There’s this thing that happens sometimes.
You’re chugging along, doing your thing — and in this case, I mean a creative thing. Maybe you’re a writer, a painter, a cheese-maker, a Brookyln-based hipster widget artisan, a techno-fuck-shaman — then suddenly comes this moment where you catch a glimpse of another human being doing that same creative thing you do. And they’re doing it at such a level, you experience a moment of awe that punctuates the moment before you tumble into darkness. You step onto this grease-slick slope, sliding down through the shadow of envy, doubt, uncertainty. You feel smaller and smaller as you fall farther and farther. You tumble face-first into the revelation of your own inadequacy, your grotesque and unconquerable imperfection, your worst failures —
And suddenly your doubt has the hunger and gravity of a collapsing star.
You feel like you want to go to sleep.
You don’t want to count sheep but instead, count your mistakes.
Again and again, over and over.
You’ll never operate at that level, you think.
You’ll never write with such elegance. Or tell such a glorious story. Or make people think and feel the same way this book has made you think and feel. You’ll never publish as many books. Or for the same amount of money. Or have the same number of readers or win the same awards or have as many fans or be anything at all, ever, ever, ever.
You’ll never compare.
You’re a mote of dust in a giant’s eye.
This feeling is a pit.
It is a slick-walled, vertical pit.
It is lightless and it is empty of anything and everyone but you.
I’m telling you this because I feel it, too, sometimes.
I’m telling you this because some of you have told me that I make you feel that way. Which makes me laugh because I don’t feel I could possibly deserve that, and the belly laughs keep on coming because I feel this all the time when comparing myself to other writers. I’m constantly teetering on the edge of that chasm.
But I try not to fall anymore.
Just as I want you to try not to fall, either.
You will never get anywhere comparing yourself to others.
It seems useful, at first — they represent a goal you can achieve, and that might work if other writers were a bullseye you could hit, or a percentage you could nail. They’re not. Their work is always outside yours. Their work will always be different, and it will always feel stronger than your own. Someone will always be doing better. Sometimes by millimeters, sometimes by miles. Getting published doesn’t fix that. Publishing ten books doesn’t fix it. Awards don’t fix it. They might pad you a little. They might buffer you — a bulwark against the buffeting winds of wild imperfection. But you will always find your way back to that pit. You will always look in the broken mirror of foul water and see a version of you that fails in comparison to others.
Stand against this feeling.
Remind yourself that you are you and they aren’t.
Be clear with your own traitorous mind: they feel it, too. We all feel it.
Step away from the pit by recognizing that while you aren’t perfect, you can always do better. We can commit to improvement. We can challenge ourselves. In this great big creative RPG we can level up in a character class of one — the character class only we belong to. (I am a BEARDED WENDIGO KNIGHT and you are not. Who are you? You’re someone I can never be. And that’s amazing.)
You’ll never be them.
You can only be you.
You can improve yourself in that direction only.
And that direction is opposite of the pit. It’s walking away from the sucking void.
It’s walking toward yourself and your own mighty efforts and endeavors.
I just wanted to say all this because we all go there. And we can all get through it. None of us are singular beings in this feeling. It hits some of us harder than others (and to those who manifest this as bonafide depression, I can only remind you again that you are genuinely not alone). But it’s something we all experience. Doubt. Frustration. Fear. The envy of others. It won’t do much for you. It’s a poison. Stop drinking it. Spit it out.
Step away from the pit.
Be you. Don’t be me.
And create the things that only you can create.
Matt says:
Thank you Chuck
August 26, 2014 — 12:11 AM
Rebecca Douglass says:
Thanks, Chuck. I needed that. I’ve been suffering a bit in the self-esteem department lately. And I know the best way out is to get to work, but then you look at whoever you look at and wonder if it’s even worth the effort. . .
August 26, 2014 — 12:16 AM
Sarah_Madison says:
I feel this way. All. The. Time. (Okay, that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but frequently. Very frequently) I try to remind myself of these very words. I think this is going to be one of those posts I need to laminate and put up on the wall where I can see it on a daily basis. It would be a bitch to get it done as a tattoo. 😉
August 26, 2014 — 12:21 AM
Chris L. Owens says:
Thanks for sharing this – you nailed it!
August 26, 2014 — 12:31 AM
Kirk Jolly says:
There’s that old saying, “You’re one in a million kid,” which is meant to make you feel so unique and special, but if you are one in a million, that means that there are 7,000 other people on this planet that are exactly like you. I guess “You,re one in approximately seven billion,” doesn’t quite have the same ring to it.
But you’re right, there is no point in comparing yourself to others. The true test is to compare yourself to yourself. See where you were the day before and try to always progress in whatever endeavor you are currently undertaking. That is all you can really do.
I actually caught myself in this trap a few months back. I started writing a zombie serial novel about a year and a half ago. Long story short, I haven’t exactly been consistent in my writing and have only release two short parts in that time (#3 coming soon). In my reading of the zombie genre, I stumbled upon another indie writer who started almost at exactly the same time as me and he has released 10 parts of his serial and 2 parts of a new series. His output is 6x greater than mine and his sales are vastly better as well. It got into my head. I started trying to compare myself to him and it depressed me and made me stop writing for a bit. I got stuck in a vicious edit, rewrite, edit, rewrite, but never actually finish writing cycle.
Then I realized for every similarity there was between us, there were at least as many differences. The parallels I was seeing were mostly imagined and were really just stemming from my guilty conscience about wasting time not writing. I fell into the trap of being afraid to fail so I just didn’t try instead. Even though I haven’t sold a ton, I’ve gotten great reviews and I need to focus on that success and move forward. I’ve been much more productive since.
August 26, 2014 — 12:40 AM
19michele66thompson says:
Thanks!I’m climbing out of the pit 🙂
August 26, 2014 — 12:41 AM
tanaudel says:
Thank you.
And people send you links to amazing works by other people which should be flattering but is just *crushing* (illustration or writing). I have to keep saying, just be me. Don’t rely just on story, or just on technical fireworks. How I – and only I – put tale and technique together sets it apart. Enough people seem to like it. Just breathe. Just keep swimming.
Although I find it useful to also have a less personal, more objectively assessable activity to turn to in these times that try the soul. Dishes. Going to the office. Doing my tax. Maths, maths is good. I may be rubbish at it, but at least I (a) am sure about that and (b) don’t feel like a lesser person as a result.
August 26, 2014 — 12:42 AM
mirrorknobdream says:
thank you. thank you.. thank you.
August 26, 2014 — 1:08 AM
ssbittner says:
Thanks, Chuck. It helps to hear this from you, who have more publications in one year than many of us can aspire to. It’s easy to forget that there’s always someone better off, and that the fact can’t invalidate your own work. I recently began my own blog, and it’s easy to look at established, talented bloggers and feel despair.
But everyone starts at that point. We just have to get working.
August 26, 2014 — 1:11 AM
Becki Jayne Crossley says:
I think we all need something like this stapled above our computers/typewriters/stone and chisels to remind ourselves every time we sit down to create words. Such an accurate description of feeling, down with it!
August 26, 2014 — 1:19 AM
Jan O'Connell says:
Thank you. Yesterday was one of THOSE days. “Who am I to pretend to be a REAL writer?” I asked myself. Even though I’ve actually earned a living by writing for decades. But that’s advertising. It doesn’t count, right? With just one book under my belt and being right at the beginning of all that trick self-promotion stuff, it’s easy to have a crisis of confidence. You reassure me. I can keep doing this.
August 26, 2014 — 1:19 AM
Kari says:
I love you, Chuck. Just for this. Because I need this (and other posts of yours) framed on my wall where I can see them every day and remind myself that I can do this and that it honestly doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks. I need to be me — and that I need to be the best me that the world has ever seen.
August 26, 2014 — 1:49 AM
Grace says:
I had it happen when I was about ten and thirty-seven years later I haven’t completely got over it. It’s comforting to have it written about, like this, and to think of walking away from a pit and towards myself. And it’s always good to know one is not alone. Thanks!!
August 26, 2014 — 2:36 AM
mhender668 says:
I get that way when I read Nick Cave or Cormac McCarthy. Compared to them I’m just a semi-naked ape pounding the keyboard with open hands hoping for something to happen. Sometimes it does, but I’ll never measure up, I know that.
August 26, 2014 — 2:46 AM
Jessa Slade says:
I’ve been standing next to that pit for a couple months. I find that I wander closer when I’m NOT writing enough, for whatever reason/excuse. Actively creating steps me back from the edge. I’m back on my schedule now, so ef you, pit!
August 26, 2014 — 2:59 AM
fadedglories says:
Thank you Chuck. I’ve been circling the pit a good while. It really helps to read your piece today.
August 26, 2014 — 3:08 AM
Leisl Leighton says:
I couldn’t have said it better myself, Chuck. Oh wait…could I? I don’t know. Given what you said, maybe, perhaps, possibly could have said it…errr…differently. 🙂
August 26, 2014 — 3:20 AM
toni in florida says:
I see what you did there! 🙂
November 5, 2014 — 2:47 PM
Anita Exley says:
Thank you, and perfectly timed. I battle depression and have started another downward spiral. I am trying to pull up but there are days when you feel like the mammoth in the tar pit and think it is better to stop fighting & just let it pull you under.
August 26, 2014 — 3:48 AM
cliffordbeal says:
We’re in such a competitive business (or think we are) and too often judge ourselves by the work of others. You’re right. It’s pointless and self destructive. Just last week I was lying awake for hours thinking what a pile of crap i had written for the last chapter. It goes away once you hit the keyboard again but it is an insidious little creature always at your back. Thanks for the face slap Chuck. Good advice.
August 26, 2014 — 4:18 AM
jjtoner says:
Every book I pick up feels like a hand-grenade. If I open it, this could be the one that PROVES to me, finally, that I should just forget about writing, relax, and read the great writers. Many that I read reinforce that notion. Sometimes, when I’m right in the middle of writing a new novel I read a book that shows me how it should be done and I teeter on the edge of scrapping what I have and starting over with a totally new story with totally new characters written in this new, amazing style. Great post, Chuck. Thanks.
August 26, 2014 — 4:21 AM
boydstun215 says:
I went through a long period after college when I couldn’t write. As an English major I had spent nearly a decade studying, analyzing, and writing about some of the greatest writers of all time—Dickens, Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck, Zola, Ralph Ellison. I wanted to follow in the footsteps of the masters, but I got stuck on the question: “How do I follow that?”
I wanted badly to write, but I didn’t want to write badly. Yet I felt doomed to failure before I really even started because I felt that I would never produce a For Whom the Bell Tolls or a The Sound and the Fury. I wanted to write that masterpiece, but I was afraid of drawing inspiration from, taking my creative cues from, the masters because I didn’t want to look like a poser. Ridiculous, right?
It actually wasn’t until I came into contact with Chuck’s no-fuckery brand of writing wisdom that I grew a pair and really started writing. I’m not b.s.-ing here, people. Dude saved my arse. I also started becoming a more diverse reader, devouring stuff from writers that, much to my chagrin, I had more or less been conditioned to avoid in college. Genre writers, speculative fiction writers, experimental writers.
I’ll tell you what, though. I’ve learned more about writing over the past several years from guys like Chuck Wendig, Richard Kadrey, Dan Simmons, Joe Lansdale, and Stephen King than I did through years of undergrad and graduate work.
So thanks, Chuck, for helping me to find my voice, my identity, and, yeah, even a bit of swagger as a writer.
August 26, 2014 — 4:35 AM
Jim Leach says:
Well that was something pretty obvious… that I very much needed to hear right now. Thanks, Chuck.
August 26, 2014 — 5:53 AM
Jemima Pett says:
Thanks Chuck. Have a hug :hug:
August 26, 2014 — 6:18 AM
Curtis Edmonds says:
Gary Clark Jr. said it best; “I don’t believe in competition / Ain’t nobody else like me around.” Pull up your socks and get in there and fight the good penmonkey fight.
August 26, 2014 — 6:21 AM
Heather says:
What a beautiful, unique you, you are.
August 26, 2014 — 6:24 AM
Elle Saint James says:
Thank you, Chuck. Amazing words as usual. Words I need to hear on occasion. Perhaps I’ll laminate them as well and post them close at hand. 🙂
August 26, 2014 — 7:00 AM
squee1313 says:
How do you always seem to know when to say the right thing?
August 26, 2014 — 7:25 AM
Paul Weimer says:
Thanks, Chuck.
I fall into this pit. All. The. Time.
August 26, 2014 — 7:27 AM
kathysteffenwrites says:
Thank you, thank you. That pit has a tractor-beam on me and reading this helped break it a bit. The right words at the right time (for many, I suspect).
August 26, 2014 — 7:33 AM
Cari Hislop says:
Beautiful post! I need this too! I’ve been standing on the edge staring into the abyss…whining into the dark depths (transfixed by the echo of my whimpering whines) when really I need to step back and just roll up my sleeves and get stuck in to the stories demanding attention.
August 26, 2014 — 7:41 AM
C.C. Chapman says:
We’ve all had this happen to us and it ALWAYS sucks! Thank you for the reminder.
August 26, 2014 — 7:53 AM
Tony Payson says:
Thank you for posting this. *Taking deep beath/face down to keyboard…
August 26, 2014 — 8:03 AM
Berni Xiong (shUNG) says:
Boom, there it is. Took the words right out of my mouth. Thank you for writing this amazing piece of truth.
August 26, 2014 — 8:12 AM
Mozette says:
Yes, yes and yes!
You’re so right, Chuck!
We all doubt ourselves when it comes to our art – no matter what it is – and yet, when we do see somebody else doing the same thing as us and we think they’re better at it, we doubt our own ability of doing our own craft.
I attend a craft market once a month… and thought to try out for another one in November. Well, with filling out the form, it asks: ‘Do you mind having to compete with other retailers at the market?’ Well, I always answer: ‘A bit of healthy competition is always healthy.’ … and I always get the spot. When I’m at the markets I never see myself as being in competition… never. I’m manning my stall as somebody who has something to sell, if people like it – great! If nobody likes it this month – okay, there’s always next month.
A positive attitude is the way to go with anything, no matter what your craft is. Getting healthy criticism is good for you, so long it helps you with your craft and makes you work harder in making it better.
But doubt is that little bit of shit that we always seem to step in by accident and never quite wipe off our shoe… and it’s still there 6 months from the time we stepped in it the first time. 😛
August 26, 2014 — 8:12 AM
Lynn Chandler Willis says:
Great words, Chuck.
August 26, 2014 — 8:17 AM
Patti says:
Great post. Thank you saying the words that I think each and every person with half a mind needs to read.
August 26, 2014 — 8:27 AM
carolabrown says:
Comparisons are odious.
August 26, 2014 — 8:32 AM
rmorrisey says:
Thanks for sharing this. It does help I think to know others go through this as well. Even though we know it… it helps to hear it out loud from a respected voice like yours. My only complaint is that I was hoping to multi-class into Bearded Wendigo Knight one day… Oh well, I guess I’ll have to settle for that Bearded Bardic Pyra-ninja prestige class… after I gain enough ranks in awesome.
August 26, 2014 — 8:40 AM
Anthony Laffan says:
One thing I’ve taken to telling myself when I feel this is “of course this is amazing the first time through, you don’t see the thirty drafts of complete crock that came before.”
Our own work seems mired with problems because we work so hard and go over it so often to fix it up to an acceptable level. We know exactly how awful it was and exactly whose help was needed to make it not suck that much. But a finished book? That looks like it just sprang up fully formed in that perfect light. It’s kinda like what Facebook does for life expectations. You only see the good.
August 26, 2014 — 8:40 AM
donnaeve says:
*applause*
It was really very kind of you to take the time to say all that.
Now, I’m heading back out to be…, me.
August 26, 2014 — 8:48 AM
louisesor says:
Good Stuff!
August 26, 2014 — 8:51 AM
Katharine Ashe says:
Said like you’re in my head. The funny thing, Chuck, is that your writing is so good it makes me feel *better*. There’s something about a writer honestly speaking his heart and mind, and speaking it brilliantly, that inspires and energizes me. Like now, here. Thank you for this.
August 26, 2014 — 9:04 AM
writerobin says:
Thanks.
August 26, 2014 — 9:07 AM
T.S.Chanz says:
Needed this today, damn you lol. Now where is that ladder??
August 26, 2014 — 9:20 AM
Fragrant Liar says:
Perfect timing for me to hear that well-written ranticus. Thanks much.
August 26, 2014 — 9:21 AM
Tess Makovesky says:
I think you’ve been lurking in my study and recording me! It’s the only way you could have got so close to the truth… I need to print this whole article and frame it above my desk. If nothing else, it’s good to know there are so many other people stumbling round in what looked like my deserted pit. 😉
August 26, 2014 — 9:25 AM
Ruth says:
Thank you, Chuck. That is exactly what I needed to read this morning. I’m trying to get into a new area of creativity, one in which I’m interested and where I think I show promise. But I also know some really amazing people in the field and it’s daunting when I compare myself to them.
August 26, 2014 — 9:29 AM
Molly Dugger Brennan says:
Chuck, I wish you buckets of success. As a writer, the only thing I truly envy that you have is your abundant productivity in the face of that ultimate distract-o-meter, a toddler. How do you do that?
August 26, 2014 — 9:34 AM
Andrew says:
Wow. Way to hit the nail on the head. It is funny though, no matter how may times you spit it out, you wake up some days and have that taste in your mouth again.
August 26, 2014 — 9:36 AM
terribleminds says:
Creativity and the effort to enact is offers a variety of weird aftertastes, it seems. 🙂
August 26, 2014 — 9:51 AM
David says:
Good one Chuck.
A variation: Reading something that’s very well written and appears to be telling the same story you’re working on RIGHT NOW. I have to force myself to reread that sort of thing until I can say “Oh, it really isn’t the same, is it…” It takes a while sometimes, but it always happens.
And of course, there’s the dirty little converse: Picking up something for sale for actual money off the shelf, flipping it open, and thinking “Wow. Oh, WOW. I can totally write better than this.” It’s not a nice feeling, but it is rather pleasant.
August 26, 2014 — 9:37 AM