Not quite "writing for yourself," but I never write with a particular audience in mind. I try to write stuff that people just like me would love to read. There must be plenty of readers like me, and I hope they find my work and enjoy it.
I remember plugging Heinlein's 5 Rules at the old place. They are:
Rule One: You must write.
Rule Two: You must finish what you start.
Rule Three: You must refrain from rewriting, except to editorial order.
Rule Four: You must put it on the market.
Rule Five: You must keep it on the market until it has sold.
I follow them all, but I try to keep Rule Five within reason. Most of my stories have sold after 10-12 rejections. I recently sold one that had been rejected more than 20 times, and that's probably about my limit. There are only so many paying markets where a particular story can fit, after all.
But the rest I follow fairly closely. Finish your projects when you're familiar with them. Stopping something and picking it up months or even years later, it's going to be like another writer has continued the story.
Three is important. Plenty of writers get bogged down and rewrite, edit, rewrite, edit, overthink, repeat, for literally years. Don't do that. Let it go and move on to the next book.
I remember plugging Heinlein's 5 Rules at the old place. They are:
Rule One: You must write.
Rule Two: You must finish what you start.
Rule Three: You must refrain from rewriting, except to editorial order.
Rule Four: You must put it on the market.
Rule Five: You must keep it on the market until it has sold.
I follow them all, but I try to keep Rule Five within reason. Most of my stories have sold after 10-12 rejections. I recently sold one that had been rejected more than 20 times, and that's probably about my limit. There are only so many paying markets where a particular story can fit, after all.
But the rest I follow fairly closely. Finish your projects when you're familiar with them. Stopping something and picking it up months or even years later, it's going to be like another writer has continued the story.
Three is important. Plenty of writers get bogged down and rewrite, edit, rewrite, edit, overthink, repeat, for literally years. Don't do that. Let it go and move on to the next book.