I've

gotten older, I've realized how. So almost

the fundamental thing about connection for me is

sharing parts of yourself that are a little bit of a risk

to share. Right? Like saying things that really mean

something to you. And it's hard to go to that vulnerable place. But

that's actually, in a way, like my definition of strength. Like,

how vulnerable can you be and

still be okay? Right. Like, still hold yourself

together. Still working on that theory. But, if

you can exercise that vulnerability, I think it opens you up to people. And

for me, it's almost like it's like the currency of

relationships, without making it a monetary metaphor.

It's like this thing that we all use to connect with each other.

And it's when I feel like I really meet

somebody where they are. We can both be vulnerable in a shared

way.

>> Jeniffer: When we're thinking about the written word, the

experience is so different for the person who's

writing it. And they put. I think we're trying to figure

out what's happening internally on the

page and for the reader, but

they're feeling, oh, my God, I'm not alone. That's why memoir

to me is so compelling. And I'm really curious, actually, if you're

going to write a memoir at some point, but. But like

the experience. And you talk about this in your book, how to submit as

well. You know, think about

what the reader is getting from it. You know, who is your

reader and why are you writing this for them?

And when we. When we start to think of that

experience, like, for the reader as well, as us, as the

writer, it takes on a whole new life of its own.

>> Chad Thompson: I think that's a beautiful way to think about it. I do

remember the first time I read David Foster

Wallace's Thing about writing makes us feel less alone. I don't

think he's the only person to say that. but he was the

first place where I encountered it becausee I wrote my undergrad thesis

on him.

>> Jeniffer: Oh my gosh. Impressive.

>> Chad Thompson: Stereotypical white man. You know, it was like

totally a classic narrative, becoming a writer. You know, I have long

hair now. It's almost like two on the nose.

glasses. I don't. I mean, I do, but I don't

wear them just to avoid, any and all comparisons.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah, you're a much happier person, I would think. But yeah, well, that's a

thing.

>> Chad Thompson: I totally agree. I mean, I don't know if I know

anything about, you know, his own interstate or anything, but like,

that aloneness, you know, I think it seems like it

was hard for him. And anyway, I don't need to talk about David Foster

Wallace, but I do think

that this question of connecting with the reader is so essential.

Right. And I think that's what we're trying

to do in our work. Right. I'm always trying to think about

that. And I think, particularly for me, it comes out in revision.

You know, I almost have to pretend people aren't there when I'm

writing because I can't even be that

vulnerable with myself. I have to just be

alone with something to be able to say something that's really hard to

say. But then in the process of coming back

to it, I can give a little bit of shape to it.

I can make it into something that I feel comfortable with sharing with people.

Maybe take out things that are too vulnerable. and I haven't figured out yet.

Right. So I have a little control over it. And that, that makes me

feel safe doing it. But yeah, the magic is really

just being like, I am going to share this with people. This is a story

that I want to tell and that I care about. And and I

think seeing those in person communities that we were talking about.

When the page or the online experience transforms to

actually sharing something in real life, those are the moments that have meant the most, me

as a writer. Like, I remember reading some of my

story or my, essay. It's not how to subm

M. Excuse me, Reading some of my essay. The Last

Remedy to a Room Full of People when I was in

Denver. And it was this experience of reading

it, not knowing if people werenna

like it or care about it or really see

the experience that I was talking about. It was all about, like, when I

eat, I feel really anxious because I know I'm going to have to go to the bathroom a

million times. And what I eat really changes my mental

state. And I just have all these difficult experiences around

it. But I'm afraid of talking about going to the bath, et cetera.

And everybody lives sat there and listened. And I was

like, I don't know. Did that work? Was

that a moment of connection or was it a moment of like, I'm just going

to be embarrassed. But then people came up to me afterward and they told me,

wow, that really resonates. You know, I. I deal with this ex.

Chronic illness or whatever.

>> Jeniffer: Yah.

>> Chad Thompson: And, it became this moment of realizing, hey, a lot of us are

in the same boat in different ways. And

opening up in that type of vulnerable way

can really be a mode of making lasting relationships

with people. So seeing that in person and really accentuates all that

you're saying for me.

>> Jeniffer: Absolutely. I wonder if you

record a lot of your conversations.

>> Chad Thompson: Wow. Like conversations with people.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah. In real life, but like your loved ones, because. And, here's

why. Maybe our listener needs some. Why is she asking that?

There's this one piece that you read in one of your

interviews, and you were re in bed. You had had

a terrible experience with your

Crohn's disease that day. And your wife, her name is Theory.

Is that right? Yeah. Hello, Theory, Shout out to

you.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah. She's an amazing writer. Theory Moja Mian to definitely check her

out.

>> Jeniffer: You'll have to, spell that for us.

>> Chad Thompson: I will. right now you can send it.

>> Jeniffer: To me and I'll just put it in the show. Notesah. I'll

do. So you're in bed with her at the end

of this really long, hard day, and you're having a conversation. And

I know you recorded it because you told us.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah. Honestly. Wait, what?

I'm totally blanking on.

>> Jeniffer: It was the piece where you were having blood drawn. And

the blood. The doctor said there's just no more blood in that vein. And then

it went to the other. He went to the other vein and

you squeezed your fist and then I think you passed out.

>> Chad Thompson: Oh, God.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah. And it's.

>> Chad Thompson: Yeah, yeah, you gotta leave me through it becausee I'm totally. There were a couple times

when something like that happened and I'm trying to remember.

>> Jeniffer: Oh, my gosh.

>> Chad Thompson: Wait, where did you find this piece.

>> Jeniffer: You were reading it. It was during COVID

and you were reading a piece with a lot of other

people. And I forget who was hosting it,

but you were talking to Theory about ghosts. So it was

based on, you know, that it was a

piece actually from Ghost Home, A

Beginner's Guide to Being Han. And I think you were talking about your sister

at one point. But were. You said that you had recorded conversations

with your mom and your dad and theory. And

in this particular conversation, you were talking about, like. Like

the deep self and like, when we don't feel like ourselves and is

that a ghost? And it was this, like, really personal

conversation that you were having in bed with your

wife after this day of, like, horror

for you. And, it was so generous

to the reader. And I wondered, like,

you recorded that conversation. So of course it begs the question

for me, is that something you do often? And is that

how you get so much intimacy into your writing?

>> Chad Thompson: Wow, that makes me want to record more conversations.

Because that piece was like a gift. It was one of these things

that arose, and I just started writing it as a break from

other stuff. I was like, I can't write this other stuff. It's too stressful. I'm just going

to write this piece about ghosts and my stomach and I need to

say it, and who knows what will happen? And, I just wrote that

piece and I wrote the first couple halves of it. And then

I realized I needed something else. I needed other people's voices.

And that's what inspired me to have the conversations with people. So

I interviewed my dad, interviewed my mom, and

interviewed, had a conversation with Theory. And that was

the only time I've ever done that.

>> Jeniffer: Oh, wow.

>> Chad Thompson: It was, also the only time I've ever reached that depth

of vulnerability in my writing, to be honest.

And I think it makes sense that that comes

from having those conversations with other people

and opening up that space to a reader.

That's a really beautiful observation that I never even really

thought about with regard to my own work, you know? Cause it's so

difficult to find that. And I think with that particular piece, you know, I

wrote it in a period of a couple weeks, did it really

fast, and I didn't even need to revise it that much, ca. Because it just

was what it was. Mostly I revise

ton ton, ton. I'll revise for weeks

if I write a piece. And I know I need to do a lot on

it. But this particular piece, it just came and it was there,

and it was.

>> Jeniffer: What it needed to be.

>> Chad Thompson: It was what it needed to be. Yeah. So in a way that's

because there was such a direct access to the reality of

those conversations in that piece. it makes sense, but

I need to record more conversations. You know, the only other time I did that

went was when I recorded kind of a conversation with

myself. I was doing a lot of running at the time and I

recorded myself talking for an eight

mile run, describing what I was thinking

about and what was going on in my mind during the run.

And I was going to intersperse it with this description of my

relationship with my dad, who's also a runner, and my

relationship with running as a thing. But I think theiacy

of recording things really does

lend like an openness to the moment because you can't edit it,

you can't mess with it, it's just right there.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: And, in a way I was talking about revision, you know, being kind of like

a safety mechanism for when you're doing something

vulnerable. But you can't really revise the conversations, can

you?

>> Jeniffer: No, you can't. You know, I find that interesting

because sometimes when I go on walks, long walks,

I want to record myself and I find it to be so

uncomfortable and forced. Like my brain doesn't work

the same when I'm speaking into recorder

as it does when I'm thinking. So when I'm walking or I'm in

the shower or and I'm doing something where I can't do anything else, that's when

I get all these ideas for story. I mean, they just like

flow like I've opened up a spigot, a

fire oose. And yet when I try and

talk them, to retain them, it just doesn't work.

>> Chad Thompson: I know what you mean. I feel like the thought,

the imagination is so pure, in a

sense, it just happens. There's nothing standing in the way.

But the second you try to articulate it, like words get in the way.

>> Jeniffer: Of I'm like, oh, that sounds dumb.

>> Chad Thompson: I know, it's kind of brutal. And then if you try to write it down,

it sounds even worse.

U and I feel like writing for me is the process of

figuring out how to not let all that stuff get in the

way. Right. Like, how can you pretend like you're not writing? How can

you pretend like you're not talking? And actually, something I recommend to

students is to do that exact thing, even though you described how

hard it isus it really is, is if they're stuck on a

story just to take a tape recorder and just tell

the story. This guy does this thing first, and then they run into

this, that, and the other thing, and then they fall in a hole. And if you

can just speak something out loud, it's kind of a no pressure situation. I

actually make my students on the first day of class tell the

story, like, out loud for five minutes to one of their

peers. Yeah. And everybody's like, no, that's the. The

most difficult thing ever. Yeah. But then I do it for them, and my

story's terrible, and it gets us all kind of opened up and makes

us vulnerable. But that's. It is an opportunity

to connect you with a thing.

But I agree, there's no substitute for thought. And the magic of the shower.

It's just like so many great novels have been written in the shower.

It never appeared in the world. Right. If only we could harness that

energy.

>> Jeniffer: Well, it makes me think that I need to do it more. As I was

telling you that, I was like, God, that just means I needed to do it. I need to

force myself to do it. Cause I think there is some magic in it.

>> Chad Thompson: Well, our, three and a half year old is

obsessed with stories, and he just wants to hear us

tell stories all the time. So I'm in a very, like, oral story

storytelling mode right now. It's almost like my form of

writing and Theorory's form of writing as a writer as well.

And, you know, he has the good fortune of having two, like, professional

storytellers, you know, telling him stories all day.

But, a lot of them are based around Frozen and the characters from Frozen, you

know, Olaf and also stuff like that.

But it really is nice when you can sort

of cultivate. Cultivate that relationship of your

imagination to the oral storytelling,

like, to speaking things out loud, because it

flows the more you practice it. Right.

>> Jeniffer: Yeah.

>> Chad Thompson: Suddenly I can tell these stories that are incredibly winding and

borderline coherent that just come off the top of my

head. Right. And it's partially just about taking my foot off the

brakes, letting whatever happens happen. You know, if an ice

monster needs to come in and bite everybody's head off or whatever,

it's okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's really

magic to kind of open up that vein in a way and just. Just kind of,

like, let it happen.

>> Jeniffer: And I think if we were to think of our storytelling as speaking

to a three and a half year old, we'd probably have a lot less

judgment of ourselves.

>> Chad Thompson: N. Totally. Yes. It's a no stake

situation, you know, except maybe he'll get upset if I make

something so silly happen. You know, like there's a little bit of

stakes, but I agree. I think if you can just envision

yourself talking to somebody who really wants to be

entertained and really wants to be loved, you

know, in a way, the story is a way of

giving love to that person.

>> Jeniffer: Totally.

>> Chad Thompson: That really takes the pressure off and you realize that whatever you're giving,

it's a gift.

>> Jeniffer: Wow, that is so cool and a really good

way to end this amazing conversation.

Thank you so much, Dennis. I am a big fan

and, I can't wait for everyone to read your book.

>> Chad Thompson: Thank you for joining USK so much, Jennifer. Yeah, I just loved having this

conversation as well. I feel like we got to some really deep stuff and it's

just so fun to talk to you about it.

>> Jeniffer: well, I really appreciate it, listener.

You can learn more about dennis@,

dennisjamessweeney.com Follow him on

Instagram denisjsweeney. You

can subscribe to his substack, which I plan to do,

see what he's reading on Goodreads and buy his

books. Go out and buy this man's books. We need to support

each other and, you know, give that love as we

want to receive it. This has been another

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Jennifer Thompson Consulting until

next week. Thanks for listening. Goodbye.

Goodbyebye M.