Point of fact: I’m the guy at parties who tells you that urban legend you’re passing around — about the AIDS needles in the McDonald’s playground ball-pit or the dead baby used to smuggle cocaine or the chihuahua-that’s-actually-a-rat — is bullshit. I don’t know why. Everybody has fun telling those kinds of stories and there I am, pushing my glasses up the bridge of my nose, murdering misinformation — and, oh, fun — in equal measure. I’m just skeptical, I guess. You tell me that the punch in the punch bowl is spiked with vodka, I’m likely to ask, “Did you check Snopes? SNOPES OR IT DIDN’T HAPPEN.”
I bring the same measure of myth-killing (and subsequent accidental fun-murdering) to writing. Writers often live or die by magical thinking, and that’s all well and good when it’s not fucking with your mojo. But myths often contain secret dangers. The Mexican Pet legend — i.e. the chihuahua-that’s-actually-a-rat — contains a not insubstantial seed of xenophobia and racism. “Oh, those silly disgusting Mexicans,” it says, “with their dog-like rats and their rat-like dogs. You just can’t trust things from wacky Mexico!”
And thus I find it instructive to shine a light in dark spaces.
It’s probably annoying.
But, too bad. Here I am, once more kicking over logs inside the writer’s mind and seeing what squirmy little wormlets lurk underneath. Let’s tackle some more writing myths.
“All It Takes To Be A Writer Is To Read And Write!”
If ever there was a piece of advice that was more dismissive of the act of writing, I don’t know what it is. At the heart of the advice is this: if you really want to learn how to write, then the only things you need to do is read books and, in turn, write them. Boom. Done. From there, you’ll… I dunno, just figure it the fuck out.
Can you imagine if we believed that true of other skills?
“Piano? Ehh. Just listen to some Billy Joel and then go flop around on this Casio keyboard for an hour and a half. You’ll pick it up.” “Painting? Sure, sure, here’s a bunch of Bob Ross VHS tapes, just put those on and then fingerpaint a bunch of happy little trees for a few weeks. You’ll be Leonardo Picasso in no time.” “Truck driving? Yeah, fuck the CDL. Just watch me do it, then you have a crack at it. That’s all you need. No, don’t worry if you mow down a church picnic or some shit. Them churchies have had it too good for too long.”
Reading and writing are two critical components of learning to write. True. No argument. But to suggest that’s all it takes is ludicrous — this isn’t fucking Skee-Ball. Writing’s got a lot of moving parts, many obscured behind a metric butt-ton of abstraction. This idea misses first that going out and living your life is a critical component to being a writer: you learn about stories by living your own stories. You also learn storytelling by hearing stories told, not just by reading them or writing them. Further, this removes from the equation any power you might get from writing classes (compositional and up) and writing advice, both of which are not only functional, but for many, fundamental.
Newsflash: I read a lot as a kid and I wrote a lot, too.
It didn’t make me a bestselling author at age 12.
The classes I took? The writing advice I read? The conferences? The sit-downs with other writers? The notes from editors? All of it, instructive. All of it putting me where I am today.
“My Characters Control Me!”
Despite how it sounds, I don’t actually want to destroy the magic implicit to storytelling. A very real magic lives there, and while I believe that writing is a craft, I’ve come to further believe that storytelling is an art.
But for me, the focus of magic must be internal, not external. Magic shouldn’t happen to the writer; the writer should be the one in control of the magic. It’s the difference between having your penis stolen by black magic sorcerers or, instead, being the sorcerer who uses his magic to steal penises. Right? Right.
So it always amazes me when writers speak of their fiction — and, in particular, the characters within that fiction — as being somehow alive, as if they’re real people running rough-shod over your story because these characters just don’t give a raw red fuck what you, the writer, want. Does that mean I’ve never been surprised by my characters? Of course I’ve been surprised by my characters. But I don’t attribute it to them being real. Instead, I high-five my subconscious mind and say, “Nicely done, part of my brain, I approve of your decision.” I mean, it’s not like comic book writers are like, “Yeah, I don’t know why Superman just took a Kryptonian Super-Shit on Hawkman. It’s just, hey, that’s Superman. I don’t control him. That crazy motherfucker does what he wants. The underwear on the outside? His idea.”
Here’s proof that you control your characters. When next you sit to write, have one of your characters just take a handgun and shoot himself smack dab in the head. You can go back and erase it — but did he fight you for control of the gun? No. No he didn’t. (And if he did: seek help. Or call a penis-stealing wizard, because maybe that dude has some advice on controlling your shit.)
“I Write Because OMG I Have To Or I’ll Explode!”
Again, another thing that gives short shrift to writers and writing. Writers write because they want to write. We’re not compelled to by some outer force. We are not mouthpieces of the divine.
Further, writing isn’t a mental illness. (Though it may feel that way at times.) We are not compelled to do it like slavering word-junkies. Christ, if writers were truly compelled to write, you’d probably see a lot less video game playing and a helluva lot more actual writing getting done.
By acknowledging that we want to write and must force ourselves to do so, then… drum roll please, we actually do so. Don’t be so dramatic to think that you’re metaphysically or psychotically forced to write by elements beyond your control. You cede that kind of authority to spectral hands then when the day comes you don’t write, well, that’s probably because the Powers That Be demanded it. Oh well!
“By Performing That Action, I Will Have Given Away My Thunder!”
Your creativity is not a newborn rabbit, so frail that even the mildest startle causes its tender systems to shut down. And yet I continue to hear about how this or that (outlining, prep-work, revising, editing, etc.) somehow damages the author’s creativity by robbing the project of its rare magic. Or, put differently, “It’s just not fun anymore.” You wrote an outline and it ruined Christmas.
You know what’s not fun? A bad day of writing. You know what else isn’t fun? When your word processor poops the bed and crashes in the middle of writing a paragraph. Rejections aren’t fun either. Neither are bad reviews. Or paring down word count. Or excising a beloved character. Or, or, or. Point is, writing isn’t a giggly run through a tickle-factory. The process is host to an endless array of cold realities. If your story idea is so fragile and crystalline that doing prep-work — or simply talking about it with a friend — then your story wasn’t worth much of a shit to begin with.
A corollary to this features discussions about money and publishing, as if discussions surrounding those things tarnish the high-and-mighty art of writing. If money somehow cheapens writing for you, then your notion of writing was really too wan, too feeble, to survive. In this day and age, with a competitive market and a fast-exploding self-publishing market, talking about advances and book prices is meaningful and necessary. Just because you don’t like it doesn’t mean the adults don’t still need to have the conversation.
If you truly feel that way about money and art, great. Prove it. Don’t get an agent. Don’t contact a publisher. Give your work away. Online. On street corners. Wherever. Just hand it off. Because, fuck money, am I right? Fuck sustainability. Fuck feeding your kids or your dogs or paying for health care or buying bags of scrumdiddlicious Funyuns (or their snacky-food counterparts, Munchos and Bugles).
Go ahead. Just give it away.
The moment you say, “Well, I’d like to get something for it…” is the moment you enter the money discussion. And it’s also the moment where I stick a bomb in your dickhole. FOOOOOM.
“My Ideas Are Super-Secret-Smooshy-Special!”
There exists a notion that the foundation of the writing life — that the curly pubic-coil that comprises a penmonkey’s most basic DNA — is a foundation made of ideas. This is why the question is always, “Where do you get your ideas?” Because people place an incredibly high value on them.
Ah, but — this high value doesn’t hold a lot of water.
Ideas aren’t that meaningful by themselves. I’ve seen some writers stymied because they “don’t have a good idea.” An idea isn’t the backbone of a story. It’s isn’t the whole pig. It’s just the squeal and maybe the tail and that’s it. The idea’s the thing that gets you off the ground, but it’s not currency. It’s not a secret treasure. Most ideas aren’t even that original. I don’t know if stories even have original ideas.
What’s original — and what matters — is the execution of an idea. The question should’t be, “Where do you get your ideas?” but rather, “How exactly did you make good on this idea and sit down in front of the computer day in and day out and give flesh and bones to this notion and then, beyond that, how did you give breath to that flesh and bones and make that story get up and dance instead of being just a hollow gas-bag of unfulfilled, unoriginal, ill-arranged, who-gives-a-shit ideas?”
But I guess that question’s a little too wordy. And besides, if writing is just about ideas, then how easy it must be! Eeeee! Giggle snort! Tickle-factory, here I come!
What else? Your turn. What myths sustain — but can also harm — the writer’s life?
* * *
If you dig on the apeshit crazy-face no-holds-barred profanity-soaked writing advice found here at terribleminds, then you may want to take a wee bitty gander-peek at: CONFESSIONS OF A FREELANCE PENMONKEY, which is available now! Buy for Kindle (US), Kindle (UK), Nook, or PDF.
Patrick O'Duffy says:
My big three:
1 – Writing about writing is just as meaningful/important as writing.
2 – If I procrastinate long enough, I’ll build up a head of steam that will push me to write.
3 – Drugs and alcohol are good for me.
—
Patrick
June 29, 2011 — 1:16 AM
Michael LaRocca says:
I’ve got nothing to add to this post except applause, and the possibility that Exploding Dickholes would be a good name for a band, so I’ll just brag instead.
I interviewed Chuck Wendig and you didn’t. http://www.editormichael.com/?p=880 Siss — boom — roasted!
(Well, unless you did interview him, in which case never mind.)
June 29, 2011 — 1:46 AM
Amanda says:
Haha this article really made me laugh.
Definitely myths I have known better than to buy into, though… i’m sure most of us writers (and aspiring writers) can remember times when it felt like the character was trying to go his or her own way despite “the plan”. I remember one day I sat down with a pen and a piece of paper, wrote down a 1,000 word or so scene in about an hour without even being fully aware of what i was doing or where it was going or why the hell this was happening with these two characters because that was not even remotely close to part of my plan. When i was done i looked at it, really liked it but it didn’t fit to what i was doing so i trunked it as it were. Now 3 years later in the process of writing down notes for structural editing, I remembered the scene and was amazed to find it actually had a place and importance in my manuscript. Kind of amazing to me.
I don’t think of it as characters taking control though i think of it as the internal writer radar kicking in. Our subconscious is supposedly working through these things even when we’re not aware of it so somewhere deep down we always know the right path. That’s why we drive ourselves crazy until we get it there, right?
June 29, 2011 — 1:49 AM
Gerald Hornsby says:
Hoo-yah! Love this. I’ve been telling anyone who’ll listen that writing is just such damned hard work, not some ethereal wafty-dress dance through fields of flowers. And the “oh, I have no idea what my characters will do – they seem to have a life of their own”. Give me strength.
Damned fine blog post!
June 29, 2011 — 1:56 AM
oldestgenxer says:
Chuck, I agree with almost everything you said. Except this:
Skeeball is fucking harder than you think. I can’t hit nuthin ‘cept the outside 10 point ring.
And people that have the problem of your last point are undoubtedly a pain in the ass to editors. Whatdaya mean I have change some of my perfect prose? Whatev. New writers, especially, think they are God’s gift to word processing. I highly recommend working with someone, or getting feedback from someone that isn’t going to kiss your ass. Take your lumps and get stronger and better from them. Here’s an exercise: write about 20k words of what you think is some great stuff (because all writers think their shit is pretty great)–
And then throw it away.
Here’s a writing myth for ya: How about the notion that writing is somehow a romantic, adventurous lifestyle, and not the introspective, isolationist, lonely pursuit that it actually is? If you’re at parties or at work or on the fucking subway talking about the book you’re writing, you’re not writing shit. You’re talking. Talk is cheap. Talk doesn’t get your book written. Maybe that’s why it’s so hard. It’s easier to get laid than it is to write.
June 29, 2011 — 2:28 AM
Anthony Laffan says:
On the people saying they write or else they’ll explode. I can actually see that being a problem for some people. There are times ideas just won’t leave you alone until you jot them down. I don’t think it is true of everyone, and I think buying into the myth is just a step towards “I can only write when the muse lets me.” but I can also see someone become addicted to the act of spilling their thoughts onto paper, and it feeling weird when it can’t.
I know I’ve felt weird the last week where I haven’t written. Speaking of, I need to get on that and away from reading blogs….maybe I should buy Freedom.
June 29, 2011 — 2:42 AM
Karin says:
Another great post.
I really hate the myth of “I’ve got a book inside me”. How on earth did it get int there? Plus I imagine it would be very uncomfortable. Don’t go putting books inside yourself people; it’s a bad idea that could require a trip to accident and emergency.
June 29, 2011 — 4:31 AM
Marshall Buckley says:
Oh, you are so like me. If I had £1 for every time I’ve consulted Snopes to debunk yet another myth I’d be a very wealthy man indeed. Annoying, but wealthy.
Great article, too. I love the “I have to write or I’ll explode” thing. Sure, sometimes I get twitchy if i haven’t written for a while, but only if I have an idea/plot that I need to write before I forget it. Mostly, I write because it’s something to do in the evenings and (usually) beats watching TV…
June 29, 2011 — 6:41 AM
Sean Riley says:
… y’know, thank you. Myth #3 up there? Is probably responsible for me NOT writing than almost anything else. (Well, other than my own laziness.) I kept thinking, “No, I’m not a writer. You know you’re a writer because you HAVE to write.”
So, y’know, it’s time to stop being lazy and get on it. Finally. (I hope.)
June 29, 2011 — 6:44 AM
Alice says:
The problem with the “characters control me” attitude is that it makes for very sloppy characters.
If you just let your impulses take over and then pull your hands back like, “Well, nothing I can do now. Princess Cochinita StarWafer does what she wants!” then Princess is going to be nothing but a mess pulled straight out of the balloon knot of your flighty artist’s psyche.
What really makes characters spring to life is a realistic psychological and behavioural map — and that takes work, and planning, and deliberate design.
Also, and this is of primary importance, it sometimes annoys me. Writing is something I take kinda seriously. I don’t write so I can chronicle the wacky adventures of my imaginary friends.
June 29, 2011 — 7:13 AM
terribleminds says:
“If you just let your impulses take over and then pull your hands back like, “Well, nothing I can do now. Princess Cochinita StarWafer does what she wants!” then Princess is going to be nothing but a mess pulled straight out of the balloon knot of your flighty artist’s psyche.”
Spoken with the piss and vinegar of a true terribleminds reader. Word. 😀
“I don’t write so I can chronicle the wacky adventures of my imaginary friends.”
Hah, well, this one I’m not so sure about. Sometimes I feel like that’s what I’m doing, and further, it feels kind of glorious.
I still make those fuckers do what *I* want, though. I mean, this isn’t a pleasure cruise for those jerks.
— c.
June 29, 2011 — 7:18 AM
Rick A. Carroll says:
“Writers write because they want to write.”
I’d like this amended to “writers avoid writing like it’s a giant phallus-kicking donkey until they absolutely have to, because they want to write.”
June 29, 2011 — 7:17 AM
Shakespeare says:
How about, “I can’t write when I don’t FEEL like it.”
You have totally kicked me in the pants today. I was feeling a bit whiny–mainly because my writing SUCKS–and you broke all my illusions up for me. I’m going to paste this up by my writing desk, along with another blog’s posting about how my writing has to suck first, and will probably suck for a long time, before it actually becomes good.
Man, I wish I was a better writer. But commenting on your blog won’t get me there. I just have to do a hell of a lot more practicing. The only thing I’m good at is taking vicious criticism. But I’ve been practicing on that far more than anything else. I just hope I get to practice some of the other stuff, like negotiating an agent contract, or a book deal, or setting up book signings/readings/appearances/movie deals. First, though, I have to get my stuff to not suck anymore.
June 29, 2011 — 7:34 AM
Amber J Gardner says:
I agree with everything in this post…as usual of course.
But I think the reason these myths exist is because of real situations. Like recently, I noticed that when I write something just for me, just messing around, compared to when I write with the thought of money or publication in mind, I get better stuff (well according to the people I do show it to). So it’s more like a mind frame. It’s not, MONEY IS EVILLLL and should be shunned for all eternity! SHUUUUN!
It’s more like, don’t think about money when you’re actually writing.
The same goes for the other myths. I think they came from tiny experience that is blown out of proportion.
That, and people are making up stuff to feel better about themselves *shrugs*
I’m guilty of at least three of these. I think it’s time for a reality check.
June 29, 2011 — 8:17 AM
angie Brooksby says:
This was fun to read, great comments. I recently realized that I can get that book done, I just have to glue my ass to the chair and knock it out, it doesn’t mean it will be any good but I’ll feel great when its a real first draft. It is not that never ending project, it can have an end but, yes, talking about it will never get it done. I like the analogy of Billy Joel and the keyboard.
So Chuck, what do you propose as the solution to the broken myths? Where can we pick up the pieces and keep from jumping out the window?
June 29, 2011 — 8:37 AM
Thomas Pluck says:
More great advice from the Chuckster.
I can always write something. Sometimes the current project, let’s say, revising a novel or figuring out the next step to replace a bad turn in a story does take time. I find myself getting a headache when I try to force something. Sometimes I write through it, sometimes I skip over it and start where I want to write. And other times the idea that won’t let go for a story gets the attention it’s been craving.
One hour a day. That’s a mere 24th of your life. For some, that can be 500 or 1000 or 2000 words. If it’s a mere 250, that is one page a day, a big novel in a year. Put in the time. Wake up early and write before the Rice Krispies get poured and their snappling crackling poppery drives you insane. Stay up late and ignore the grumblings of the spouse. Pack a lunch and whip out the laptop at your desk instead of following the herd to eat slop in a bread bowl at the mini mall.
Do it. Get to the chopper.
June 29, 2011 — 8:40 AM
Jerry Bloomfield says:
I can’t say I’ll explode if I don’t write but if I manage to go too long without writing, I get in a bit of a mood. Maybe my brain just likes the workout.
June 29, 2011 — 8:43 AM
Darlene Underdahl says:
I’m not really answering your question; more like coming at it in a roundabout way.
The old men in the family told an urban legend. It was from the time when cars were new and so were microphones. Gas stations had no indoor plumbing. There was an outhouse a short distance away.
A couple of jokers decided to have fun. They ran hidden wires to the outhouse and installed a microphone under the two-hole seating area. When a woman would visit the outhouse, they’d wait for her to get comfortable, and then one would say, “Lady, would you mind moving to the next hole? There are men working down here.”
You wouldn’t believe the laughing and snorting over that one!
Garrison Keillor told a version of that story, but didn’t acknowlege its origin as an urban legend, which I’m guessing he didn’t have to do. Hmmm.
I need more coffee.
June 29, 2011 — 9:02 AM
Josh says:
The last one’s a big ‘un and I think quite a few writers will fall into the trap of thinking they’re doing something new. They’re not. I know for a fact I’m not. None of my ideas are brand-new or even all that original. I’m playing in the same sandboxes as Tolkien, Martin, Butcher, Niven and Heinlein, and they’re all bigger kids with fancy collapsing spades while I have my little cracked plastic bucket.
But you know what? I’m going to build my sandcastles anyway. Sure, they’ve built sandcastles before. Doesn’t mean I can’t make a cool one that’s interesting in its own way despite being fundamentally no different than that scale Minas Tirith or King’s Landing or Chicago or Ringworld over there.
June 29, 2011 — 9:04 AM
Kate Haggard says:
Thinking about, I think I know how these myths arise. We’re writers, right? And writers, naturally, are prone to hyperbole. Don’t tell me you’ve never told a story to someone and made a point or two that was bigger than it was in reality.
A lot of these stem from pretty real feelings (as we’ve admitted in the comments about feeling like we sometimes write about imaginary friends). What sounds more interesting to the poor fools that listen to us ramble – “I’m a crazy cuckoolander with multiple personalities” or “Gee, that scene went better than I expected because this character is a nice piece of work, go me”?
Think about the folks we hear these phrases from – novices. They’ve probably heard someone say something similar, tongue in cheek, and, when it happens to them, they’ve got no better language to describe what it is they’ve done.
Or I’m blowing smoke out of my butt.
June 29, 2011 — 9:13 AM
Chadwick Scott says:
One I hear a lot is this: Revise as you write your first draft. It will make for less work during the first revision process.
When I tried doing this, it fucked up my momentum in spilling out that first draft. I’d rather barf my guts out on the page first and then separate the salvageable chunks before mopping up the putrid liquid.
And, Chuck, I need to call you out on something that you mentioned in your post: I don’t think you could actually fit a bomb into my dickhole. Sorry, but I don’t think it’s possible.
June 29, 2011 — 10:21 AM
Joanna says:
Garrison Keillor told a version of that story, but didn’t acknowlege its origin as an urban legend, which I’m guessing he didn’t have to do. Hmmm.
He does that a lot, and he gets away with it because of his soothing baritone delivery. The man’s a good storyteller, but he’s not always that terribly original. (Look up James Lileks’ vivisections of his grumpy-old-man columns if you want a good laugh.)
Three things I live by are “Get good and pissed”, “I’ll try just about anything once” and “Do it anyway.” They dovetail into each other to form a triangle of get-up-and-go, which pokes me in the bottom when my life grinds into a rut. They apply six ways to Sunday when it comes to writing.
Now I’m going to go pound out a 5,000-word chapter before six o’clock. Goway and leemee ‘lone.
June 29, 2011 — 10:57 AM
Juliette Kelley says:
Here is my favorite: I don’t need an editor because what I write is good enough the first time. It is MY story.
(It may be your story but if you lose me in the first sentence or misspell the third word — it will STAY yours and yours alone)
June 29, 2011 — 11:03 AM
G says:
“We’re not compelled to by some outer force.”
No, we’re not. We are, however, compelled by an inner force. Of course, I can only speak for myself.
I write because I must AND because I want to. I find pleasure in my personal duty. I may not be very good at it, but I don’t really give a steaming horse pile about that. It’s more about expression than writing. Expression is the destination. Writing is the rusty old pick-up truck that gets me there.
June 29, 2011 — 11:16 AM
Louise Sorensen says:
Chuck Wendig is the guy who blows all your delusions apart with a shotgun. But they have a life of their own and even as we type, are coming back together into a misty cloud, reconfiguring themselves to a more palatable form, and solidifying. Muahahahaha : )))
June 29, 2011 — 11:22 AM
Bob Mayer says:
I must disagree with every single point you make and agree with the myths:
1. All it takes is reading/writing: 80% of American believe they can write a book. 50% read. Therefore reading is not important. Actually, 99% of that 80% don’t even write either so . . .
2. My characters control me: recently in court I explained that to the judge when the prosecution showed the bloody axe and the autopsy photos. The judge was a writer and totally got it was my antagonist channeling through me. Case dismissed.
3. I have to write or I’ll explode. Oh yeah. Well, actually, I won’t be able to pay the rent is more accurate and wife will toss a grenade in my office.
4. Giving away my thunder. Oh yes, my thunder is sacred. I had four books published and thought I’d better learn something about writing. So I took a writing course at local university. The professor walked in the first day, taught nothing, told us to pull out pen and paper and write what we feel. I wrote “I feel like I’m wasting my time and money in this course because you haven’t taught us a damn thing.” Needless to say my thunder was stolen.
5. Oh yes, my ideas as so super-secret I went into special forces figuring it would be a good way to learn how to keep a secret, even under pain of torture. SERE school– survival, evasion, resistance and escape taught me how to keep my ideas so secret no one will even know what they are.
June 29, 2011 — 11:39 AM
Jess Tudor says:
Love it for the most part. The only one I’d hesitate at is OMG I HAVE to write. Your explanation, I agree with, but I also know that I can actually get twitchy and irritable when I’m not working on a project (rule of thumb). I don’t wither away if I’m between projects, and I certainly don’t think it’s external at all. I make myself write everyday when I’m working; it’s not like because I feel I have to that it always goes well. But I do recognize an inner compulsion to write. It’s how I process my life, I think, and so if I don’t, things build up. Does that make any sense?
June 29, 2011 — 11:48 AM
Angela Perry says:
Ahahahaha!
Nope, no thoughtful, insightful comment today. Just a good belly laugh.
June 29, 2011 — 12:11 PM
Lesann says:
My personal gripe is people who can’t write until the fat lady sings…err, until the muse speaks through them. WTF? You’re channeling some bodiless entity who needs your knobby fingers to ferfluffle out bad prose and stiff dialogue. What a crappy inspiration. Take responsibility people. It’s your story, your words. You write it. You take responsibility. Don’t pass it off on some unsuspecting otherworld nitwit.
A muse is a crutch.
A muse is an excuse for why you don’t have the cajones to sit your ass in a chair until your back creaks, pounding out the words. A muse is for pansies, the same kind of pretentious pricks who stuff cigarettes in holders, wear berets, drink martinis befouled with fruit-juice, and talk about writing instead of doing it. By doing it, I mean writing. But I guess the other applies too. The longer you work at this labor, the easier it is to see the myths. Remember folks that mythology is what we use to tweak with people’s minds when they read our words, it isn’t how we sing or dance or breathe the words into existence.
Rant done. Thanks for reading. Go write something.
June 29, 2011 — 12:18 PM
Sarah says:
Hey, Chuck. Thanks for taking the time to murder these myths. I’ve heard them all and always wondered what was wrong with me. Writing is hard work, and it seems I have to fight for everything I get down. Don’t get me wrong, I love it, but it’s tough.
June 29, 2011 — 12:19 PM
Matt Himlin says:
Ah yes, dick stealing black magic. It’s been a problem for a long time. Fortunately, the Malleus Maleficarum has the answers. See Part 1 question 9 here: http://www.malleusmaleficarum.org/?p=22
Also, great post. I’d like to add the myth that all you need to do is have a friend in the business. Sure, that helps, but if you ask that friend to pass along a big fat load of shit you call a script, you won’t have a friend in the business much longer.
June 29, 2011 — 12:24 PM
Anne-Mhairi Simpson says:
I have actually subscribed to every single one of these at some point or other. Yeah, that’s me in the corner, eating my own vomit.
I’d like to say I’m now cured, but it would be a lie. There’ll always be something stupid out there that I believe because it’s preferable to admitting that I’m not Super-Duper-Smooshy-Special. What? I’m not?
*sob*
NB. I edit as I go. Hate seeing those typos fly past. Practically OCD about it. Which is why I don’t like the myth that says ‘barf it all up and sort it out later’. Doesn’t work for me. But, it does for some people. Maybe we should just choose our myths? I like to hug mine while drinking my hot milk before bedtime…
June 29, 2011 — 12:37 PM
Jason Black says:
Awesome post. Except for the scratchy-looking beard, and the fact that I have no idea where the hell you are, I’d totally kiss you for it.
In a completely platonic way, of course.
June 29, 2011 — 12:42 PM
Kristin says:
My favorite myth is the dreaded writer’s block. There are definitely days when the writing is hard and every word has to be chiseled out of stone and the letters decoded to make sense. But if you sit there long enough, you will swim through the shit blocking your way and find yourself back on track. Some days what you write isn’t worth keeping, but even then it still had a point. To me, writer’s block always seems like one more excuse not to sit down and hammer out some words.
June 29, 2011 — 1:04 PM
Russell Bailey says:
@Chadwick Scott
“One I hear a lot is this: Revise as you write your first draft. It will make for less work during the first revision process.”
Agreed. All that attempting this has ever gotten me is slower wordcount and a less coherent first draft.
June 29, 2011 — 1:28 PM
Garner Davis says:
A mighty fine post, Chuck. However, what kind of writer’s rock have I been living under, that I hadn’t actually heard of 4 out of the 5 myths you exploded?
@Darlene Underdahl. Graham Norton has done versions of the hidden microphone (and camera) in the public restroom routine on his show. He’s targeted guys in stalls and at the urinals, always with hilarious results.
Here’s a classic writer’s myth for you. If you leave the pages you excised (during your first revision) under your pillow at night, you’ll find a dollar under the pillow when you wake up in the morning. Wait … that’s the tooth fairy. Never mind.
June 29, 2011 — 2:11 PM
Pickles says:
Thanks for #3. I get really irritated when people start trying to sell me willowy bullshit about they write because some supernatural force drives them to do so.
I love writing, but it does feel an awful lot like work sometimes. That’s not a complaint.
June 29, 2011 — 2:12 PM
Delia says:
I’m with Kristin on the writer’s block. Only, to me, writer’s block = I forgot to plan my shit and then I started and then I said to myself “Hey, maybe this will be good!” only it wasn’t and now I don’t know what to do. So maybe it’s just part of Myth #4. Not that they were numbered. Also, Funyuns, Munchos, and Bugles (Yeah, that’s right. I just used the serial comma. Screw you, Oxford.), righteous snack choices, my friend.
June 29, 2011 — 2:20 PM
Cincoflex says:
A terrific blog, and thank you. I appreciate your honest look at myths like this. One that I hear a lot, or used to is :Fanfiction isn’t real writing.
Of course not. It’s practice. It’s playing in someone else’s dollhouse, learning how to move the pieces and re-arrange the furniture. It’s Driver’s Ed for writing, and ranges from eye-gouge-ingly bad on up, but the point is that people who start there are getting a taste of what writing is like.
And what the hell is this icon thing? A mal-formed pig? A junior Cuthulu? What?
June 29, 2011 — 2:50 PM
Raymond Rose says:
As always, great post Chuck. Dispelling myths is always a great thing to do because it shatters peoples misconceptions about what we writers do. As always, your sense of humor really makes your posts shine. I was going to do a story about a man’s penis stolen by black magic sorcerers but now… I’m fucked.
To comment on another comment: “Anne, I don’t completely agree with your statement “What really makes characters spring to life is a realistic psychological and behavioural map…”
Mostly, ’cause that’s stymieing.
If you plan out your characters to the nth degree, where’s the discovery? Where’s the joy of learning something new? If I started out every story with each character all mapped out, I’d be bored out of my mind. I wouldn’t have any of those “Ah ha!” moments! I wouldn’t have any of the joy of figuring out: “Holy shit! He’s actually a transvestite circus midget!”
For the record, that’s, oddly, happened twice.
June 29, 2011 — 2:54 PM
CC says:
I personally use “s/he decided to do Thing A instead of Thing B” as shorthand; I don’t mean it -literally-. When I was writing my last Nano novel, I kept trying to shove my female protagonist toward the love interest character I’d thought up for her. Instead, she had far more chemistry with the crabby old man character who was meant to be her ex-boss. I rewrote the last three chapters post-November and it flows much better now. I wouldn’t be nearly so mortified if someone put a gun to my head and demanded they read my draft.
If I say that X “decided she prefers Z”, I don’t mean I’m literally hearing her freakin’ voice. It’s shorthand for “the chemistry between X and Y really wasn’t working, and something planted the spark in my head to try X with Z, and it flowed much better.” I like my shorter way much better. It’s less time talking about writing and more time doing it.
June 29, 2011 — 5:08 PM
Neliza Drew says:
Maybe I just like pretending I have “voices in my head” because having people think I’m too crazy to hang out with gives me more time to write and read and screw around on Twitter.
June 29, 2011 — 7:22 PM
Wade says:
Thanks for this. I was sitting here, doing everything I could think of except write, and I said to myself, “Read Chuck, he’ll kick your ass.”
June 29, 2011 — 7:26 PM
John Doe says:
@oldestgenxer It’s easier to get laid than it is to write. Then why is it I find it easier to write out 300 some odd words in an hour each night and haven’t been laid in a year. I really think you’re sadly mistaken, while I’m just sad. So very, very sad…..>trudges off to use tears for ink<
@Chuck I'll write or I'll explode. Actually it works out like if I don't write I'll end up in the water tower with a high powered rifle taking off heads in a pink mist cause the voices of the fuckers from high school, who I hope turn into the voices of editors, just won't leave me alone till I exercise them with a new pen and old pen and lots of unholy blank pages.
June 29, 2011 — 9:51 PM
Anthony Elmore says:
1) Ideas need to steep; like good tea. That’s true until your about to write something down and you’re ransacking your brain trying to remember that great idea. I’ve got hundreds of .doc with one liners, paragraphs, synopsis and outlines. Most of them will never be used, but a few may just be the first line of my next story.
June 29, 2011 — 11:49 PM
Michael LaRocca says:
Yep, everybody’s got a book inside them. In most cases the damn thing should just stay there.
Hey, I’ve got two ideas. Which one is scarier?
1) Many people regularly visit Chairman Mao’s mausoleum to look at his corpse. And one day it comes to life as a brain-eating zombie and it’s gonna get you! Run for your lives!
2) Many people regularly visit Ho Chi Minh’s mausoleum to look at his corpse. And one day it comes to life as a brain-eating zombie and it’s gonna get you! Run for your lives!
June 30, 2011 — 9:57 AM
Angela says:
I know this has nothing whatsoever to do with this post but I just have to say: I JUST WON THIRD PLACE IN A CONTEST! This is the third contest I have entered. The first time I won first, the nothing, now third. Sorry, but I’m kind of throwing a party in my heart. And my brain. My brain is that drunk uncle you thought was cool as a kid now know he’s just a drunk uncle who knows nothing. SO HAPPY!
Sorry. Just had to get that out there.
June 30, 2011 — 12:51 PM
Angelina says:
I agree with everything you’ve said and love this post.
But I think you can agree that writers write because they WANT to not because they HAVE to and still say “I have to write or my head will explode”
I definitely have always written because I love it. Like most people, I seek to do the things I love as often as possible. It easily becomes a compulsion. Compulsions are not connections to anything divine but brought to us by experiencing corporeal pleasure and being greedy bastards-wanting as much of it as possible. Like sex. I have heard men describe how they feel when they have blue balls, they say things like “If I don’t have sex soon my balls with explode!” I’ve always been confident that a lack of sex will not result in exploding genitals but take the statement as an expression of how much they love and have come to rely on sex to make them feel good and right with the world. I feel that way about writing. My husband wishes I felt that way about sex.
And maybe you’re not mentally ill, but I AM. Writing every single day during my suicidal teen years is the only reason I’m not dead. Writing gave me a way to get serious bad-ass crap out of my head when I had absolutely no one to talk to about what I was experiencing. Talked to myself on paper and called it something else.
While the stuff I wrote back then makes my teeth hurt it’s so bad, I do believe that the urge I had to get this stuff out of my head and using writing as my way to do it served me very well as a writer in the long run. It created a daily habit of writing that I have kept up for 31 years. I do it every single day whether I have something to say or not, whether I have inspiration or not, whether I feel like it or not. Whenever people ask me how I find time for writing I say “It’s not so much that I ‘find time for writing’ as much as I have to find time for everything else.
June 30, 2011 — 2:59 PM
Athena McCormick says:
Not 100% settled on my opinion of myths 2 and 3. 2, Well, I don`t think anyone`s characters control them, but I have had two characters get into a relationship which wasn`t only not planned, it was specifically forbidden by my outline, character descriptions and story notes. I kept writing *they are just good friends* – and then the scene where they got together pretty much took over and wrote itself. Obviously, had I really wanted to, I would have been physically able to rewrite it the way I had originally planned, but I couldn`t bring myself to do it. And in the end, it worked out better the way it ended up.
As for number 3. I don`t have to write to avoid explosion, but I do have to write to avoid visual and auditory hallucinations – and boy do I wish I was joking. And the need to write I experienced during my late teens was nothing short of overwhelming; I would write on my arms if I couldn`t find paper, scratch things into notebooks with a safety pin if I didn`t have a pen, snap my fingers and make frantic `give me a pen` motions at total strangers, things like that. Age is mellowing me, though, and to be honest, I find it a bit sad.
My favourite (by which I mean most hated) writing myth: My writing will make me rich and famous. Sure, we all want to get there, and I certainly don`t think there`s anything wrong with striving for slash breaking your back to achieve it, but it`s like acting or any other art form: if your only reason for doing it is to get rich and famous, you should probably be doing something else.
July 1, 2011 — 2:08 PM