28: Book Coaching, Creative Writing, and Overcoming the Inner Critic with Dr. Bailey Lang
MAR 4, 202676 MIN
28: Book Coaching, Creative Writing, and Overcoming the Inner Critic with Dr. Bailey Lang
MAR 4, 202676 MIN
Description
What if the stories you grew up with weren’t just entertainment… but training?Dr. Bailey Lang didn’t become a book coach and editor by accident.Her path moves from hyperlexic child… to marketing professional… to PhD… to founder of The Writing Desk. And when you zoom out, none of it is random. Every season sharpened how she sees story, structure, mindset, and the humans behind the pages.In this conversation, Bailey and I talk about creative writing beyond fiction, the realities of academia, the power of marginalized voices, and why standing out has less to do with tactics and more to do with telling the truth about who you are.HighlightsCreativity processes are personal and they evolveSo many writers assume there is one correct way to be creative.One correct routine.One correct drafting method.One correct productivity system.And when their process doesn’t look like someone else’s, they assume they’re doing it wrong.Bailey gently dismantles that myth.“People kind of assume there’s one right way to do it. And that is where people get stuck. The same thing is true with our creative processes, right? The actual practice of showing up to write, I think people often assume, I’m supposed to do it this one specific way, right? And it’s, no, you can do it in infinite ways.”Different seasons of your life require different approaches. Different projects demand different rhythms.When you stop trying to copy someone else’s creative process, you free up energy to actually create.Marginalized voices reveal universal habits of mindOne of my favorite parts of this conversation is when Bailey talks about her dissertation research.She studied women writers outside academic spaces and asked whether the same “habits of mind” celebrated in academia showed up in their reflections on craft.“I was looking specifically at women writers who were not working in academic spaces... And do we see these same habits kind of showing up in how they’re reflecting on their own work... But the answer that I found in my dissertation was more or less, yeah.”This is why diversity is a strength. Different lived experiences expand the creative toolbox for all of us. When we spotlight marginalized voices, we don’t narrow the conversation. We deepen it.Mindset will make or break your progressCraft matters.But mindset is often the real bottleneck.Bailey works as both a coach and an editor, and she sees how the inner critic shows up when revisions land in someone’s inbox.It’s not just about fixing sentences. It’s about facing fear.“Mindset is huge, particularly in coaching engagements, right? So I also do editing. At that point, a lot of mindset stuff is like dealing with how do you make revisions once I give them to you.”Revision isn’t a verdict on your talent. It’s part of the creative loop.If you can separate feedback from identity, you unlock growth.Authenticity Over Visibility TacticsThere’s a difference between being loud and being aligned.A lot of creatives think standing out means reaching more people. Bigger audience. More noise. More reach.Bailey reframes that completely.“Standing out isn’t about broadcasting to a broad audience but about amplifying your unique perspective and personal qualities. Genuine authenticity attracts the right audience organically.”The right people are not found through volume. They’re found through clarity.Value of Authentic Self-RepresentationWe copy because it feels safer.If it worked for them, maybe it will work for me.But that instinct slowly erodes the very thing that makes your work compelling.“Your unique personality, perspective, and vulnerabilities are your strongest branding assets—cloning or copying successful models dilutes genuine appeal.”The more you sound like you, the less competition you actually have.Adaptation Is Essential for SuccessThere is no fixed formula for a creative life.What works this year may not work next year. What worked for one book may not work for the next.“Different seasons of your life, different seasons of the year, different projects, they can all require some adaptation and flexibility.”Flexibility keeps you in motion.Rigidity is what burns people out.The creatives who last are not the ones who find the perfect system.They’re the ones who adjust without abandoning themselves.Community is not optionalThere’s a myth of the solitary genius.Bailey rejects it completely.“Find your people, make a cool thing, and then show it to all of the people that you know who like cool things. It’s great.”That’s it.Community accelerates courage. It also keeps you sane when the work feels heavy.Writing is solitary. A creative life doesn’t have to be.Closing ReflectionBailey’s story isn’t about choosing the perfect path.It’s about noticing where your skills, values, and energy intersect… and building from there.From hyperlexic kid to marketer to PhD to book coach, every chapter informs the next. Nothing is wasted.If you need help building a creative business, writing a book, or trying to find your voice in a crowded world, sign up for a free call and we’ll figure out your best path forward.If you liked this conversation or want to share your own insights. Drop a comment and tell us what you’re building.Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to see.