rmfw logo long
Menu
  • Join!
  • Members
    • Member Hub
    • Professional Authors Alliance
  • Blog
    • Blog
    • Blog Contributors
  • Events
  • 2025 Conference
    • Conference Homepage
    • Registration
      • Regular Registration
      • Saturday Day Passes
    • Keynotes
    • Agents
    • Presenters
    • Workshops
    • Handouts
    • Schedule
    • Program
    • Thursday Intensives
    • Masterclasses
    • Add-Ons
    • Sponsors
    • Scholarships
    • FAQ
      • Code of Conduct
      • Accessibility
  • Awards
    • Colorado Gold Rush Literary Awards Contest
      • Colorado Gold Rush Winners & Finalists
    • Jasmine Awards
    • Honored Guiding Members
    • PEN Awards
    • Writer of the Year Award
      • Writer of the Year Award
      • 2025 WOTY Nominations
  • Books
  • Anthology
  • Resources
    • Podcast
    • Critique Groups
    • Service Providers
    • Youth Writers Program
  • About
    • About Us
    • Board of Directors
Menu

Scrap The “Hobby” Thought

Posted on July 2, 2024July 1, 2024 by Mark Stevens

Here’s actor Jeremy Renner on a recent episode of the Smartless podcast.

“I don’t really believe in hobbies. Either you do something or you don’t, right?  I don’t have time to just dip my toe in the water. I’m not taking a ******* bath here in life.”

Where do you categorize your writing?

If you’re published and regularly publishing, this blog is not for you.

If you’re unpublished and working your way into the business, how do you think of your writing? Of your writing time?

It takes no effort—and no money—to move it from the “hobby” category to the “priority” category in your mind.

To the “treat it like a business” category.

To the “I’m taking this seriously” category.

In other words, from “dabbling” to “purposeful.”

It’s a mental thing.

I’m not here to demean hobbies. Hardly. But to me they imply “sideline.”

Like ostrich racing or trainspotting.

To me, hobbies mean you can do it or you can NOT do it.

Either way, nothing is going to change.

If you choose to think about your writing in a more serious way, you write a plan.

You set goals. You make a list of things that need improvement. You work on those improvements. It might be your craft at dialogue. It might be your comfort level when walking into a room of, gasp, other writers. It might be your ability to take feedback.

Whatever the issue, you are treating it as a serious matter.

Which it is.

And you continually adjust as you go. You set a six-month goal and you evaluate how you fared, readjust, and set new goals.

As Jeremy said, either you do something or you don’t.

Right?

++

Photo by Andrey Tikhonovskiy on Unsplash

Mark Stevens

Mark Stevens is the author of the The Fireballer (Lake Union, 2023) and The Allison Coil Mystery Series including Antler Dust, Buried by the Roan, Trapline, Lake of Fire, and The Melancholy Howl. Trapline won The Colorado Book Award for Best Mystery. Stevens has also published short stories in Denver Noir (Akashic Books, 2022), Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, and Mystery Tribune, among others. Stevens is longtime member of Mystery Writers of America. In 2023, Stevens was named Writer of the Year by Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers for the second time. He lives in southwest Colorado.
Category: Blog

1 thought on “Scrap The “Hobby” Thought”

  1. Kelley says:
    July 5, 2024 at 3:44 pm

    Yoda agrees! “Do, or do not. There is no try.”

Comments are closed.

Mission Statement

Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers is a non-profit, volunteer-run organization dedicated to supporting, encouraging, and educating writers seeking publication in fiction.

Important Links

Board of Directors

By-Laws (Updated 2024)

Conference Code of Conduct

Diversity Statement

Privacy Policy

Facebook
Twitter
Instagram

Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Newsletter Signup

© 2025 Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme