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Rejection is the part of your life. It is a fact that you cannot change. But we all know that a coin has two sides, A good and a bad one. When you flip a coin you don't know what the result would be, but when it strikes the ground, you will have your end result.
Acceptance and rejection are two sides of the coin. Undoubtedly when you are accepted, you will be overwhelmed with joy, but when you face rejection, you will be depressed, you will be sad, you will be crying.
As an experienced writer and teacher of writing, I always want to respond to this question with fatherly advice and say something like, "I view rejections as evidence of growth." But to the novice, such fatherly advice may sound like "Eat your spinach; it's good for you." Well, as many parents will attest, spinach is good for you-but only if it doesn't cause you to throw up. Similarly, getting rejections may be good for you, but only if they don't cause you to give up. Greg Daugherty~ editor of Money magazine (1996, p.28), says that if you haven't been rejected lately, it may means "you simply aren't trying hard enough." Perhaps a better response is that all successful authors get rejections. Successful writers grow as a result of rejection because they learn from experience. Some aggressive novices ask the editors for advice. They ask the editors of referred journals for copies of the reviewers' evaluations of their manuscript. With this feedback in hand, rejections can become painful blessings.
First and foremost I have no other option to accept it. Next I would investigate the root cause for rejection and take it as a lesson for not repeating such a thing in future to get rejected again. Thanks.