New Year’s Writing Resolutions — 2026

Another year is in the books, and a new one looming on the horizon. Last post I recapped my 2025. In this post, I’ll get into my plans for 2026.

Another Year of Short Stories

Way back in 2024, I declared it my year of short stories (or YOSS for the acronymically-inclined). I focused on writing, editing, and submitting short fiction on a scale that I had never done before. Not only was this a lot of fun, but I feel that it really helped me improve a variety of writing skills.

At the start of 2025, I was hesitant to repeat myself. Well, screw it! I’m getting old and set in my ways, so I’m doing it again in 2026.

With 2024 as my baseline, I aim to make YOSS 2026 bigger and better. My goals are:

  1. Finish and submit at least twelve short stories
  2. Send at least 50 submissions
  3. While I’m at it, post on Words Deferred 100 times.

Completing a short story per month will be the biggest challenge. However, I think it’s doable. I currently have four or five stories already written that need various amounts of revision. I have another three stories that are partly written. That gives me a decent head start.

In 2024, the original Year of Short Stories, I managed about 35 submissions. With a dozen new stories, getting to fifty submissions should be fairly straightforward.  I expect that to be the easiest goal to achieve. I also have a few stories already out, and I’ll be keeping my eyes open for reprint opportunities as well.

One hundred posts on Words Deferred works out to slightly less than two per week, which is what I’ve already been aiming for over the past year. I’m sure I’ll have plenty of short fiction-related topics as a part of a second Year of Short Stories. Beyond that, as I mentioned in my most recent State of the Blog post, I’ve developed a number of series or templates I can use to keep things interesting:  the Idea Vault, Games for People Who Prefer to Read, Reference Desk, Read Reports, and perhaps a few reblogs here and there.

The Enduring Allure of an Organized Schedule

I suspect that anyone going through my old posts can easily see that I have a love-hate relationship with organization and scheduling. Long have I aspired to the “write every day” mantra advocated by Stephen King and Dorothea Brande, but my attempts at keeping up that schedule rarely last more than a month. (Of course, it’s a little easier when you’re a full-time writer who can dedicate a few hours to writing time each and every day.)

Still, as much as I try to cultivate a creative mind, I also have the brain of a lifelong engineer. I like order. I actually enjoy planning. I write outlines. It galls me a little bit to be so unstructured when it comes to writing. So I keep on trying.

This year, I’m going to start with a loose plan—a set of weekly checkboxes to tick off, but no particular order. I plan to use a very basic agile loop: setting goals at the start of the week, working through the tasks, and reviewing the results at the end of the week.

One of the things I really enjoyed about writing short stories in 2024 was that it requires the exercise of many different writerly skills: ideation, writing, revision, polish, and submitting the work (with all the little businessy bits that entails). It’s hard to get all that variety of experience on a regular basis when you’re exclusively working on longer work. I intend to set my goals across this full spectrum of writing.

What About You?

Do you have any New Year’s writing resolutions? Anything you found challenging in the past year that you’re looking to overcome? Or exciting new goals? Let me know in the comments.

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Author: Samuel Johnston

Professional software developer, unprofessional writer, and generally interested in almost everything.

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