Seen a lot of folks giving advice to so-called “aspiring” writers these days, so, I figured what the hell? Might as well throw my dubious nuggets of wisdom into the stew. See if any of this tastes right to you.
1. No More Aspiring, Dingbats
Here are the two states in which you may exist: person who writes, or person who does not. If you write: you are a writer. If you do not write: you are not. Aspiring is a meaningless null state that romanticizes Not Writing. It’s as ludicrous as saying, “I aspire to pick up that piece of paper that fell on the floor.” Either pick it up or don’t. I don’t want to hear about how your diaper’s full. Take it off or stop talking about it.
2. Kick Your Lowest Common Denominator In The Kidneys
You can aspire to be a lot of other things within the writing realm, and that’s okay. You can aspire to be a published author. Or a bestselling author. Or a professional freelance writer. Or an author who plagiarizes his memoir and gets struck with a wooden mallet wielded by Oprah live on primetime television. You should aspire to be a better writer. We all should. Nobody is at the top of his game. We can all climb higher.
3. Aspiring Writers, Far As The Eye Can See
Nobody respects writers, yet everybody wants to be one (probably because everybody wants to be one). Point is, you want to be a writer? Good for you. So does that guy. And that girl. And him. And her. And that old dude. And that young broad. And your neighbor. And your mailman. And that chihuahua. And that copy machine. Ahead of you is an ocean of wannabe ink-slaves and word-earners. I don’t say this to daunt you. Or to be dismissive. But you have to differentiate yourself and the way you do that is by doing rather than be pretending. You will climb higher than them on a ladder built from your wordsmithy.
4. We All Booby-Trap The Jungle Behind Us
There exists no one way toward becoming a professional writer. You cannot perfectly walk another’s journey. That’s why writing advice is just that — it’s advice. It’s mere suggestion. Might work. Might not. Lots of good ideas out there, but none of it is gospel. One person will tell you this is the path. Another will point the other way and say that is the path. They’re both right for themselves, and they’re both probably wrong for you. We all chart our own course and burn the map afterward. It’s just how it is. If you want to find the way forward, then stop looking for maps and start walking.
5. The Golden Perfect Path Of The Scrivening Bodhisattvas
Point is, fuck the One True Way. Doesn’t exist. Nobody has answers — all you get are suggestions. Anybody who tells you they have The Answer is gassy with lies. Distrust such certainty and play the role of skeptic.
6. Yes, It Always Feels This Way
You will always have days when you feel like an amateur. When it feels like everybody else is better than you. You will have this nagging suspicion that someone will eventually find you out, call you on your bullshit, realize you’re the literary equivalent of a vagrant painting on the side of a wall with a piece of calcified poop. You will have days when the blank page is like being lost in a blizzard. You will sometimes hate what you wrote today, or yesterday, or ten years ago. Bad days are part of the package. You just have to shut them out, swaddle your head in tinfoil, and keep writing anyway.
7. Figure Out How You Write, Then Do That
You learn early on how to write. But for most authors it takes a long time to learn how they in particular write. Certain processes, styles, genres, character types, POVs, tenses, whatever — they will come more naturally to you than they do to others. And some won’t come naturally at all. Maybe you’ll figure this out right out of the gate. But for most, it just takes time — time filled with actual writing — to tease it out.
8. Finish Your Shit
I’m just going to type this out a dozen times so it’s clear: finish your shit. Finish your shit. Finish your shit. Finish your shit. Finish your shit. Finish your shit! FINISH YOUR SHIT. Finish. Your. Shit. Fiiiiniiiish yooooour shiiiiit. COMPLETO EL POOPO. Vervollständigen Sie Ihre Fäkalien! Finish your shit.
9. You Need To Learn The Rules. . .
…in order to know when they must be broken.
10. You Need To Break The Rules. . .
… in order to know why they matter.
11. What I Mean By Rules Is–
Writing is a technical skill. A craft. You can argue that storytelling is an art. You can argue that art emerges from good writing the way a dolphin riding a jet-ski emerges the longer you stare at a Magic Eye painting. But don’t get ahead of yourself, hoss. You still need to know how to communicate. You need to learn the laws of this maddening land. I’ve seen too many authors want to jump ahead of the skill and just start telling stories — you ever try to get ahead of your own skill level? I used to imagine pictures in my head and I’d try to paint them in watercolor and they’d end up looking like someone barfed up watery yogurt onto the canvas. I’d rail against this: WHY DON’T THEY LOOK BEAUTIFUL? Uhh, because you don’t know how to actually paint, dumb-fuck. You cannot exert your talent unless you first have the skill to bolster that talent.
12. Oh, The Salad Days Of College!
Why are the days of our youth known as “salad days?” Is “salad” really the image that conjures up the wild and fruitful times of our adolescence? “Fritos,” maybe. Or “Beer keg.” I dunno. What were we talking about? Ah! Yes. College. Do you need it? Do you need a collegiate education, Young Aspirant to the Penmonkey Order? Need, no. To get published nobody gives a flying rat penis whether or not you have a degree. They just care that you can write. Now, college and even post-grad work may help you become a better writer — it did for me! — though, I’d argue that the money you throw into the tank getting there may have been better spent on feeding yourself while you just learn how to write in whatever mousetrap you call a domicile. You can only learn so much from someone teaching you how to write. Eventually you just have to write.
13. Reading Does Not Make You A Writer
That’s the old piece of advice, isn’t it? “All you need to do is read and write to be a writer.” You don’t learn to write through reading anymore than you learn carpentry by sitting on a chair. You learn to write by writing. And, when you do read something, you learn from it by dissecting it — what is the author doing? How are characters and plot drawn together? You must read critically — that is the key.
14. Here Is Your Tin Cup, Your Hobo Bindle, Your Rat-Nest Undies
You’re going to starve for a while, so just get used to that now. Don’t quit your day job. Yet.
15. Commerce Is Not The Enemy Of Art
If you think commerce somehow devalues art, then we’re done talking. I got nothin’ for you. Money doesn’t devalue art any more than art devalues money — commerce can help art, hurt art, or have no effect. The saying isn’t Money is the root of all evil. It’s The love of money is the root of all evil. Commerce only damages art when the purpose of the art is only money. So it is with your writing.
16. Overnight Success Probably Isn’t
Suddenly on your radar screen is a big giant glowing mass like you’d see when a swarm of xenomorphs is closing fast on your position and it’s like, “Hey! This author appeared out of nowhere! Overnight success! Mega-bestseller! Million-dollar deal!” And then you get it in your head: “I can do that, too. I can go from a relative nobody to America’s Favorite Author, and Oprah will keep me in a gilded cage and she’ll feed me rare coffees whose beans were first run through the intestinal tract of a dodo bird.” Yeah, except, those who are “overnight successes,” rarely appear out of nowhere. It’s the same way that an asteroid doesn’t “just appear” before destroying earth and plunging it into a dust-choked dead-sun apocalypse: that fucker took a long time to reach earth, even if we didn’t notice. Overnight successes didn’t win the lottery. They likely toiled away in obscurity for years. The lesson is: work matters.
17. Meet The Universe In The Middle
My theory in life and writing is this — and it’s some deeply profound shit, so here, lower the lights, put on a serious turtleneck with a houndstooth elbow-patched jacket over it, and go ahead and smoke this weird hash I stole from an Afghani cult leader. The theory is this: meet the universe halfway and the universe will meet you in return. Explained more completely: there exist components of any career (but writing in particular) that are well beyond your grasp. You cannot control everything. Some of it is just left to fate. But, you still have to put in the work. You won’t get struck by lightning if you don’t run out the storm. You must maximize your chances. You do this by meeting the universe halfway. You do this by working.
18. Self-Publishing Is Not The Easy Way Out
Self-publishing is a viable path. It is not, however, the easy path. Get shut of this notion. You don’t just do a little ballerina twirl and a book falls out of your vagina. (And if that does happen, please see a doctor. Especially if you’re a dude.) It takes a lot of effort to bring a proper self-published book to life. Divest yourself of the idea that it’s the cheaper, easier, also-ran path. Faster, yes. But that’s all.
19. No, Total Stranger, I Don’t Want To Read Your Stuff
I really don’t. And neither does any other working author. It’s nothing personal. We just don’t know you from any other spam-bot lurking in the wings ready to dump a bucket of dick pills and Nigerian money over our heads. That’s not to say we won’t be friendly or are unwilling to talk to you about your work, but we’re already probably neck deep in the ordure of our own wordsmithy. (Or we’re drunk and confused at a Chuck-E-Cheese somewhere.) We cannot take the time to read the work of total strangers. Be polite if you’re going to ask. And damn sure don’t get mad when we say no.
20. Your Jealousy And Depression Do Not Matter
All writers get down on themselves. It’s in our wheelhouse. We see other writers being successful and at first we’re all like, “Yay, good for that person!” but then ten minutes later we get this sniper’s bullet of envy and this poison feeling shoots through the center of our brain like a railroad spike: BUT WHY NOT ME? And then we go take a bath with a toaster. Fuck that. Those feelings don’t matter. They don’t help you. They may be normal, they may be natural, but they’re not useful and they’re certainly not interesting.
21. Talking About Writing Is Not The Same As Writing
Needs no further comment.
22. Pack Your Echo Chamber With C4 And Blow It Skyward
Aspiring writers lock themselves away in echo chambers filled with other aspiring writers where one of two things often happen: one, everybody gives each other happy handjobs and nobody writes anything bad and everybody likes everything and it’s a big old self-congratulatory testicle-tickling festival; two, it’s loaded for bear by people who don’t know how to give good criticism and the criticism is destructive rather than constructive and it’s just a cloud of bad vibes swirling around your head like a plague of urinating bats. If you find yourself in this kind of echo chamber, blow a hole in the wall and crawl to freedom.
23. Learn To Take A Punch
Agents, editors, reviewers, readers, trolls on the Internet, they’re going to say things you don’t want to hear. A thick skin isn’t enough. You need a leathery carapace. A chitinous exoskeleton. Writing is a hard-knock career where you invite a bevy of slings and arrows into your face and heart. It is what it is.
24. You Can Do Whatever The Fuck You Want
As a writer, the world you create is yours and yours alone. Someone will always be there to tell you what you can’t do, but they’re nearly always wrong. You’re a writer. You can make anything up that you want. It may not be lucrative. It may not pay your mortgage. But we’re not talking about that. We’re talking about what’s going on between you and the blank page before you. It’s just you and the story. If you love it and you want to write it, then wire your trap shut and write it. And write it well. Expect nothing beyond this — expect no reward, expect no victory parade — but embrace the satisfaction it gives you to do your thing.
25. The One No-Fooling Rule
Is “write.” Write, write, write, motherfucking write. Write better today than you did yesterday and better tomorrow than you did today. Onward, fair penmonkey, onward. If you’re not a writer, something will stop you — your own doubts, hate from haters, a bad review, poor time management, a hungry raccoon that nibbles off your fingers, whatever. If you’re a writer, you’ll write. And you’ll never stop to look back.
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Michael John Bertrand says:
Actually, not only is talking about writing not the same as writing, it is actually anathema to writing. It dissipates that vital urge to communicate that is the basis of all good writing. Writings write because they feel they have something to say, and if you say it in words to your friends, you will be way less likely to take the harder route of saying it in words in your writing. Keep that shit bottled up and gives it only one way out : WRITING.
May 8, 2012 — 10:21 PM
Donna says:
I’m this real writer who aspires to live in a world where anyone cares.
May 14, 2012 — 4:02 PM
Aquanymous says:
Thanks for this post. Not only made me laugh, but also gave this “aspiring” writing a good kick in the pants.
May 15, 2012 — 4:00 PM
Georgia Twynham says:
Thank – you X
May 18, 2012 — 5:25 AM
Leanne says:
Yup, yup, yup and yup. And especially all praise to point 4.
May 25, 2012 — 6:41 PM
Caleb Dorsey says:
Excellent, and thank you for the advice. I am at the beginning of a long journey in what looks to be a jalopy, but that just means there’s room for polish right?
May 28, 2012 — 9:10 PM
Emma says:
That bit about the ballerina twirl and the vagina just killed me.
June 24, 2012 — 8:04 AM
Virginia says:
Really needed to read this today! Thanks!!
July 4, 2012 — 5:06 AM
Christopher Wilde says:
Addendum to #22, when your writer’s group becomes a drinking group that just bitches about how they aren’t writing, walk away.
I miss those guys.
July 5, 2012 — 3:28 PM
Christopher J Garcia says:
There is one piece of advice not here that I truly believe is the most important: know when you suck, know when to quit. I gave up on trying to be published a long time ago because I realized I was just not good enough and nothing I would do would ever make me good enough. So, I took to writing whatever I wanted, publishing it in my zine and THAT has made me a happy guy who can write whatever I want without having to worry about how it is received. It’s made me far happier than I would be struggling to catch a toe in the door, and it’s even gotten me a few writing gigs that never would have looked at me previously.
July 5, 2012 — 8:36 PM
Carol Morgan says:
I love this! I am printing it off and hanging it above my computer. #8 Finish your shit –is my BIGGEST fault. I have over 20 novels in my computer (all with at least 50,000 words)!! And I LOVE #15: Commerce only damages art when the purpose of the art is only money. (i.e. John Locke novels)
July 16, 2012 — 11:18 PM
Sarah says:
Love everything about this post. It made me laugh as well as sit up and think “oh yeah… damn…”
I used to make the mistake of saying “I want to be a writer”. Actually, it was only recently when I’d been writing my blog for five?? years and knocked out a few drafts of a novel, writing every single fucking day when I realised “holy shit that means I’m a writer.” Not because I was an established, published, respected author, but because I wrote stuff. Terrible, awful stuff that looked like someone had taken a bunch of random sentences and shoved them in a blender, but I’d still written words, a whole lot of them, and that counted.
Thanks for the reminder 🙂
July 24, 2012 — 10:40 PM
Darling says:
I needed this more than ever. This was AWESOME!
August 5, 2012 — 5:35 PM
carol hugh says:
thanks chuck….your 25 points were the best thing I’ve read in years….loved no. 8!!!!!!!!
August 8, 2012 — 3:20 PM
Linda Louise Rigsbee says:
Now THAT was good writing – and good advice. I chuckled all the way through it. Nothing goes down smoother than humor. Hats off to you. loved #1!
August 10, 2012 — 4:37 PM
Angela says:
I absolutely enjoyed this. I found myself laughing out loud at the blunt blurbs and raw anectodes!! BRAVO! I LOVED “Just finish your shit”!!! LOL! Thank you~
August 22, 2012 — 10:06 AM
Allena says:
:/ I’m late to the party, BUT I want to say that although reading alone won’t make you a good writer, it supplies some of the most important tools. Reading, over the course of a lifetime, simply PACKS your brain with things that you MUST know to be a good writer. For example, I know where semi-colons go. I know by sound. I know by years of reading good prose that correctly uses semi-colons. I didn’t learn it intentionally, and I didn’t learn it from the exercises on it in 5th grade, then 7th grade and so on. I learned it by the sound in my head.
Ok, not that semi colons make good writing, obvs. But that sound- that data input that you get from years of reading good prose- it generalizes to other parts of “good writing.”
You don’t learn to be a carpenter from sitting in a chair, but you sure as hell learn a good chair from a bad chair, what you like in a chair, what the best parts of a chair are, the shape of a chair, the ways people use chairs, and so forth. If you’d never sat in a chair- never gave a thought to chairs- how would you know what kind of chair you want to build, and how the pieces of that go together. Where would you get that data? What would be your frame of reference.
Yes, you learn from doing. But you’ve got to access that data somewhere, first. Reading GOBS of GOOD SOLID writing is a sure path to improving your own writing.
September 11, 2012 — 4:19 PM
Leon Enriquez says:
CHUCK:
Thank you for the 25 Tips! A writer’s wake-up call!
My gratitude in words… Enjoy!
PENSMANSHIP
P – Pen and ink stains, purge of bold plot;
E – Etch from raw deal, end of blunt rage;
N – Now feel the pain, new lines of thought;
S – Surmount this hill, sustain inked stage;
M – Make words congeal, mull written page;
A – Apt write induce, apply fierce draft;
N – Note clear appeal, nerves raw with rage;
S – Sense thought seduced, slide your own craft;
H – Heed voice that yearns, hurts that seed flow;
I – Ink stains induce, inscribe more stuff;
P – Please write, I learn, primal as glow!
LEON
Singapore
September 20, 2012 — 9:32 PM
Rebecca says:
Optimistic pessimism at its finest. Well said.
October 8, 2012 — 8:45 AM
Ana Vi says:
“Finish your shit.”
I felt like that was specifically for me. I’ll finish my shit, from now on. I will always FINISH MY SHIT.
October 11, 2012 — 11:48 PM
S.L. Bartlett says:
This has to be the most honest, no-bullshit article I have ever read. I loved it! Thanks for writing this. Bravo!
October 12, 2012 — 11:26 AM
Brian B. King says:
Hell, I don’t need any advice anymore.
October 13, 2012 — 10:32 PM
Jennifer Walker says:
I don’t read you nearly often enough. When I do, you never disappoint. So, so, so true…every word.
October 15, 2012 — 4:03 PM
Samantha Finley says:
I’m a niche-subject blogger. I’d like to be more than that. Thanks for the no-bullshit advice. ‘ Much appreciated.
October 31, 2012 — 10:47 AM
Stephen Rustad says:
I was in the Army and the Treasury Dept so I understand that swearing, per se, is the way guys talk. That said, your self-conscious vulgarity merely obscures the profound wisdom you have to share. Man, you speak the truth, rat-penis macho swagger notwithstanding.
November 3, 2012 — 1:23 PM
terribleminds says:
@Stephen —
It’s part of my voice. And I don’t mean that artificially — I mean, it’s how I talk, and it’s how the advice comes out, good or bad.
— c.
November 3, 2012 — 3:53 PM
Norman Sutcliffe says:
After a night with a Bad Burrito…This all looks (and sounds), familiar. Especially 21, 22; though 23 speaks to my innards as succinctly as those Mexican Jumping Beans I had for dinner. Thanks. Good rot!
November 3, 2012 — 5:26 PM
Daveronius says:
Sometimes I think the most creative thing I will ever do is succeed at number 8. I see myself chatting with Jon Stewart about my Oscar-nominated script, and apologizing on national TV to every boss I’ve ever had for taking so long to finish my shit.
December 11, 2012 — 2:50 PM