I received a very nice email from a very nice reader that said (and here I’m paraphrasing) that her problem isn’t writer’s block, but something bigger and yet, at the same time, less tangible. She said she’s a young writer, and then she went to say:
The cement wall in the subject line could be named lack of confidence, or even lack of vision if you like. Being where I am in life makes it hard to picture myself as the respected, published author I’d like to be one day. In theory, I know what it takes.But is it really as simple as, “just do the work and you’ll get there?” Or is there something I’m missing? Because there’s a part of me that feels like I might not have what it takes even if I work hard, my ideas are good, and trusted friends tell me I’ve got a gift.
I’ve been searching the net, but it doesn’t feel like a lot of people get the sentiment. So, I figured that the perspective a more experienced person could help me out. What were the biggest concerns/issues/toxic leeches attached to your back you had when you started out? Were they in any way similar to mine? How did you get around them?
My initial response on this was just going to be, “I’ll send her my advice on caring less, as maybe that’s the problem.” Everybody — not just writers — is afforded a Basket of Only So Many Fucks at the start of each day. And we spend those Fucks on whatever we can or must. It’s comforting and occasionally badassedly energizing to say, I’m all out of fucks to give, but for writers, that’s not really an option. You gotta give a fuck about this whole thing. You can’t just hit the bottom of the basket. But at the same time, some writers give too many fucks. They blow them all like a cokehead gambler at the Vegas roulette table: “PUT IT ALL ON RED 42,” and the lady is like, “The table only goes up to 38,” and the gambler’s like “SHUT UP AND TAKE ALL OF MY FUCKS.” A writer who spends it all like that puts too much pressure on herself, makes it too important, too heavy a burden, and then the risk can be paralyzing.
And then my next response is basically:
“Well, yeah, writers write, so go write.”
Then I drop the mic. But remain on stage to eat a pie rather noisily.
But I don’t know if that’s what’s going on here.
Here’s what I remember about being a young, untested writer:
I didn’t know what the fuck was going on.
Like, I understood the principle. You sit down, you tippy-tappy out the word jabber on your typey machine, you arrange all the word jabber into the approximate shape of a “story,” and then ???? and then step three: cry under your desk. And maybe at some point in the future, Big Publishing knocks on your door, chomping a cigar made of old parchment and he’s all like, “HERE’S YOUR TICKET, KID, YOUR TICKET TO THE BIG TIME. YOU’RE A BESTSELLER NOW, PAL — A BONA FIDE AUTHOR-TYPE! HERE’S YOUR KEYS TO NEW YORK CITY AND NEIL GAIMAN’S PHONE NUMBER. NOW GET ON THE UNICORN AND LET’S RIDE, CHAMP.”
But really, what it feels like is that you’re the guest at a party. And you don’t know anybody. You don’t know the rules — are you allowed to double-dip a chip? Where is the guest bathroom and are you allowed to use the hand towels? Is that an orgy upstairs? What’s the orgy etiquette, exactly? Was I supposed to bring my own lube? Silicone or water-based?
Worse, it’s like everyone at this party is speaking a sorta different language. It’s still English, but there exists a lingo, a jargon, a sense that you stepped into a subculture that isn’t your own. Everybody and everything feels and sounds off-kilter, like you’re listening to a bunch of software programmers or Wall Street execs make up buzzwords while really, really high.
It’s not just about the writing — writing is, itself, not a difficult task. Like I said: tippy-tappy typey-typey and ta-da, you wrote something. But the problem lies in the hurricane winds of bewilderment that roar and whirl around that central act. What’s good writing? What are the rules? What is your voice? What’s everyone else doing? Will you get published? Agent? Editor? Self-published? What’s good storytelling? What the hell is a genre and why does it matter? Whoza? Wuzza? Why am I doing this? Why does my soul feel this way? Do I want to cry? Am I crying? I’m crying. I’m eating Cheezits at 3AM and I don’t have a shirt on and I wrote another short story and it’s probably not any good or maybe it’s really good I don’t know AHHHH I don’t have any context at all for anything that I’m doing.
And that’s the trick. We lack context. We lack experience and awareness and instinct.
So, we seek that out.
We look to other writers — and to the industry at large — for context.
We get advice. We load ourselves up with information. We crave context and so we gobble it down like that box of 3AM Cheezits and soon our fingers are dusted with Cheezit pollen and shame but we feel emboldened with new information.
And often, it’s shitty information.
It’s shitty because everyone is faking confidence.
They’re creating context by mostly making it up.
I do it, too. We all do. We all have our little rules of writing, our ways that things are done, and they’re nearly all smeared with at least a little bit — a dollop! a thumbprint! — of horseshit. “Don’t use adverbs,” someone says, except whoa, hey, lots of words are adverbs: then, still, never, anywhere, downstairs, seldom, soon, after, since, and the list goes on and on. “Never use a verb other than ‘said’,” except then you see how nearly every book uses dialogue tags other than said. He shouted! She asked! He growled. “Never open a book with” and here the list goes on and on — weather, a character regarding themselves, a line of dialogue, a prologue, a penguin on a jet ski, two vampires blowing each other, a math problem, a heretical screed, a Roomba endlessly tracking cat shit around a living room while pondering its own existential dread. And then, ta-da, you read like, ten books that break these rules. And sometimes the books that break these rules are bestsellers. Or are literary books that are well-regarded critically. Or is just a book that made it to someone’s book shelf at all. “But they did it!” you stammer frustratedly as the Roomba bumps fruitlessly into your boot, getting poop on your foot.
It only gets worse when you start taking publishing advice. I hear bad publishing advice all the goddamn time. “Nobody gets an agent from the query process,” I heard recently. Yeah, except me. And a whole dumpster full of writers I know that got agents from the query process. “Nobody survives the slush pile.” Totally true, except when it’s often not. “Urban fantasy isn’t selling,” and then you read about two more urban fantasy series coming to print, and you look at the bestseller lists and it features Butcher, Hearne, McGuire, Harris (and then you realize what they really mean is, “Nobody’s buying shitty urban fantasy right now”). Hell, even publishers don’t know things. You want them to. You think they should. But when a hot new trend kicks off through book culture like some kind of super-crazy-contagious syphilis, the best they can do is capitalize on the trend they failed to predict.
What I’m trying to say is:
None of us know what the fuck we’re doing.
I know we don’t because the deeper we go down this career, the less we seem to know. Oh, we have ideas. We’ll literally explode your ears with our self-important author talk, but at the end of the day, all the shit we say can probably be disproven by talking to five other writers, and mostly that look in the black of our eyes is one of utter bewilderment. Our greatest and most honest answer to you regarding all the questions you want to ask us would be a vigorous, exasperated shrug.
That’s not to say we’re entirely clueless, mind you. It’s like this — you’re at the bottom of the mountain looking up. We’re on the side of the mountain or even at its peak looking down. You have the climb ahead of you. We have the climb — or some of it, at least — behind us. We have a view of the valley. You have a view of only the mountain. We know a little bit about climbing. We know some of the gear. We have our limited perspective on getting up to where we are, at present. We can only tell you what we know and what we did — and that’s not entirely helpful.
See, up at the peak, we’ve just achieved a new level of cluelessness.
“What’s that body of water over there?”
“Fuck if I know.”
“How’d we survive crossing that SNOWY CREVASSE where the ICE WEASELS were nesting?”
“Luck, I guess.”
“How do we get back down?”
“I think we die up here.”
“Oh.”
There exists no well-marked, well-lit path up the mountain. You will find no handy map. No crafty app for your smartphone. The terrain shifts after everyone walks upon it. New chasms. Different caves. The ice weasels become hell-bears. The sacred texts we find in the grottos along our journey are sacred to us but heresy to someone else.
The person who wrote me the email, she’s probably saying:
“None of this is helpful.”
Which is likely true.
Though, hopefully, the lack of cluelessness that abounds through all the strata of This Thing We Do is comforting? It’s not like young writers are the only ones who don’t know what the fuck is going on or how things work. We’re all just making this shit up as we go. Some of us have a little more context for it — we’re the guests at the party, the ones babbling the jargon and the ones who know some of the orgy etiquette rules. But take heart: we’re just making the jargon up as we go. We’re inventing the orgy etiquette as the orgy unfolds because hey man, orgies aren’t math problems. ORGIES ARE ART. And writing is like that, too — it’s not a repeatable science experiment. It’s not, “Take this pill to relieve your headache.” It’s not X = Y. Instead it’s a lot of random: “Should I stick this in there?” “Yes?” “Bend over, I’m going to try this.” “I tried this in New Mexico and it didn’t work.” “Good to know.”
We share information, we do our best, and for the most part? We wing it.
I feel like I’m not helping.
So, let’s try this.
Out of all the bullshit about writing and publishing, I think you’ll find a series of constants.
These constants remain necessary to do the thing that you want to do.
And doing these things again and again will grant the confidence to continue. (And by the way? Don’t worry about whether or not you’re ‘good enough.’ Nobody even knows what ‘good enough’ means. That’s for someone else to worry about. You worry about whether or not you want to be a writer. And if you do, then be a writer and do your best to cleave to these constants.)
The Five Constants
1. Write A Lot (And To Completion)
2. Read A Lot (And Read Critically When You Do)
3. Think About Writing And Storytelling
4. Talk To Writers
5. Go Live A Life
That’s it.
I don’t even know if I need to explain those, really — they’re all pretty obvious, I like to hope. If you want to write, you need to write. No matter who you are or what problems you suffer: writers write. And writers write to the end. They finish their shit. And they read a lot, too. I’ve never met a writer who doesn’t read, same as you’ve probably never met a chef who doesn’t like food. You gotta give this thing we do time and thought and energy. And despite all of us not really knowing what the fuck is going on, it helps to talk to other writers. If only for solidarity. If only so we can all shrug together. If only so we can drive the car over the edge of the cliff as one, Thelma and Louise-style. And beyond that is life itself. A life that demands living. Life that will fuel the words, that will form the warts and blemishes and little bones of the stories you want to tell.
None of us know what the fribbly fuck we’re doing.
But to gain the confidence you need, you sometimes gotta pretend like you do.
* * *
The journey to become a successful writer is long, fraught with peril, and filled with difficult questions: How do I write dialogue? How do I build suspense? What should I know about query letters? How do I start? What the hell do I do?
The best way to answer these questions is to ditch your uncertainty and transform yourself into a Kick-Ass Writer. This new book from award-winning author Chuck Wendig combines the best of his eye-opening writing instruction — previously available in e-book form only — with all-new insights into writing and publishing. It’s an explosive broadside of gritty advice that will destroy your fears, clear the path, and help you find your voice, your story, and your audience.
kessara says:
This was, hands-down, the best thing I’ve read about being a writer. I’ve been published, but not yet for the fiction that consumes my waking hours. The self-doubt and “am I an idiot for even thinking I can do this?” crap can make you stare at a blank screen for way too long.
Thanks for this. Seriously.
May 12, 2015 — 9:30 AM
caszbrewster says:
Hang int here, Kessara. Non-fic publishing is still publishing and teaches you lots about the process. I was like you and had lots of expository, non-fiction, even creative non-fiction published before fiction publishing got going. I’m still considered an “emerging” writer, but I’m not giving up. I’m certainly not an idiot; You’re not an idiot. Keep at it.
May 12, 2015 — 2:20 PM
kessara says:
Thanks Cas! Now – if I could get those characters to stop arguing in my head…. :wry grin:
May 12, 2015 — 2:21 PM
Jeanne says:
Good luck with that! Wait till they start waking you up at 3am wanting attention!
May 12, 2015 — 5:03 PM
kessara says:
Already there, Jeanne. Sleep is for the weak, right?
May 12, 2015 — 9:47 PM
Jeanne says:
Umm, sleep? Sadly, I can’t speak from experience here. I’m an editor of sorts, or at best a ‘creative consultant’, which means some of my author friends are kind enough to let me play with their characters, and some of what I write for them actually makes it into their stories. I’m helping a friend now with what started out as a 73k NaNoWriMo project which has turned into somewhere between 127k and 128k words. Can’t tell you how many all night FB conversations we’ve had about plot, characters, scenes, and everything else. I feel like I know these characters intimately, and have had many a discussion with the author about why I think this person would do something other than what she had written. We started talking at all hours of the day and night early on because her characters were talking to her, which meant she had to get out of bed to write. But then, vampires don’t sleep much, so they don’t think their creator should, either. This book is finished on her part, if not on mine, and she’s already started the second book in the series. We have high hopes (I also happen to have a few friends who are indie publishers) to the point that we’ve even started casting actors for the movie!
May 13, 2015 — 5:46 AM
A Citizen of the World says:
This morning, I sat down at my laptop and started tapping out my daily 350 words before starting my day and my exact thoughts were: “What the hell am I doing? Am I even doing this right? Why are my characters running in all different directions? Help! They are all over the place! Help…”
Yeah. The more I write fiction, the more I discover that no matter how much planning I do, the more I discover that I know eff all about writing.
But hey – it’s fun, I like spending time with those crazy kids I whose adventures I record, so it could be worse…
May 12, 2015 — 9:34 AM
yellehughes says:
Exactly how I feel most of the time.
May 12, 2015 — 9:38 AM
C.E. Kilgore says:
I so needed this slap in the face today. <3 Chuck. Thank you for always being so fucking honest about this crazy adventure we're all on.
May 12, 2015 — 9:42 AM
Beth Greenberg says:
I feel that question in the deep recesses of my am-I-a-writer? heart, and I love your answers–all of them, including the fact that for every rule, there are wildly popular published books to disprove it. I’ve also noticed that the people who seem to have “the right answer” usually want you to pay them to pass it along. Thank you!
May 12, 2015 — 9:45 AM
jackiehames says:
Now I have this vision of Neil Gaiman standing near this mysterious body of water going “Where did I put my boat?” *remembers it’s in the valley below the mountain* “Ah, fuck me.” *builds raft*
May 12, 2015 — 9:46 AM
allreb says:
Oh man, thanks. “I’m a guest at the party, but I don’t know anyone else (or the etiquette)” is *exactly* how I feel right now. My book sold!! Incredible!! But I feel like I don’t know anyone, I have no scale to measure things by, I don’t know what’s normal.What do I do now?? What’s going on?? Where am I?? Do I get to stop wearing pants soon??
May 12, 2015 — 9:48 AM
terribleminds says:
PANTS ARE A TOOL OF THE OPPRESSOR. Be gone with them!
May 12, 2015 — 9:49 AM
Gareth Skarka says:
See, now that I’ve read the next-to-last sentence? I’m craving a Fribble. And we have no Friendly’s here in the benighted wilds of Kansas. CURSE YOU, WENDIG!
May 12, 2015 — 9:48 AM
terribleminds says:
This was the purpose of my post.
Friendly’s pays well, my friend.
INFINITE FRIBBLES FOR ME.
Only desire for you.
*lightning crashes*
May 12, 2015 — 9:49 AM
laurajquinn says:
“Don’t worry about whether or not you’re ‘good enough.’ Nobody even knows what ‘good enough’ means. That’s for someone else to worry about. You worry about whether or not you want to be a writer.”
Huh… I forgot about this for a while. Thank you for the reminder.
May 12, 2015 — 9:50 AM
Paul Baxter says:
Funny thing, Laura, is that while sometimes I have the feeling I’ve written something good, just as often a piece I’m dissatisfied with gets a better reception than I expected.
It just goes to show I’m not always the best judge of what’s “good enough.”
May 12, 2015 — 12:37 PM
Silicon says:
Yeah this is the weirdest thing about writing. There was this one forum writing competition I was in, I had 2 hours to submit to fill that day’s deadline (one short story a day for two weeks. It was crazy and really fun). I wrote this shit story, and posted it with the comment “I don’t even know if this makes any sense.”
That story won the entire fucking contest. Literally the first time I’ve ever won ANY writing thing ever. I still think it reads like I was on mind-altering substances at the time … but hey. Maybe, just maybe, it DOESN’T. To other people.
May 12, 2015 — 8:23 PM
mariceljimenez says:
The “and to completion” part seems key. For every finished piece of work I’ve done, there are at least 3 unfinished ones.
May 12, 2015 — 9:51 AM
Paul Baxter says:
I have no unfinished pieces; only ones I’m not done working on.
After all, as Leonardo da Vinci said, “Art is never finished, only abandoned,” and I haven’t abandoned my not-yet-complete stories yet.
May 12, 2015 — 12:42 PM
mrwallacetheauthor says:
That’s the worst. I’m right around 30k words on a book and I’ve also put down a thousand words each on two separate sci-fi ideas that popped into my head. It’s really easy for me to start stories, but I’m awful at finishing them. I’m working on it, though.
May 12, 2015 — 12:55 PM
C.K. Black says:
I too often feel like a blind man fumbling around at a party, I hear terms and advice and I cant put it together. And when I feel I I finally have, that ah-ah! moment, someone comes along and says no,no that’s not hows it done, its done LIKE this and I leave more confused and frustrated that when i started, so to ease my depression, I scarf down a big box of cheeze-its and watch reality tv.
May 12, 2015 — 9:51 AM
erinbear says:
I only wish the word “fuck” wasn’t in the title, because when I share this to FB, it freaks out my Mennonite relatives and Mommy friends.
May 12, 2015 — 9:52 AM
terribleminds says:
That is, in part, as intended. 🙂
May 12, 2015 — 10:01 AM
iconoplast says:
I have to admit I’m a bit curious about the Mennonite relatives on facebook.
May 12, 2015 — 7:14 PM
Emily says:
Such a great post! I felt a bit like the person asking the question. I still don’t know what I’m doing. But I do think one thing that wasn’t said, and that everyone knows but people rarely say, is yes, you can work hard, have talent, do everything you’re supposed to do, and still not get what you want out of publishing. Lots and lots and lots and lots (and however many lots you can put) DON’T get published every year. It’s way easier to be one of them than the one who gets an agent. So, I don’t think there’s a trick to it, except, for me, ignoring the fact that the stats are bonkers set against me. (Yes, yes, there are things to do to make it more likely, but even at its MOST likely there is still a big chunk of unlikely).
Also, I think sometimes writers freeze because they’re afraid of making mistakes. Jump in and make mistakes. Lots of mistakes. Then learn whatever you need to learn from them.
May 12, 2015 — 9:57 AM
Caethes Faron says:
I can relate to her sentiment. I think a lot of it comes from the fact that people who want to become writers tend to idolize writers. Professional writers are this mystical “other” that we aspire to. It’s hard to think of our writing heroes as just regular people who write. Instead, we view them as these magical beings who write fantastical worlds into being. Their words are magical and ours are just words.
May 12, 2015 — 9:59 AM
jrupp25 says:
I started a writing career in my 50’s that I couldn’t have started in my 20’s because of my fear of sucking. I think raising a child exhausted my bag of fucks. When I realized I had run out of fucks, I started writing every day. I read, learn, and continue to write. Each day I suck less. Except now I want to take a road trip to Conn. and suck on a malted fribble.
May 12, 2015 — 10:01 AM
Denise Willson says:
Chuck, you make me smile, laugh out loud, and nod my head in agreement. On a regular basis, but today especially. Thank you for that. Sincerely.
Dee Willson
Author of A Keeper’s Truth and GOT
May 12, 2015 — 10:01 AM
angelomarcos says:
*puts on asshole pedant’s hat*
Hey! What happened to number 2 in that list?!
*takes off hat*
Sorry…
May 12, 2015 — 10:02 AM
angelomarcos says:
*puts on author hat*
Oh, and great post by the way.
It reminds me of when I used to do stand up, where all the older comedians would give all the younger comedians advice, which wouldn’t necessarily be helpful anymore.
As you said, the terrain shifts, so the steps may be similar, but never seem to be the same.
*takes off author hat*
*vows to stop buying so many hats*
May 12, 2015 — 10:05 AM
Steven Cowles says:
I like to think of it as my own Hero’s Journey. The basic shape of the journey is always the same – write stuff, get it published – but the details always differ, from hero to hero.
Right now, I’m still sizing up the portal guardians between me and the Publishing Cave of Deep Despair™, but I’ll get there.
After all – we have many tales of Heroes who have been successful in their quest to encourage us along our way.
May 12, 2015 — 10:06 AM
joshlangston says:
Oh, puhleeeze. Everybody knows what #2 is.
Great post, Chuck. I’m recommending it to my newbie writer friends. (The ones who aren’t in therapy, anyway.) Angst is good for you, right?
May 12, 2015 — 10:08 AM
betsydornbusch says:
There’s the part about living with “Never being good enough” too. Never good enough for all readers, never good enough for the industry, never enough sales, never words fast enough, never able to write EXACTLY what’s in the head and soul… It’s just the gig. I wonder if that’s at the heart of it. She’s “young,” whatever that means, so she thinks/hopes someday that she will be “good enough,” but she won’t. None of us are. Gotta live with it, find a way to not care about not being good enough and only caring about bringing the words ever closer to our own vision.
May 12, 2015 — 10:10 AM
Andy says:
Thank you. It is definitely stuff I know and have heard, but forget often enough that the re-hearing is important. Definitely the “to completion” thing is important. I do wonder if you missed a joke in your orgy metaphor in relation to “completion”, but your metaphor, your “rules”..
May 12, 2015 — 10:19 AM
Jon Lasser says:
I’m hoping the next volume of Chuck’s writing advice is called “Bend Over, I’m Going to Try This.”
May 12, 2015 — 10:20 AM
J. Kolb says:
I love this! I am new to this biz and writing for public consumption, but I am not a spring chicken in age. That is pretty true about every aspect of life I have lived so far.
May 12, 2015 — 10:22 AM
Sophie G. says:
Finally a fucking published writer that doesn’t expect to be carted in a litter. I truly appreciate your advice! Thank you for the confidence boost and the smack I need to keep going.
May 12, 2015 — 10:23 AM
terribleminds says:
Whoa whoa whoa what is this about litter? You shouldn’t litter. Or is it kitty litter? I REFUSE TO BE DRAGGED THROUGH KITTY LITTER BY YOU INGLORIOUS PROLES
*shakes gauntleted fist*
May 12, 2015 — 10:24 AM
susielindau says:
I remember trying to figure out what the heck a “writer’s platform” was when I first started. I had been told I needed one. Four years later, I find out I don’t need one at all for my particular writing journey. Like you said, bad information is everywhere.
May 12, 2015 — 10:23 AM
Michael J. Martinez says:
This post is wisdom. I’ve been mashing words together professionally for two decades — first as a journalist, now in marketing, and with three novels under my belt. And you know what? It’s just something I do. Explain why a flower is beautiful, or why you always hit the red lights on 5th Ave. in Manhattan, or how you can tell your writing is good. You can’t, man. I’m just doing it, and I’m gonna keep doing it until the Men in Black come and take the laptop away.
May 12, 2015 — 10:25 AM
L.E. Falcone says:
I’ve been slowly learning this over the past few months, but I need reminded of it every damn day. Thanks for the words. Now, about this orgy etiquette…
May 12, 2015 — 10:26 AM
Lynn Chandler Willis says:
My dearest Chuck, this piece has now been moved to my annual must-read bibles for writers, right up there with my annual read of King’s “On Writing.” It may even surpass Mr. King’s as my favorite go-to when I wonder why the hell I’m doing this. Thank you.
May 12, 2015 — 10:28 AM
Alexa Milne says:
Thank you – after publishing my second book, and trying to read all the so-called rules, I’m feeling a bit lost. I needed to read this today.
May 12, 2015 — 10:33 AM
Linda says:
Thank you. Because even though I am not a writer, I am working on a project that has many of the same parameters. Daily activity needed. A lot of reading and research on writers and writing. Constantly aware of how everything applies to the project and not missing an opportunity to fill out and improve the result. And having doubts because I think I don’t know what I am doing and no one else really offers advice that can help. The doubts creep in and filter everything else and then you find yourself questioning, can I do this, is it going to work, will anybody care, will it matter. Should I just toss it in now and save myself and all those supporting me the energy that can apply to something else.
Then you put it all into words – the doubts and the pressures and that even those who have climbed that mountain may not be sure how they got there and how they are holding on. And sometimes it is about pretending and sometimes it is just about taking that leap of faith that this is what you are meant to do and heh, it is going to be okay. And if it isn’t, it wasn’t a waste of time because you learned a lot and met a lot of nice or at least interesting people along the way. And got out of your comfort zone. And can say I tried. I didn’t sit on my ass and not try.
Thank you for your words.
May 12, 2015 — 10:35 AM
Luke Matthews (@GeekElite) says:
I don’t know if this is true for any other new writers, but I’ve been surprised at how paralyzing the weight of expectation can be. And I’m not even famous. Or popular. Or… likeable, really. But now that I’ve got a book in the world, the first in a series, there are people who’ve read my words. Even more surprising, there are people that seem to like them. And that’s TERRIFYING.
When I was writing the first book, I just bumbled blithely along, oblivious to the world. It wasn’t a thing for others, it was just this thing I was doing, so every step (especially later in the process) was exciting. I wasn’t nearly as frightened as maybe I should’ve been to whip it out, but I had professional editors and cover artists and I was blind to the worry.
But now, it’s out there. *I’M* out there. I’m now the guy who has “friends” who’ll make the near-constant “So when’s the next book coming out HUR HUR HUR” comments. (See how I put “friends” in quotes? Because yeah, fuck that “joke”.) I’ve got people – and it doesn’t matter whether they’re being truthful or patronizing – telling me they like my work and my characters and now I have expectations to live up to and fuck me how am I ever going to and crap on a stick these characters aren’t just mine anymore and holy ballsack they’re going to hate what I do here and shitbiscuits this wasn’t this hard the first time.
So, for me, it’s now the hopes and fears of people who’ve read my work that have my bowels in a hammer-lock. But it’s posts, and communities, like this that help. They really do help. But it’s still on me. Blogs like this can help with motivation, but it’s on me to cultivate discipline. One leads into the other, though, and that’s why I’m grateful to know that other authors have pulled themselves out of the lightning sands, so maybe I can, too.
May 12, 2015 — 10:37 AM
miceala says:
Chuck! A question!
“No matter who you are or what problems you suffer: writers write.”
Well, yes, this is true. But I’ve still got a question about it. I’m one of those bazillion people on the planet with some mangled depression thing that I’ve spent years throwing all manner of dysfunction and psychiatry and hard work and progress at, and while most days, writing’s a sword that can slay at least some of the sucky tendrils of the depression beast and I can write shit I think is relatively good or at least finish it and tuck it away in some folder hidden deep within the bowels of my hard drive and consider that, at least, some kind of win for myself, but on other days – well, depression just doesn’t play fair.
It’s hiding in the kettle, turning coffee-making into some anxiety-ridden, slow-as-sludge process where it’s a win if I end up with a cup of warm thing dripping caffeination onto my shaking hand. It’s in my dresser drawer, making figuring out which clothes to just goddamn pull out and put on a nearly impossible process. And it’s lurking on the keyboard, ready to bite me with every key I press. If I even get that far. If I’m not just sitting in my chair, staring at my computer screen, wanting desperately to write but stuck down with anhedonia and numbness and not capable of even really thinking, let alone thinking of any words that would serve as some satisfactory blood-letting process for this ridiculous mind-disease I tote around.
There are days where I cannot write because I pretty literally cannot do anything. It’s just me. On chair. Swimming around in my head demons trying to breaststroke my way back to reality.
And then sometimes those days are weeks. And months.
And that scares the shit out of me. Sure, I can sometimes grunt out some sort-of-acceptable piece of writing when I’ve got those things called “deadlines,” but that’s directed, required, non-negotiable. Writing for me? Writing the projects that are my dreams, not my duties? They dry up. Shrivel. ‘Cause that’s what my dopamine neurons are doing or whatever.
And I hate it. Absolutely fucking hate it.
So… advice? How do you keep writing when even just fidgeting your fingers across a keyboard is the equivalent of climbing Everest? “Wait until you feel better” isn’t exactly a useful thing. ‘Cause fuck if I know when that’s going to be. In an hour? A day? Five months? How do you extract the writer in you when she, along with the rest of yourself, is barely capable of dealing with just existing and your brain translates the noise of keys into “no, this is shit, why are you even trying, this sucks, oh you fucking silly thing you thought you could do this look at that crap, just go shrug off and die somewhere and stop trying to pretend like you could do this.” I want to write. I can’t write. I try to write. My brain tries to kill me. Ensue downward-drowning whirlpool loop of escalating mind-shittiness that usually ends with me on the ground next to my chair crying in fetal position over the fact that I could barely vomit out a sentence.
I would really like to figure out how to tell those demons to sit down and shut up because I am a writer, and I write, and I’d really just like to fucking do that.
May 12, 2015 — 10:48 AM
terribleminds says:
This is one of those really, really, really hard questions. And it has no good answers.
Depression is a thing you have to deal with and you can’t treat it like writer’s block because it’s not. It’s a whole other animal. You gotta deal with that as a thing separate from writing and not bind the two up together because that creates a world of weird, tangled expectations and, to my experience, only worsens the depression. So, you go at the depression direct. And that means whatever it means to the person suffering from it — medication, therapies alternative or psychological, whatever. It’s best to deal with that before you tie up a creative career into it.
At the same time, the advice remains true no matter the privilege of saying it: to be a writer means to write at whatever pace and schedule your mind and soul and life allow.
The good news *and* the bad news is that you’re not alone. A whooooole lot of authors and artists suffer in this way or in ways adjacent. It’s good because, again, solidarity. It’s bad because it’s also easy to look at those suffering the same problems and yet maintaining success, so there’s that “COMPARE YOURSELF TO THEM” angle which is always a toxic POV to take.
So, you do what you have to do.
Ultimately, try to be kind on yourself but also push yourself when it’s healthy to do so.
I wrote a bit about writing and depression a while back: http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2014/08/27/the-writer-and-depression/
And I talked about being kind to yourself as a writer here: http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2015/03/18/the-flipside-of-my-writing-tirade/
— c.
May 12, 2015 — 11:00 AM
Ktbenbrook says:
Yes definitely this. I can tell the difference since I am currently able to plot my story in my head. No writers block there, just a depression block I’ve come to recognize in getting stuff down. Don’t know if it will help others, but sometimes when I can’t get the actual story down, I write notes/emails about minor bits. Heck I’ve created rpg character sheets for my antagonists. Sometimes all I can do is write the story In my head, which helps later on.
But the most important thing is to get help, and remember that you willo often be the last to notice any effect. I remember when I first got help, it felt like other people around me were changing and not me. I mentioned this to my doctor and she said it was a common occurrence.
Dr: so have you noticed any changes.
Man: no nothing at all, the drug is having no effect I haven’t changed at all.
Wife: no dear, there have been huge changes.
Help is a long journey, often frustrating and to borrow yes often involves encounters with ice weasels. Get help, it’s a mountain where you need a Sherpa equivalent to help you.
A good way I’ve found to tell the difference is looking around your life and seeing if there are other types of blocks. Not cleaning blocks, staying awake blocks, reading blocks, just having fun and enjoying life blocks. Focus on getting well.
May 12, 2015 — 3:02 PM
janinmi says:
Miceala, I’m walking a parallel path to yours. Just wanted to say that; maybe it’ll help, maybe not. I wish you all best on your journey.
May 17, 2015 — 8:36 PM
David Baur says:
Just last week I wrote a post about how I constantly feel I am doing this — whatever it is I’m doing — wrong. I am not writing enough or maybe I’m writing too fast at low quality. I pay too much attention to my blog or not enough. Am I a brand? I think I’m supposed to be a brand now, or maybe I’m still just some guy. It’s baffling, and I guess in a way it’s good to know that that’s just how it is, even for wily veterans.
May 12, 2015 — 10:52 AM
Firebabe5150 says:
I think the ultimate lesson is that sometimes, SOMETIMES, no matter what you do, who you talk to, how you write, which positions you try in the orgy, it can still take timing and luck to “make it big.” Think of how many writers and other artists became famous after they were dead. Obviously no one wants to hear that the key to their success is to bite the mortality apple, but at the same time, it’s a pretty strong testament to the fact that sometimes no matter what you do, there’s still an undefined arbitrary element at work here. And since you can’t control it, the best thing to do is to try and be ready for it should it ever careen through your roof, smash your 65-inch flatscreen, set your cat’s tail on fire, and hand you a golden ticket to ride the Crazy Train. As the saying goes “Luck favors the prepared mind.” So prepare!
Also, those lists of how to write that say things about not using adverbs, and ignoring chapters, and never giving a dog a man’s name, and whatever the hell else they say – those things really irritate me. They’re a comprehensive list of what some author does to create their kind of story. But I don’t want to create THEIR story – I want my own. My liver cringes every time I see one of those damn things. And my liver lived through Mardi Gras 2008, 2011, and 2013.
May 12, 2015 — 11:08 AM
iconoplast says:
Perhaps we should make some numbered lists of these “rules” and roll dice for them to find out which ones we should be using in our stories. It seems to work for inspiring flash fiction…
May 12, 2015 — 7:23 PM
writerspice says:
So, so true! I’m working on my second novel (first one published, after I got an agent in a weird, connect-y, impossible way), and understand both a) the deep importance of reading, and b) how writing the first novel is about figuring out how the hell to write a novel. I tell this to my workshop students, and also that the only rule in this crazy task is: Have you broken your contract with the reader? Because if you break the fictional dream, they’ll throw your book across the room and it’s game over. Writing is unpredictable, instinct-driven art, that can’t be defined by the stupid, prescriptive rules that are all over the Internet. Thank you for this!!!
May 12, 2015 — 11:14 AM
sailingbloomers says:
I’m already pretty fed up with my constant doubts and have reached a point where I have lowered my expectations all the way down to the bottom of a filled latrine; anything that happens above that level is ‘gravy’…I’m quite sure I can get lower it need be.
May 12, 2015 — 11:20 AM
JaimeOMayer says:
“We wing it.” That feeling of great disappointment merging with being completely encouraged? I’m feeling the feels.
May 12, 2015 — 11:23 AM
Arlana K says:
Funny how the universe or whatever aligns sometimes. I needed to hear that. Thanks!
May 12, 2015 — 11:34 AM
abillyhiggins says:
*flashback to alien orgy*
Ah, New Mexico…
May 12, 2015 — 11:51 AM
S. J. Pajonas (spajonas) says:
I sometimes get emails like this from young writers or get asked this by people younger than me. I always answer, “Write your heart out, but learn a trade.” Because, sigh, making a living as a writer is so hard, but making a living as a graphic designer, or video editor, or house builder, or plumber, or landscaper, or whatever, is a little easier. You can always write on your off time and learn something else along the way that will inform your writing, and still be able to eat and have a roof over your head.
In my teens and twenties, I wanted to be a screenwriter. Then I realized there were no jobs for screenwriters and I had to pay off college loans. So I learned HTML and went to NYC and lived the dot com boom. In my thirties, I’m finally making those author aspirations happen that will inform my forties, fifties, and beyond. Always be looking ahead!
May 12, 2015 — 12:06 PM
Anna Langford says:
You had me at lube.
I’m going to shut up now and get back to writing.
May 12, 2015 — 12:16 PM
Kay Camden says:
If I didn’t feel like a fraud every day, I don’t think I’d have such a powerful drive to write. I think self-doubt and fear of failure is just part of being a writer. They’re great motivators though, if you can somehow let them drive you instead of drive over you. I imagine them as a stampede of wild-eyed cattle. And I don’t run. I brace my feet and jump on the first beast’s back. Yeehaw!
May 12, 2015 — 12:17 PM
ergeller57 says:
I’ve read/been told half a dozen times to cut out my cherished prologues. “Nobody reads prologues.” Just picked up “Ocean at the End of the Lane”–prologue AND an introduction. And an epigraph! Gaiman–what does he know?
It’s a knife fight. Pick your rules at your own risk.
May 12, 2015 — 1:05 PM
Ed says:
My editor hates (or at least dislikes my prologue) only everyone else loves it as the parachute it is to give you a world view of whats going on before i dump you into the story.
Who do you trust? I’m keeping it cos i believe in it. I always think that who is crazier, the person who comes up with the idea to run an ultra marathon, or the person who looks at that idea and goes you know what that IS a good idea?
Go with what you feel.
May 13, 2015 — 6:31 AM
Susan Faith Corl says:
Chuck–thanks so much for the laughs and the advice. It is also great help for an old person just trying to finish a book before she dies–maybe at the side of the mountain, but please, dear lord, not at the bottom. : ) Love your blog!!
May 12, 2015 — 1:13 PM
David Corbett says:
CW:
I think it’s item #3 where a lot of young writers get stumped. They don’t know how to think about writing, and so when they read or watch films or TV they’re not asking the right questions.
I think most writing books and classes are good solely to give you an idea of what questions to ask — how to think about writing.
But you actually learn how to write by applying those things — by applying them when you watch or read, and then translating what you’ve learned to what you write.
Your best teachers are always the writers you admire. Period. Learn from them. You may need to learn how to learn from them, and that’s what guide books and workshops are for.
Go forth and blunder.
May 12, 2015 — 1:14 PM
Pam Cable says:
This was AWESOME. But it’s not only the writers who don’t know what the fuck they’re doing. I believe in some bigger sense, neither do the agents or the publishers. They THINK they do, which is the first clue that they really don’t. Anyone who has worked in this industry knows it. It’s all a crap shoot.
May 12, 2015 — 1:45 PM
Nadia McGlinn says:
Your post addressed EXACTLY what I’ve been going through. The trouble with asking someone to tell me who I am as a writer is that someone will actually tell me. It’s like asking someone “who am I?” Trying to make an almost autistically subjective domain become objective. All that is objective in it is craft, like when someone shows you how to move from a description into a scene, for example. Or your great post about the mushy middle. (I just downloaded your book and expect some good stuff along those lines there too.) That’s fantastic. And then you practice. And finish the four manuscripts totaling about 100,000 words in all different genres, or shoot them with a pearl handled pistol. (How DO you put a manuscript out of its misery? or are you DOOMED unless you finish each and every one of them?)
I’m running out of runway in life, not starting out – that’s good medicine against procrastination. So now I’m on a plane, and I’m actually listening to the stew explain about the flotation cushion, because I can see that… THE WINGS ARE ON FIRE! I can’t afford to sit and read the paper! I’m all ears, and thank you for writing absolutely authentic, fantastic, helpful posts!
May 12, 2015 — 2:05 PM