The Journal, Tuesday, September 17
In today's Journal
* Quote of the Day * I experienced a major epiphany * The numbers
Quote of the Day
Again via The Passive Voice, "No insect hangs its nest on threads as frail as those which will sustain the weight of human vanity." Edith Wharton
This is the sort of thought that strikes me every time I hear a fiction writer refer to what he does as "hard work." Such an appellation is nothing more than an attempt on two fronts to validate what the fiction writer does for a living.
On the first front, maybe saying writing is hard work keeps him from feeling guilty. After all, how can one feel guilty if one is doing "Hard Work"?
On the other front, I suppose it's a way of yelling to the world, "What I do is Important!"
How presumptious, and how very silly.
Anyone who's ever wielded the working end of a shovel for even a few hours knows that writing fiction is not "hard work," or any kind of work for that matter.
And it's probably difficult for anyone who's served as a first responder or worked a shift in a hospital to consider creating something so trivial as a moment's entertainment "important."
A story is roughly as important as a song or a film or a sculpture or a still life in oil on canvas. In other words, it isn't.
I mention this only to free-up those of us who are fortunate enough to be fiction writers. We don't have to make every word perfect. We don't have to write polished, grammatically correct sentences.
We only have to convey the stories our characters give us, breathe, eat and sleep. ***
I experienced a major epiphany this morning.
I realized that many writers and ALL would-be writers hear what they want to hear, believe what they want to believe, and—most importantly—flock to advice they're comfortable with.
I was no exception, I'm sure, before I found Heinlein's Rules and Writing Into the Dark. Practicing those required a great leap of faith. And discovering for myself that they actually work made me hungry for knowledge.
Then came a transition period, during which I held my own feet to the fire publicly in this Journal. At the same time I began to seek out those who are much farther along the road than I. When I find them, I pay rapt attention to (and pass along) whatever they say. I also read their fiction and pay close attention to how they do what they do.
But until I made that leap of faith, I didn't do those things. Like most everyone else, I stuck with advice with which I was comfortable. Non-threatening advice. Advice to do the same old things in the same old way and hope someday they'd work.
Mostly that advice bounces back and forth at writers' conferences, in writers' groups and in critique groups, basically the blind leading the blind. Meaning they all tell each other the same things they initially learned from non-writers. It's a self-perpetuation machine. And again, I was no exception.
But once I found HR and WITD and learned that they actually work, I also learned the value of practice. My skills and knowledge quickly grew, and soon I became one of those writers from whom some others seek advice. How weird is that? And I gladly pay it forward in both mentoring and in free advice.
But it's also been bugging me that so many writers who are not as far along the road and who know me will actually still give me advice that I tried and discarded a lifetime ago. (grin) Historically, it's been difficult for me to smile, nod, and go on about my business.
Then my epiphany happened this morning and I figured it all out. I realized the epiphany is part and parcel of a new growth spurt. As is my recent slacking off on the Journal and my need to not write for awhile and my need to start separating myself from the end results of the advice I hand out. ("Some writers 'get' WITD and others just don't.") It's all one big package, and this morning it all came together when I heard (read) yet another Stage Two writer advising others to do something that flat doesn't work.
I'm glad for the epiphany, and I'm glad for all the stuff that led up to it. I wrote fiction today for the first time in a very long time (for me). I'm excited about writing again.
It hit me too that of the writers I admire (with the notable exception of DWS) either don't hand out advice at all or they do so only rarely. Probably because they're too busy writing.
Or maybe because they learned at some point, as I finally have, that most writers flock to advice they're comfortable with and treat sage advice from seasoned writers who've been there and done that like so much nonsensical verbiage. (grin)
Talk with you later. 'Til then, keep writing and learning.
The Numbers
Fiction words today…………………… 2245 Nonfiction words today…………… 1030
Total fiction words for the month……… 2245 Total fiction words for the year………… 376898 Total nonfiction words for the month… 9680 Total nonfiction words for the year…… 256390 Total words for the year (fiction and this blog)…… 633288
Calendar Year 2019 Novels to Date…………………… 7 Calendar Year 2019 Novellas to Date……………… 1 Calendar Year 2019 Short Stories to Date… 2 Novels (since Oct 19, 2014)…………………………………… 43 Novellas (since Nov 1, 2015)………………………………… 8 Short stories (since Apr 15, 2014)………………… 195 Short story collections……………………………………………… 31