Friday, May 13, 2011

Why Be a Writer? - the lost post appears but without comments....please check post below for FRIDAY CHALLENGE

Oh go on! You know you ask yourself this question - if you are a writer that is. In the middle of the night,  you wake up and can't get back to sleep - you had a dream, perhaps. The one with the woman wearing silver lamé again. And you lie there feeling as if sleep will never come again. Sleep is as foreign a concept as the international dateline. Simply not comprehensible. And so you start to worry at a plot line, a bit of a snarl - OK - a lot of a snarl. You simply don't believe that anyone in the universe would be remotely interested in what you've written. Or you keep switching from loving what you've written to hating it. Or you just read the most wonderful book (in my case it was Lisa Moore's February) and can't think that the world needs one more novel. Ever.

So there is this existential question hovering above your reclining form. And then the more practical, less philosophical questions crowd in. Shouldn't you get a 'real' job - one with a paycheck perhaps. Or, if you have one of these, and work your writing in your so-called free time, shouldn't you spend more of your energy trying to get ahead in that field? Shouldn't you take courses in your free time, become adept at Mandarin Chinese or computer programming?

You might wander from these thoughts to others. I know I do. Perhaps if you weren't writing all the time you would've noticed that your teenager was hanging around at the mall instead of doing her homework? Or maybe if you weren't away at some cottage revising the latest manuscript, you could've spotted the leak in the basement before it became a flood thus pressing home the point that perhaps you should get a real job (better job, second job) and you are back at the worry loop in the paragraph above.

If you are feeling a little more this than that - a little more crushed in the query process, for instance, you might wander from the 'get a job' loop onto the 'why does my family, friends, partner, dog, put up with me at all' loop. That can absorb hours of looping through the other areas and including all sorts of real and imagined sins.

For aren't we big gamblers when we write? Especially if we write novels or full length manuscripts (memoirs, histories, etc...) For they take years - or at least mine seem to. I know I can write a novel more quickly than when I started but still - they take a long time to finish and then you aren't. Finished that is. Then they take a long time going and coming from agents and publishers - a long time. Then if they are chosen by an agent or a publisher - or you are, more correctly - then they take a long time while the agent or editor has at them and there is a lot of business to figure out - cover art and book tours and on and on. And all so we can make what? I don't know - I'm hoping for an advance of 15 thousand. If the whole thing doesn't collapse before I get there that is. That ought to work out to about $1,300.00 a year. Yes. We are gamblers and not for good odds.

But...

But I'm a writer. That's what I am. I may not be a successful writer, a published writer, a famous writer, a rich writer, but no one can tell me that I'm not a writer. I write. I sit down and keep at it, day after day, week after week, month after month. And even in the worst of my misery over the last few months, and the years of the midnight loops I just described, will I give it up. I will write and I will write novels. I will become a better writer with the writing and as I invite more and more critique into my life. And I will write.

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Please spare a thought for the family of Jane Kennedy Sutton. Jane died last Friday. She had been sick for awhile but never burdened her fellow bloggers with complaint.  She was a generous and kind person - known in the blogging world for her wonderful comments and her dry wit on her blog Jane's Ride. She will be missed.

13 comments:

RHYTHM AND RHYME said...

Enjoyed the read Jan,
So sad about Jane, although I never read her blog it's awful to lose a fellow friend.

Yvonne.

Elizabeth Spann Craig said...

I think it takes something really...well, I was going to say 'special,' but maybe it's just 'different'...to be a writer. We've got to be so naive and so hardened at the same time!

I've been so sorry about Jane. I always looked forward to her Monday posts and it feels like we've all lost a friend.

Talli Roland said...

Wonderful post, Jan. It's so easy to caught up in all the angst of the road to publication (and the aftermath, which is HIDEOUSLY nail-biting!) that you can forget the JOY of writing.

Anonymous said...

Great post. Sometimes all us writers need to remind ourselves why we are here, slogging away.

Liza said...

Oh I am so in that loop right now...

Thought and prayers for Jane...

Elspeth Futcher said...

And then there are the days when you realize being a writer takes wagon loads of self-discipline and your wagon is lost somewhere on the way to town. *sigh*

I've been thinking of Jane and her family all this week. I always enjoyed reading her posts and I was so hoping she would conquer the monster.

Julie Flanders said...

Like Karen, I feel as if you wrote this post just for me, even though I know that's not the case. But, the post really spoke to me, very inspiring.

Very sorry to read about Jane, I wish I had gotten to know her.

L. Diane Wolfe said...

I'm back to writing again, so I guess I'm still a writer at heart. Maybe I enjoy the torture.

And I was so shocked when I read Jane's blog Monday morning. She will be missed.

D. U. Okonkwo said...

Because the question is: How can I NOT be a writer? What else would I do that would equate to the pleasure of it?

:o)

K.C. Woolf said...

I often question if my writing is good enough, but for some reason I never question being a writer.

RHYTHM AND RHYME said...

I remember this one, mine lost comments also ......quite a few.
It's sad to lose a blogger friend,
My prayers go to her family and friends and you.

Yvonne.

Anonymous said...

Jan, you certainly described my sleepless nights!
But we keep plugging along -- keep writing even if it's just for ourselves.

Sorry to hear of your friend's death. Allow yourself time to grieve.

MM the Queen of English

Dorte H said...

I know what you mean. Because I am a teacher and I get that pay check every month. But what makes me happy is writing. Those days when I hit the thousand-word mark, or when I check my account and see I have earned another dollar or two. Financially it´s a stupid way of spending so many hours of my life, but that doesn´t matter the least. Because I am also a writer.