Once in a while, I like to write one of those posts where I try to scare you away from this gig — I put on my boogeyman costume and jump out of your toaster and be like, “BOO. EVERYTHING SUCKS, DON’T BE A WRITER.” And then you drop your toast.
Thing is, I started to write my scary grr-snarl run away the bridge is out bloggerel, but every time I came up with one of those horror-show items, I found myself countermanding it with a BUT BUT BUT — which means, I think, that I’m growing soft. Soft and squishy like a fire-warmed marshmallow. Mmm. Marshmallows. S’mores.
*drool spatters on space bar*
Anyway, here, then, I will act as the Devil and Angel on your shoulder.
The good.
The bad.
And all the what-the-fuckery sandwiched in-between.
Everybody Is A Fucking Writer Now
Blogs and tweets and self-published books and more blogs and Faceyspace updates and Ello screeds and free short fiction and novellas and the 1s and 0s of a billion e-books piling up atop one another like grains of sand forming an ever-growing mound. Everybody’s a writer now. This is why when you tell someone, “Oh, I’m a writer,” they roll their eyes and pat you on the forehead like you’re a silly doggy and they go, “Of course you are.” This isn’t rarified air that we’re breathing. It’s smog. Great gassy exhalations of authorial ego, clouding the sky. We’re all sucking it in and coughing it back out.
But…
That also means that everyone is a reader now, too. Okay, so maybe that means that not everyone is reading books, yet, but for as visual as the Internet is, it’s also got a startling number of words that must be read. We have not yet learned to communicate purely with CAT VIDEOS and PORNOGRAPHY, so: it falls to things like sentences and paragraphs to convey information. More readers is a good thing, isn’t it? Seize them, writers! Seize them now!
Still, People Give Even Less Of A Shit About Writers
More readers or no, writers are still growing at an unprecedented screws-loose monkeypants rate, and the reading public isn’t catching up yet. Let’s say that the entire book-reading public gives off approximately four million care-cubits (aka “give-a-shit units”) every year. These units represent how much attention (and money!) they can devote to writers and our stories — but here’s the rub: a sharp increase in the number of writers does not create an equally sharp increase of how much they give a shit. It’s just less attention to go around. It’s more books, but the same number of readers. And those readers are finding themselves compelled by other entertainment distractions, too: apps and movies and television shows and social media and comic books and free porn. It won’t be long before we all have 3D printers in our house and then that’s one more distraction because then we’ll all be 3D printing My Little Ponies and weird dildos and homunculi we hope to infuse with alchemical life. To sum up? More writers with more books but same level of attention except now that attention is increasingly divided amongst various new iterations of both bread and circuses. I mean, holy shit, most Americans read like, one book a year at best. Which means we’re all just a whistle in a hurricane trying to be heard above the howling wind.
But…
Maybe that’s a good thing. Or, at least, there’s value in writing not being some vaunted, sacred act performed only by properly sanctified authors (that last word said with nose in the air, eyes dismissively cast, a faux-British accent). The Internet and self-publishing has definitely given us our Martin Luther 95 Theses moment where we no longer need to be blessed by dubious arbiters within the industry — it’s weirder and trickier now to make a living at what we do, but really, anybody can do it. Low ground has been made higher. High ground has been leveled. We’re all looking at each other eye to eye now. And no, I’m not wearing pants. YOUR MOVE, WORDMONKEY.
There’s Big Money In Writing (And You Won’t Get Any Of It)
The days of being a rockstar writer trading in stories for wheelbarrows of gold Krugerrands would seem to be fading. In fact, if the author surveys hold any water at all, writing is a very good way to get poor. Enjoy your second-hand underwear and Ramen noodle cups, jerks!
But…
Those surveys are horseshit. They frequently fail to account for all manner of variables, including whether folks do it as part-time, full-time, what they actually earn per hour of work, or if they’re really even working at all or if they’re “writers” instead of writers, meaning they do a whole lot of blabbing about writing while never actually crafting anything to be read by other human beings. Is the age of the rockstar writer dead? If not dead, then certainly diseased, and that’s a good thing, not a bad thing. More money to spread around the center. A healthier, stockier midlist, not some narrow-trunked tree too heavy with bestselling fruit.
Luck Matters
Luck matters in nearly all things — you think you hear someone calling your name and you step off of the curb too late and get whacked by the city bus (or, if the luck is good, the bus just misses you and then travels back in time and runs over Hitler instead). Win money from a scratch-off ticket? Luck. Get the last bagel? Luck. Sneezed on by a plague-toddler? Luck, file under: bad. One might argue that luck even figures in to the equation of whether or not the tiny tail-whipping tadpole carrying half of your genetic information crosses the finish line and headbutts his way into the Cadbury egg that contains the rest of your potential genetic information. Your very existence and identity are Luke Skywalker torpedoing a Death Star exhaust port, which is to say? Total luck, because the Force isn’t a real thing. This is entirely true with writing, too. They say that successful authors cashed in on a lucky lottery ticket, and while that’s incredibly dismissive, it also contains a wee smidgen of truth: luck fucking matters. Luck in finding an agent, an editor, a publisher, a marketing budget, luck that your book lands on the right shelves in the right stores, luck that the right people buy the book and tell other right people about it — luck can sometimes explain how a bad book does well, and bad luck can explain how an amazing book (even one with a robust marketing budget) can trip on itself, fall down the escalator, and poop its pants like the ghost of Chris Farley. Luck is a vital alchemical reagent to this thing that we do.
But…
Luck is also not the most important thing. It matters more than you’d like, but that doesn’t change the fact that writing a good book — or, hell, writing as many good books as your frail psyche can manage — increases your chances. See, that’s the thing. You can maximize your luck by taking more shots at the goal. You can be smart and you can be prolific and you buy the ticket and take the ride as many times as you can. Optimize your experience! Keep going. You learn. You fail. You seize opportunity. You make opportunity. Yeah, it’s important to recognize that luck is a factor. It’s also important to grab luck by its nipples and twist ’em so hard it drops to its knees. (When you do, scream: “PURPLE NURPLE, MOTHERFUCKER. NOW BUY MY BOOK.”)
The Muse Is Dead And There Ain’t No Goddamn Magic
Writing feels very special. I’m crafting stories, you think. I’m changing the world. Fairy-spun story-magic. Biblio-sorcery. Dark powers summoned by one word placed in front of the next, as if each book is an incantation summoning something greater than the sum of its parts. Bad news: ain’t true. Writing isn’t magic. You are given over to no Muse, no wispy spirit crapping Skittles of inspiration into your open skull. It feels like magic, but it isn’t. Some days of writing feel more like digging ditches than casting spells.
But…
That’s awesome. Magic is overrated. Magic feels like something outside you. Something you don’t control. But this thing that we do? You control it. Writing and storytelling is less a magic spell and more a magic trick — the ability to orchestrate an illusion, to fool an audience, to play with their expectations with a practiced, mechanical expression of deception and delight. Letting your work exist as ‘real’ magic takes something away from the very real effort and awesomeness it takes to do this thing that we do. Further, it makes it sound again like it’s something reserved only for the Most Special. “Only one out of a thousand of us possess the Authorspark, a shard of the original ink-fingered gods…” Hey, fuck that. If we let this thing be too hoity-toity hocusy-pocusy, then a bad day of writing feels like cosmic punishment. A failed career makes it sound like we should just give up because the Dark Deities of the Elder Omnibus haven’t granted us their magical mercy. Sometimes, digging ditches is clarifying. It’s simple. It’s something you can do. It’s craft and construction, not Muse-farts and manuscript thaumaturgy. Let your writing feel like magic. But don’t give it over to imaginary forces. Own it. Control it. Swung shovels and sleight-of-hand.
Publishing Is A Garbage-Fire Shit-Show
The earth shudders like it just had an ugly orgasm, and the ground is moving and cracking beneath our feet. Who the hell knows what’s going on inside publishing? Publishing doesn’t even know what’s going on inside publishing. Seriously, track an editor down in NYC and ask them, “So, how’re things?” and they’re eyes will go wide, their lips will search wordlessly for news, and then a slow pee-stain will spread across the crotch of their pants. The editor might hiss something like, “Amazon drones are watching us right now,” and then turn and dart down an alley. Publishing feels nuts right now. The future, weird and uncertain. And you might say, “Oh, ho, ho, but self-publishing is all good,” but hey, things are crazy there, too. Amazon is the biggest beast in town, and this is a beast with a drinking habit. It does two good things and then one really bad one. It barfs up candy and disco balls and then eats half your livestock without warning. Everything is goofy. We’re all fucked. Go find a bunker.
But…
This is all good! I promise! I swear! Sure, sure, the ground is splitting like too-tight boxer shorts and everything’s gone super-fucky, but sometimes, shaking things up is just what the doctor ordered. (Er, not literally, and especially not regarding infants.) In these grave tectonic gaps, new life grows. And you can crawl into the fissures born of a shattered mantle and find new ways into a writing career — ways that did not exist before. The old paths are uncertain. The ancient rules are called into question. And so the fleet-of-foot and flexible-of-fiction can find opportunity in this time of disruption. *rips off clothes, runs screaming into the maelstrom*
Nobody Knows Anything
Seriously. They don’t. Not publishers. Not self-publishers. Not Amazon. Nobody. I don’t know anything. This blog is basically just an agglomeration of lies and lucky guesses. The most knowledgeable group is, has been, and will always be: readers. And they aren’t telling.
But…
Chaos is joy! Ignorance is bliss! Discovering that nobody knows anything is really, really freeing. Why? Because it’s not just you. Sometimes it feels like you’re powerless, bewildered, left wandering the snowy wolf-haunted wilderness while everyone else is enjoying snifters of brandy around a roaring fire, but ha ha ha, nope. We’re all dopes! Okay, sure, yes, some folks have more skill in navigating this wilderness than others — certainly you can hone your instincts and keep up with patterns and trends, but at the end of the day, when it comes to actually knowing things, we’re all looking up in the clouds trying to see shapes.
You’re Going To Fail
You’re going to write a shitty book. Maybe three of them. Or ten of them. And they won’t get published. Or they will (or you’ll self-publish) and they won’t sell. Writing is tough noogies, man. Everybody can’t do this thing well. Success isn’t a guarantee. The numbers are in, and most of you? Nearly all of you? You’re going to fail. And some of you will quit as a result.
But…
Failure is not a dirty word, not like ‘fucksmudge’ or ‘jizzdonkey’ or ‘trickle-down economics.’ Failure is great. I’ve failed before. I’ll fail again. Failure is a ladder made of bent metal. Failure is there to cut out the gutless and gormless, the lost and lazy, the easily dissuaded. Failure is a test — not a test of talent, no, but a test of determination. And failure is itself a learning opportunity. How did I misstep? Why? What can I do better next time? Should I include more instances of the word ‘fucksmudge,’ or fewer instances of the word? Failure is a crucial first step.
You’re Not A Special Snowflake
You’re just part of a big noisy-ass blizzard, sucker.
But…
Okay, but wait, hold on — a blizzard is still composed of itty-bitty unique snowflakes, right? At a distance it’s just a white whorl, but capture an individual snowflake and — such elegance, intricacy, and architecture. Snowflakes separated from the whole are unique, are special. And, they also melt fast. Therein contains a vital lesson, I think: every writer really is her own creature. Your voice does make you special. You have things to say and experiences and ideas and metaphors that nobody else has on offer. But — but! — if you act like a special little snowflake, you’ll turn to a drop of common water lickety-quick. It’s vital to recognize that what you bring to the page is all you, but the way you engage with the rest of the world is the same as everyone else. We’re all trying to be our own special snowflakes in this sightless, screaming blizzard. Manage that task, and you may find yourself the success you seek.
Be special.
Just don’t act like the world owes you something.
Now go and write. And know nothing. And fail proudly.
Rip off your clothes and go careening into the maelstrom.
* * *
The Gonzo Writing E-Book Bundle:
Karla Brandenburg says:
LOL – love it.
September 30, 2014 — 11:04 AM
Tina Gabrielle says:
Love it too. My favorite line: Failure is a test of determination.
September 30, 2014 — 11:12 AM
saltlake62 says:
Ditto! Great line, great blog.
September 30, 2014 — 11:48 PM
Denise Willson says:
Way to make me smile, Wendig. Happy to join you on the fence. 🙂
Denise Willson
Author of A Keeper’s Truth and GOT
September 30, 2014 — 11:13 AM
Heather says:
I’m down the street with no clothes now what.?..Oh never mind I hear sirens everything should be okay!
September 30, 2014 — 11:33 AM
Susie says:
What do you mean there’s no such thing as the Force? :O
September 30, 2014 — 11:36 AM
Doug Daniel says:
Thanks for the truth-speaking, Chuck. If failure is essential to a writer, then I have been well-schooled indeed….
September 30, 2014 — 12:07 PM
eldritchgirl says:
I received my very first rejection as a writer last week and while it felt like I was being crushed by the weight of all my hopes and dreams dying a fiery, Michael Bay-esque death, it was also rather freeing. Everyone fails. Everything gets rejected. You don’t hit a homer on your first time at bat.
It still sucked. But I’ll get up to write another day. I really wanted to thank you for all your writing tips, screeds, red faced neckvein-buldging gibbering howls and the weird deer parts you leave on the doorstep. I know that no one has all the answers to the art of writing but you at least make it feel like it’s more hard work and perseverance and donkey-like obstinance and less like gutting open some birds and using their entrails to make plot summaries. So thank you for all the help, Chuck. I mean it.
September 30, 2014 — 12:08 PM
L. N. Holmes says:
@eldritchgirl —> Rejection letters are totally normal and honestly don’t necessarily mean your writing is awful (because art is subjective and all publishers have a lot of work to do). It is, unfortunately, the nature of the business. Keep going, keep pushing, keep revising, keep submitting your work!
I remember my first rejection letter. I was expecting a form letter but it was actually really nice. They told me I had made it to the final round of selected stories before I was cut in the end. Although it was still a rejection, it made me feel really excited to know that others were reading — and liking — my work. That’s what I keep in mind every time I am rejected. It keeps me going. That B. A. in creative writing wasn’t for nothing!
I’ve been published in four publications now, but I really want to be known for my fiction. I am writing a novel but I am also still submitting my short stories. My goal is to be accepted by a more “prestigious” literary magazine before finishing the final edits on my novel manuscript. That’s my advice — set concrete goals. It really helps!
October 1, 2014 — 10:29 AM
Baby June says:
But but but I’m a special snowflake!!
September 30, 2014 — 12:11 PM
marylholden says:
“…monetized productions…” http://www.hitrecord.org/
September 30, 2014 — 12:40 PM
JD Mader says:
Write forth!
September 30, 2014 — 12:46 PM
Michael E. Henderson says:
Take the word “writer” and substitute “musician,” “artist,” “photographer,” “dancer,” “actor,” or any artist. It’s true for all of them. It’s true for many non-artist gigs too.
With the advent of digital photography, everyone is a photographer. Everyone can be a painter by splashing paint on a canvas. Just go to any website that sells art where anyone can sign up, and you will see the counterpart to Amazon’s self-publishing.
So, what do you do to improve your abysmal chances?
You learn the craft. You study, you practice, you get taught, and you work at it, “it” being the craft. For the luck wizard will never tap the untrained on the noggin. There is not that much luck on the world.
Once you know (or have a decent idea) of what the fuck you’re doing, you don’t give up.
I have self-published, and I will likely do it again, but I’m also traditionally published. Take away the writers/painters/photographers/etc. who have not learned the craft, and you cut the field by about 99%.
One of the things I like to do as part of my program to waste my time, is to critique stories on sites like Scribophile and Critique Circle. I find a story where someone says “I’m a writer with a degree in English. I’ve written five novels, and I have four in the works.” Ok, motherfucker, let us see. Well, fuck, you don’t know the difference between “there” and “they’re.” In fact, you mix them up.
This makes me feel good, actually. Why? Because that cocksucker will never be published. He will forever be doomed to failure, and is no competition for the real writer.
But it also makes me sad. I may want to self-publish because I actually think it’s fun, but this fuck will spend the rest of his life shitting up the world of self-publishing with bad writing and unedited first drafts. (So as not to sound sexist, this applies equally to women.)
So, yeah, it’s bad, but if one actually learns to write, and works and works and works and doesn’t give up, one may have success. My company commander in boot camp used to say: Luck has nothing to do with it. I can and I will. If it is to be, it’s up to me. (He said a lot of other stuff, too, but it’s not applicable here.)
September 30, 2014 — 1:11 PM
M T McGuire says:
“Muse-farts and manuscript thaumaturgy.” Mwah ha hahahrgh! Thank you for this phrase. I have written four good books, which don’t sell. But I want to prove them wrong. I want to do it in a Terry-Pratchett-angry sense, I want to write better and faster and succeed so I can extend my middle fingers at all the bastards who never said I’d amount to anything. Sure luck may play a part but the thing about luck is that I believe you can make a lot of your own. It’s no good if you are hit by the thunderbolt of luckiness if you haven’t put in some serious ground work, like learning to write, making contacts, talking to people and er… stuff. Because if it hits you unprepared it will merely fry your arse. So I’m just going to keep writing and learning and hoping that one day, the unicorn of good fortune shits on my work. Until that day, I’ll just produce as much as I can, as well as I can and if anything happens, I’ll make the most of it.
In other words. I agree.
Cheers
MTM
September 30, 2014 — 1:25 PM
jrosebooks says:
I loved this post. That is all.
September 30, 2014 — 1:41 PM
Susan Spann says:
Dammit, I dropped my toast.
Brilliant, as usual…and now I go to write ALL THE WORDS. Thanks for the inspiration.
September 30, 2014 — 2:18 PM
Jenni Cornell says:
My favorite line: Everybody can’t be do this thing well. Whether it’s a typo or not…funny. Wanted to say you should do stand up, but I like reading and cracking up, so stay behind the pen. You really are so smartly funny. Truly witty.
September 30, 2014 — 2:26 PM
terribleminds says:
Haha OOPS.
September 30, 2014 — 2:56 PM
jackiehames says:
We are writer. We are legion.
September 30, 2014 — 2:34 PM
Sara Testarossa says:
Thank you for the awesome post (hell, thanks for all your awesome posts) and for the very lovely deal on your books. Finally got off my ass and bought them. You provide plenty of advice and inspiration for free but I have a feeling there’s some in the books that I need to read. Shared this post on my author FB. Write on, folks!
September 30, 2014 — 2:41 PM
Lisa Verge Higgins says:
“You’re Not A Special Snowflake
You’re just part of a big noisy-ass blizzard, sucker.”
OMG still laughing.
September 30, 2014 — 2:59 PM
Jamie says:
Krugerrands: always funny.
September 30, 2014 — 3:06 PM
donnaeve says:
Write on, dude.
September 30, 2014 — 3:20 PM
Vickie Knob says:
Loud announcer voice booms, “In a world where everyone can publish a book, not everyone should.” Thanks for the point – counterpoint. Leaving on a positive note makes me more determined than ever. I won’t quit.
September 30, 2014 — 3:26 PM
diverjanny says:
Word of the day is “fucksmudge.” Note to self: must use a minimum of 6 times.
September 30, 2014 — 4:10 PM
jnfr says:
I still feel magic sometimes when I write. It may be an illusion but it seems so real…
September 30, 2014 — 4:11 PM
ssbittner says:
This post gave me whiplash, Chuck.
September 30, 2014 — 5:25 PM
Katrina Woznicki (@katrinawoz) says:
I am writing a shitty book now as I read this. If I get to write and publish (through traditional publishing, hopefully) 10 shitty books, then I’ll feel super lucky
September 30, 2014 — 6:21 PM
leifthesailor says:
If only the stories behind the free porn of the young loser going through life and finally making it big with the babe and getting lucky were true. *throws laptop across room and writes in a notebook instead Time to get serious about story crafting.
September 30, 2014 — 6:28 PM
Bob Mayer says:
Wait– I know something! Oh, just forgot.
Agree completely. Tired of all the gurus telling me what I should do, when they aren’t doing it.
Everyone has to do their own thing and hope the Gods smile on them; more likely the Gods will shit on you, but at least you got their attention.
September 30, 2014 — 6:44 PM
terribleminds says:
“Everyone has to do their own thing and hope the Gods smile on them; more likely the Gods will shit on you, but at least you got their attention.”
Man, put that on a t-shirt and I will buy.
— c.
September 30, 2014 — 6:46 PM
Garnet Belial (N. L. McFarland) says:
Rip off my clothes? I NEVER WEAR CLOTHES – YOUR move, master wordmonkey!
September 30, 2014 — 7:13 PM
Jen Donohue says:
I discovered, at work, that cinnamon graham crackers, Nutella, and (just plain) marshmallows make magnificent s’mores. Zap them just briefly in the microwave (the library’s microwave is mystically powerful, perhaps because of the hauntings? Who’s to say?”, schmear just enough Nutella, and Bob’s your uncle. Whatever that means.
But oh yeah. Writing Magic. Fizz! Pow! The rejections tell me I’m not special. But also, sometimes, that I’m ALMOST special. Which in a way makes it worse.
September 30, 2014 — 9:52 PM
warjna says:
Oh, Chuck, I love you! If for nothing else than that your words make the most EXCELLENT of T-Shirts! Just designed one that says “I am a Child of the Ink-Fingered Gods”.
But – as seriously as it gets – what you say is TRUTH with a capital TRUE. It’s luck, and hard work, and perseverance and determination, and still no guarantee.
I love your posts, though I don’t always get the chance to read them right away, which means that about once a month I go on a marathon Wendig-Fest and laugh myself silly. Thank you, thank you for that!
Toddling off now to chase through your past posts to see if you’ve got anything there about how to find a beta-reader. If there isn’t any, can you post something about that?
September 30, 2014 — 10:55 PM
S.H. Mansouri says:
I’m nailing this to my wall along with a rotten cheese quesadilla. That way, when the queso-in-the-dilla finally melts and drips and ruins the carpet, I can still be thankful that I’m climbing a winding ladder, lined with rows of bent bars, dripping slippery shit from the Gods above. Amen.
September 30, 2014 — 11:24 PM
percykerry923 says:
Abso-fucking-lutely awesome Chuck! You made my day 🙂
October 1, 2014 — 12:53 AM
decayingorbits says:
The truth is, people can be whatever they want to be. The best advice is don’t spend your life worrying about whether other people are going to fill up your happiness bucket. You make your own luck. You want to be a writer? Then write.
October 1, 2014 — 5:45 AM
Ed says:
Chuck, given the state of sex ed classes in school, the whole “headbutting a creme egg” is by far and away the most bizzare analogy ive ever heard………is this what you were taught as a child?
Great post as always tho thank you = )
October 1, 2014 — 6:23 AM
Sarah Dahl says:
Thank you so much for another entertaining, yet educating (well, if only strengthening the wisdom that it’s all down to ourselves, in most respects) post that made me smile but also learn something. You’ve been there, I am grateful that you share it all with us and in a way that makes me laugh and THINK at the same time! Continue to do so, I always smile whenever a new post arrives in my inbox.
October 1, 2014 — 7:20 AM
MakeLifeMemorable says:
Your words, Chuck. Those choices you make to smush otherwise innocuous words together and turn them in to utter hilarious filth. I applause you, sir.
October 1, 2014 — 7:59 AM
Linda C Jaeger says:
For some reason, “The editor might hiss something like, “Amazon drones are watching us right now,” and then turn and dart down an alley.” has me giggling uncontrollably!
Thinking of writing as a magic trick (which you practice and get better at) rather than magic makes sense to me. It’s also comforting. I distrust muses and words that “just come to me”. Teaching students who think like that is the worst. They jot down every word that whizzes past their brain and shout “done!” as soon as I’ve written the task on the board (I’m in high school). They refuse to edit, because of course they “receive” everything as it’s supposed to be. And if they don’t become inspired, they won’t write a single word. I was exactly like this and worse myself, so I’m only getting what I deserve.
I do think ideas come easier to some people than others, but if we don’t take the time to learn how to use them, what’s the point of getting them in the first place? I might have a brilliant idea of how to “magick” myself out of a shark tank, but if I don’t plan the details and practice the trick, it’ll fail (rather spectacularly, I suspect).
October 1, 2014 — 9:10 AM
fran730 says:
Worth every penny. Especially the “plague toddler” reference. Here’s to long term better failing.
October 1, 2014 — 11:13 AM
Amber J Gardner says:
*rips off clothes and runs screaming into the maelstrom*
…I love that imagery way too much to be healthy 😛
October 1, 2014 — 11:29 AM
Lee Mountford says:
Fucksmudge – love that! Best word I’ll learn this month (probably this year) 😀
Really enjoyed the post Chuck!
October 1, 2014 — 11:30 AM
Elisabeth Kauffman says:
It’s kinda a relief to be part of a mad, careening blizzard. Love, love, love it! I keep sharing bits on my FB page (www.facebook.com/WritingRefinery). I’m sure my followers think I’m a bit nuts now…but you have to be to do what you love, right?
October 1, 2014 — 2:24 PM
jonathan27lew says:
Sure, everyone’s a writer, but there’s only one you. Be the youest you you can be. (Ow, that sentence hurt.) They love to call it “branding” or “platform” or any other nonsense word, but I think it’s more than that. And less. It’s personality. I think in the ye olde days they called it style. Audioslave calls it “Be Yourself”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WC5FdFlUcl0
Amen, brudders and sistahs.
October 1, 2014 — 7:45 PM
Scrappy Doo says:
You’re not your fucking khakis.
October 1, 2014 — 10:03 PM
Amy Eyrie says:
he, he, hoo hoo. You are funny.
October 2, 2014 — 2:36 AM
Louis Shalako says:
Now we know how to spell noogies. For that, sir, I thank you.
October 2, 2014 — 8:59 AM
Rose Red says:
And if the clothes are already off? It was really warm and humid today. I can’t write overheated.
October 2, 2014 — 10:28 PM
terribleminds says:
Then reapply clothes so that you can make the dramatic gesture of ripping them off.
October 3, 2014 — 7:02 AM
Rose Red says:
In that case I am putting on the Darth Vader mask as well.
October 3, 2014 — 12:00 PM
boydstun215 says:
Yeah, sometimes it DOES feel like digging ditches. But I know if I keep digging, I’m going to find something. Even on those really shitty days where the ideas refuse to come out of their cerebral burrows, just struggling to write feels good.
Thanks, Chuck, for always keeping it real (and reminding the rest of us to do the same).
October 2, 2014 — 10:58 PM
Judy K. Walker says:
Thank you, Chuck, for making my heart lighter tonight. I would second your t-shirt request and add a merchandise wish of my own… when can I buy the Penmonkey purple-nurples Luck mug? You know, Christmas is coming.
October 3, 2014 — 2:00 AM