Why Publishing Feels So Heavy
Feb 28, 2026
Lately I have been strength training with fitness expert Deonna.
Strength training feels different than walking or hiking. The weight does not move unless you move it. The bar does not care how motivated you feel. Progress requires intention, resistance, and repetition.
Some days the weight feels manageable. Other days the same bar feels heavier than expected. My capacity is increasing, but as soon as Deonna notices, she quietly raises the weight again.
Growth rarely stays comfortable for long. Writing a book and navigating the publishing process feel heavy for many thoughtful people in the same way.
Accomplished women who have managed careers, raised families, led teams, and carried serious responsibility often stall when it comes to publishing their books. Hesitation does not come from laziness. Hesitation comes from care about doing things the smart way, getting the final outcome right, and honoring the significance of what they are creating.
A book carries your name and your legacy. Whether you are pursuing self-publishing, hybrid publishing, or exploring traditional routes, the work feels personal. Creativity is personal. That weight feels different than a work assignment or a casual hobby.
My husband Jeff’s cancer journey sharpened my understanding of weight in another way. When something matters deeply, decisions deserve more time. Wise people pause and ask better questions. During his early diagnosis, I went into survival mode and made decisions quickly. Those rushed decisions made life harder than necessary. Slowing down, renegotiating deadlines, and protecting my sleep would have served us better.
Society rarely rewards restraint. Noise gets attention. Speed gets applause. Guarantees get clicks. Urgency sells.
A calm, deliberate publishing strategy serves authors far better than urgency. Thoughtful action, however, does not mean perfectionism. Writers must strike a balance between wise decision-making and forward movement.
Taking time to think often proves more efficient than rushing ahead. Sometimes writers need to step back before moving forward. Publishing does not begin with choosing a platform or comparing publishing packages. Publishing begins with purpose. Why are you writing this book? Who needs it? What outcome do you hope it creates? What season of your life supports this work?
Writers rarely need more pressure. Writers often need a clearer understanding of the big picture, realistic expectations about the publishing industry, and a structured book development plan. Accountability helps. Clarity helps. A well-designed publishing pathway helps even more.
At Crippled Beagle Publishing, my team and I guide first-time authors, professionals, and legacy writers through thoughtful publishing decisions. Our Publishing Pathway Calls provide structured guidance before you commit to a publishing plan. Sometimes the next step is professional editing and publishing. Sometimes the next step is book development and strengthening your outline. Sometimes the next step is simply thoughtful discernment.
If you feel heaviness around your manuscript, the publishing process, or the decisions in front of you, clarity can lighten the load. Slowing down long enough to think strategically often creates ease and joy. Ease and joy accelerate progress far more effectively than urgency ever could.
If you have not worked with us before, schedule a Publishing Pathway Call HERE.
If you are an existing client and would like to explore a new project or discuss next steps for your current book, schedule a Next Steps Call HERE.
The best action step is making time to make the next wise decision. We are here to help you.
Books live forever.
Jody Dyer
Founder and CEO, Crippled Beagle Publishing and Story Mountain Media
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