You are the sun at the center of your own narrative universe. You are its god. You are its savior.
I am not its god. I am not its savior.
Let’s rewind a little.
I get emails.
These emails ask me things like, How do I get motivated? or How do I get inspired?
Or, worse, they want to know how I “do it” every day. Not a reference to my sexual prowess (were you to ask the intimate partners of my life, they may speak of a lack of prowess reminiscent of the fumblings of an inept-yet-eager lube-soaked chimpanzee), but rather it’s a reference to my ability to hunker down and just… write.
I do it every day. And people want to know how.
They want hard answers. They want a button to push, a lever to yank. More troubling, they seem to want a menu of options. Discard this one, pick that one, the perfect meal suited to the eater.
I have one answer for you.
It is not a nice, nor easy, answer.
That answer is: “You just do.”
How do you get motivated?
You just do.
How do you get inspired?
You just do.
How do you write every day? How do you finish a book? How do you learn to spin a great narrative, to create memorable characters, to put pen to paper and fingers to keys and explode your heart and your mind with the power of motherfucking stories?
You.
Just.
Do.
This may seem like an admonishment against writing advice, that all the shit that I sling here is worthless because the reality is, the very act of writing is the answer. Do not misunderstand: writing advice has value, but it only has value to those who are willing to execute and implement. All the writing-talk and story-speak in the world won’t do more than tickle your theoretical story’s imaginary testicles if you’re unwilling to commit the time and effort it takes to grab the words from inside your ribcage and smash them like overripe fruit on the page.
Only when you choose to open that door by embracing action does this stuff matter.
Until then, it’s all just candy-floss and elf-dreams, man. It’s ether. It’s nothing.
Action. Execution. Implementation.
Do. Write. Finish.
I know, you’re saying, “That’s easier said than done.” I know it is! So fucking what? A big-ass boulder tumbles down from the mountaintop and falls on your hand and pins the limb, you either gnaw through your arm like a goddamn coyote or you die under the rock. Door won’t open? Kick it down. Wall blocking your path? Bash it with your skull until it falls or you do.
Life’s getting in the way? I’m sorry, that’s how life works. Life is a series of obstructions — it’s speedbumps all the way down. You’re depressed? Get in line. You’re depressed. So’s that woman over there and she wrote 1000 words today, and yesterday, and the day before. You think I don’t deal with depression? Of course I do. We writers are tailor-made for that. I know, I sound unsympathetic — trust me, it’s the opposite. I’m completely sympathetic. I’ve been there. I’m sometimes there still. It doesn’t change the cold, hard fact that all the power lies with you. In your brain. In your hands. Nobody ever said it was going to be easy. Did you want it to be easy? What fun is easy? Easy is a value of zero. And surely you want more than nothing? Writing makes you pay. In blood and tears and frustration. You do it because you love it. Not because it’s a warm bed at your back but because it’s sharp stones under your feet spurring you forward.
It’s the wolf at your heels. It’s the fire in your heart. Wolves bite. Fire burns.
Sometimes it hurts. Sometimes it’s scary. Sometimes it’s hard and makes no sense and sometimes the frustration gets so bad you just want to dunk your head in a bucket of whiskey and hide your tears inside the liquid burn but, but, but —
Fuck it. Shut up! Write. You get your years and you get no more. These are your days. No Muse is going to breathe a hot sigh of inspiration up your hiney-hole. I’m not going to come to your house and crawl inside your skin and bind my bones to yours with the purpose of forcing you to crap out all your big bad story-words. Oh, you have writer’s block? Boo-hoo! Writer’s Block has as much power as you give it — it’s a Weeping Angel, so bind it to the earth with your gaze.
This is creation!
This is the act of forging something out of nothing. It demands sacrifice. It’s you carving off parts of yourself to a future without promises, you spilling power and grief and embracing chaos and uncertainty all in the hopes of trying to make sense of this thing you do in the sheer bloody-minded chance that something you write will finally matter but the trick is, it all matters, because writing is how we connect with ourselves and the world beyond our margins. Writing is how we tether ourselves to god, a god in a narrative world that is, of course, us.
You’re the Muse that inspires you. You’re the god to which you sacrifice. You’re the battering ram made of unholy fire that tears down Writer’s Block. You’re the knife that cuts the arm off, you’re the boulder that must be pulverized, you’re the devil in the details.
You’re the one-armed coyote or you’re the dead sonofabitch under the rock.
I can try to tell you how to write.
But first you have to be willing to write.
You only get the map when you step through the door.
It only gets done by doing it.
Will yourself to create.
Accept no excuses.
Brook no fear.
Shut up.
Fuck it.
Write.
Laura K. Cowan says:
I just did. 🙂 After overcoming some pretty serious bullying targeted at my writing, a chronic illness, and severe anxiety, I finally learned how to start, how to write, how to rewrite, how to just do it. And how to finish. My first novel debuted today, and I can hardly believe how far I’ve come with just the difference determination made. First novel published. Now I publicize. And write the next novel. And the next. This is the life. I think you just decide that no other life will do, and living with the obstacles and overcoming them again and again is worth the pain, and that’s how you do.
http://laurakcowan.com/2013/02/12/the-little-seer-debut-novel-of-dreaming-novelist-laura-k-cowan-now-available/
February 13, 2013 — 12:08 AM
rebeccadouglass says:
I think I’ll print this out and pin it to the end of my nose or whatever else gets between me and writing.
February 13, 2013 — 12:22 AM
Rautenbach says:
Your post has fulfilled the promise of its heading. Well done and thank you! I know from personal experience that people LOVE to collect writing advice to assuage the fear-dragon that prevents them from writing. People love the *idea* of being a writer more than they love the act of writing… it boils down to fear of commitment.
You’ve put into words the most profound concept that kicked my ass from thinking about writing to actually writing: “Fuck it. Shut up! Write. You get your years and you get no more. These are your days. No Muse is going to breathe a hot sigh of inspiration up your hiney-hole.” Love it!
February 13, 2013 — 12:35 AM
T.L. Bodine says:
You, sir, write the BEST ass-kicking inspirational speeches.
February 13, 2013 — 12:53 AM
Sean Riley says:
I hate to say it, but… then fucking how?
How do you inspire yourself? How do you MAKE yourself? If you’ve not got it in you, if you can’t summon the motivation, if you can’t figure out why on earth you should be letting fingers hit the keypad, then fucking HOW?
February 13, 2013 — 12:58 AM
Veronica Sicoe says:
If you don’t want it, don’t do it. There are other ways to spend a good afternoon.
February 13, 2013 — 2:14 AM
tigs (@syzara) says:
Veronica Sicoe is right.
In the case you do want to anyway:
Sit down.
Write.
I’ve spend whole afternoons just writing down about writing down because I couldn’t find the words to start. Had to get past the ‘what the freaking hell am I doing? why would my words mean anything to anybody else anyway?’. It’s not relevant. It’s fear talking. If there is a will to write, you will write.
When I finally got past that fear, I became one of those women up in Chuck’s post who sat over there and wrote those 1000 words for days, weeks, months.
In hindsight, I would never have believed anyone if they had told me I could actually write a story. Fear is a bitch that way.
There is no ‘why’. You either want to put down words or you don’t. The only thing you’re doing to yourself is making your life miserable with wanting to have a reason to put them down. If writing is your thing, you will get those words down. Just sit down and write.
/with which I am repeating Chuck’s post.
February 13, 2013 — 4:52 AM
jeffo says:
” If you’ve not got it in you, if you can’t summon the motivation, if you can’t figure out why on earth you should be letting fingers hit the keypad, then fucking HOW?” in that case, maybe you don’t. Maybe it’s not for you.
One of the things I do is think about what I want from all this. I love to write, really, so I do. But I *also* want you to read my stories. And I want to get *paid* for my stories. To get you to read my work, to get paid for my work, I have to finish what I start. And to that, I have to sit down and work.
That’s how I do it.
February 13, 2013 — 6:00 AM
terribleminds says:
I feel like this question is a joke.
February 13, 2013 — 6:39 AM
crossedstars says:
The same way you go to the gym when you don’t feel like it, or go to work on a day when all you really want to do is stay home, or shovel the drive when it’s snowing because as little as you want to go do that thing, you know that not doing it is worse. And then, of course, you do the thing, and sometimes it sucks as much as you think it will, but usually it actually turns out to help you feel okay. And the next day you do it again.
You only put it off because you think it’s a choice you don’t have to make.
February 13, 2013 — 9:27 AM
auroranibley says:
I was once lucky enough to meet and talk awhile with Stephen Adly Guirgis, a Pulitzer-winning playwright, and of course someone there asked him what the secret was to writing. He said, “The first and hardest thing: Sit down, and stay down.”
This is by way of echoing Chuck (thank you Chuck, as always), and answering Sean, above me.
February 13, 2013 — 1:05 AM
Remi Jones says:
I get emails.
We can email you?
February 13, 2013 — 1:09 AM
terribleminds says:
Sure! My contact form has the address, but it’s terribleminds at gmail dot com.
— c.
February 13, 2013 — 9:39 AM
Gabrielle Byrne says:
Woot! I mean, fucking woot!
February 13, 2013 — 1:15 AM
Jules says:
If (WHEN! I HOPE! EEE!) I get published, you, sir, will be mentioned prominently in the acknowledgments.
You will, too.
By which I mean: thank you for another great inspirational…inspiration.
February 13, 2013 — 1:25 AM
Veronica Sicoe says:
As always, the ultimate truth of HOW TO BE A WRITER is to fucking write and stop bitching about it being hard. Thanks, Chuck.
February 13, 2013 — 2:16 AM
Nana Prah says:
So True!
February 13, 2013 — 4:15 AM
kaytee says:
Think it through. How will you feel if you don’t write today, the next day, ever again? Will you regret it? Do you care about your story? If you don’t tell it, no one will. Does that matter? Maybe not, but it’s up to you to decide.
Also a practical suggestion – make it a habit. You get up in the morning, you brush your teeth. Do you really *want* to brush your teeth? Do you feel that flame of motivation everyday? No, it’s just become a habit and you don’t even think about it. Pick a time every day, sit down, open your notebook or your file and sit there for, say, 30 minutes. Write something, anything. It might be shit but that doesn’t matter. Just get over that inertia and it will be easier next time.
I wrote this for myself as much as for you…
February 13, 2013 — 4:22 AM
kaytee says:
Oops, that was meant to be a reply to Sean Riley…
February 13, 2013 — 4:30 AM
tigs (@syzara) says:
Thank you, Chuck. It was the ‘sit down and write’ advice that got me started two years ago.
I will keep this in a safe place for when I need a reminder.
February 13, 2013 — 5:08 AM
jeffo says:
Great stuff, Chuck.
February 13, 2013 — 6:02 AM
Alan Baxter says:
FUCK YEAH!
February 13, 2013 — 6:32 AM
Francis Knight says:
Word.
Nothing gets in the way of me writing. Okay, perhaps one of my kids falling off the roof…rephrase – nothing short of an emergency gets in the way of my writing. Depressed? (I suffer from biploar so yeah, I know down in the pit, I’m worthless why bother carrying on, life is futile and meaningless and so am I depression) I write. Ill? I write. Bad day at work? I write. I have no more hours in my day than anyone else. I *make* time.
Writers *write*. And once you get into it – the act of writing begets more writing, more ideas, more..EVERYTHING.
So if you want to write, write. If it doesn’t matter to you, then don’t. Simples.
February 13, 2013 — 6:43 AM
Stephen Gallagher (@brooligan) says:
I’d love to be able to claim that I got this from reading Aldous Huxley, but I actually got it from a Batman comic that quoted him. There’s always a “player on the other side” — whatever you want out of life, some total stranger out there wants it too. While you’re bitching away, that person is working to get it.
February 13, 2013 — 6:52 AM
angie arcangioli says:
Do you offer a swivel chair with a glue seat, like those sticky mouse traps? It might be the time to add this to the Wendig merchandise along with free t-shirt that says. “my ass is in the chair”
February 13, 2013 — 7:52 AM
Audrey's Writing Closet says:
“No Muse is going to breathe a hot sigh of inspiration up your hiney-hole”
LMAO – Epic!
February 13, 2013 — 8:03 AM
Amy says:
I needed this post today. Thank you! I don’t have much to do at work besides dreaming, plotting and scheming, but then when I get home “something” (aka excuses) usually come creeping out of the shadows and kidnap my attention. I need to crane kick that shit in the face and just write. I can dream all I want but they’ll just stay unreachable whisps of fancy unless I do something about it and I can’t blame anyone else except myself. No one will get my story out except me.
February 13, 2013 — 8:14 AM
Kathleen says:
Amen.
February 13, 2013 — 8:19 AM
Cari Hislop says:
If someone’s asking How questions there is a good chance they’re inert from fear. You can sit down to do it and then find yourself frozen like a statue. I somehow developed a fear of painting. I recently decided I’d just do it. I got everything ready; the paint and the water and the lovely big piece of paper that’s been taped and ready to go for nearly two years. And then I sat here frozen. I know I can paint, but I couldn’t. After half an hour I put everything away feeling like a failure. Instead of facing a large expensive piece of water colour paper I need to set aside my grandiose self-expectations and allow myself to paint-doodle on a scrap of paper.
When people ask me how to write I tell them to start small. If you have large stories in your head, it can be like standing at the foot of Mt Everest in a t-shirt and jeans and knowing to finish means you’ll somehow have to reach the top. With that mentality, logically you won’t survive. Part of your brain interprets story telling as facing certain death. Tell yourself for the next few months you’re only going to write 50 word stories. A story has a beginning a middle and an end. If you can write a 50 word story you can write a book, it just takes longer. If the thought of a 50 word story makes you freeze then write a diary. Vomit your life story onto the page for a few months every day. Teach your brain that writing down words isn’t going to destroy you and then sneak in the odd paragraph of description or just start writing a story.
February 13, 2013 — 8:20 AM
karen Y. bynum says:
Wow! Amen!! That was EPIC.
February 13, 2013 — 8:22 AM
Michael Kofi says:
I am feeling this. It is all beautiful. In a world where Political Correctness and Fairness are prevalent (a bid to make us weaker as people, I believe), harsh needed truths just have to be told. And I for one, would rather embrace the pain and discomfort of my plight, than to have the pain and discomfort of life be placed upon me, through my LAZINESS, SPOILTNESS (I know that isn’t even a word) and WANT FOR EASE AND PLEASURES.
Thank You,
Much appreciated
February 13, 2013 — 8:32 AM
Damian Trasler says:
Because of you, Michael Kofi, “spoiltness” IS now a word. You have increased the potential vocabulary of the world. Thank you.
February 19, 2013 — 4:58 PM
Alexa Muir says:
This a thousand times. If you want to write, then write. If you don’t, then don’t. It really is that simple and that hard.
I’ve starting using gamification to motivate myself, not just with writing but with everyday life things. I know I’m a terrible procrastinator, but getting little rewards, even if they’re just virtual, is enough to keep me going. So another bit of advice from me would be: Think of ways to reward yourself for when you DO write. It’s amazing how quickly it will turn into a habit.
February 13, 2013 — 8:37 AM
Shelly Tennyson Taylor says:
I adore your matter-of-fact writing.
Writer’s block is always in our mind and not our fingers. When I am blocked I sit down at my computer and write, 99% of the time that block is dissolved on finger with keyboard contact.
February 13, 2013 — 8:43 AM
Todd Moody says:
Bing Bing Bing! Bullseye! On the nose! A whole lot of other things signifying that you hit the mark with this post. I sat in a class last night about being productive as a writer. This is essentially it.
Thank you!
February 13, 2013 — 8:45 AM
Jenna Blue says:
Chuck,
Love this kick in the pants as I work through a 30 day, 30K challenge we call JeRoWriMo at New Jersey Romance Writers. I’ll share it with the other moaners and groaners on our loop.
I burst out laughing at “No Muse is going to breathe a hot sigh of inspiration up your hiney-hole.”
Keep it coming, & thanks!
Jenna
February 13, 2013 — 8:45 AM
J.R. McLemore says:
Fuck yeah!
February 13, 2013 — 9:06 AM
Puck says:
Well *that’s* the most inspiring thing I’ve read all month. Definitely a good kick in the ass to get me going. Thanks.
February 13, 2013 — 9:09 AM
D. A. Adams says:
“You have to go to considerable trouble to live differently from the way the world wants you to live. That’s what I’ve discovered about writing. The world doesn’t want you to do a damn thing. If you wait till you got time to write a novel or time to write a story or time to read the hundred thousands of books you should have already read–if you wait for the time, you’ll never do it. ‘Cause there ain’t no time; world don’t want you to do that. World wants you to go to the zoo and eat cotton candy, preferably seven days a week.” Harry Crews
February 13, 2013 — 9:14 AM
Josh Loomis says:
This is right up there with “carve the time out in bloody chunks” in terms of things I need to make myself do every single day.
February 13, 2013 — 9:22 AM
Brandy says:
Oh, Chuck. You’re gonna get some emails…
Writing is like other art. You do it or you don’t.
February 13, 2013 — 9:22 AM
betsydornbusch says:
I think the main misconception about writing is that it is actually plain old work, like any other job. Take the romance out of it a bit, eh?
February 13, 2013 — 9:36 AM
Jon says:
Yeah, that’s easy for you to say.
But how do *I* do it?
(kidding!)
February 13, 2013 — 9:41 AM
Laura Hughes, MittensMorgul says:
If you need more advice than that to get you to the keyboard, then what you need isn’t inspiration or motivation to write. What you need is a new hobby.
So many people tell me they have always wanted to write a book. I used to ask them why they didn’t give it a try. Nearly every time the excuse was “I just don’t have time.” It just made me sad, so now I just smile and nod politely when people tell me about the book they always dreamed of writing.
February 13, 2013 — 9:46 AM
James R. Tuck says:
You’ve got 40 or so comments saying: “Fuck yeah.”
But here’s one more.
February 13, 2013 — 9:47 AM
Barry Le Bombe says:
Best article I’ve read in years.
February 13, 2013 — 9:56 AM
Jeff Chapman says:
Yes. The options are “suck it up, princess” or “stop talking about it”. It takes time for some to realize this.
February 13, 2013 — 10:09 AM
mark matthews says:
As somebody who has never moderated a single thing in my life, I don’t have an issue with starting, it’s stopping.
February 13, 2013 — 10:22 AM
Gregory Lynn says:
I’m gonna need this on a t-shirt.
February 13, 2013 — 10:23 AM
terribleminds says:
All of it?!
🙂
— c.
February 13, 2013 — 10:29 AM
Todd Lucas (@ToddLucas5) says:
Preferably someone else’s t-shirt, so you can read it without looking like you’re having a seizure.
February 13, 2013 — 3:30 PM
Alisa Russell says:
Thank you for this. I’ve had some health issues the past few weeks which have made it difficult to write as much as I’ve wanted. But, I made a goal of posting an entry in my blog every day during the week, just so I could write something, and I’ve done that. Now, I’m working on getting back into my story, and I know I can do that too. Thanks again.
February 13, 2013 — 10:38 AM
Shuray M says:
Alway the bearer of bad news or Truth. Some people are born writers and some are not. Everyone can learn to get better but very few are spitting out award winning novels with ease and finesse. You are either willing to put in the hard work or not. You should know your own motivation and if not this may not be for you.
February 13, 2013 — 10:39 AM
terribleminds says:
I don’t agree that people are born writers. Writers are made by choice, not by birth or talent or any of that. It’s work — and the decision to do that work — that is the fire that forges the writer.
Or, so I believe.
— c.
February 13, 2013 — 10:43 AM
rebeccadouglass says:
I think you’re right only to a point. I certainly know people without a story in them. I know a lot more, though, who could write, if they cared enough to learn the craft and make the time to stick the arse in the chair and do it. But it’s not a passion with them, so they never will (and mostly that’s okay–that’s the choice thing).
February 13, 2013 — 11:03 AM
Elisabeth Anne says:
Funny how good writing advice so often turns out to be good life advice. Thanks Chuck.
February 13, 2013 — 10:43 AM
Els says:
‘These are your days’ indeed…nothing like a ticking clock to get you writing. Great advice. Thank you. I am getting back to it right now.
February 13, 2013 — 10:54 AM
Louloubell says:
Well said.
February 13, 2013 — 11:04 AM