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Monday, June 27, 2016

LIES WRITERS BELIEVE

LIES

They are what drives our characters to do the things that spiral into 

foolishness and adventure and wisdom won ... 

or defeat assured.

LIES 

They do the same to us if we believe them about our writing dream.  Lies can be fought with truth talk.


LIE #1

I AM NOTHING, A FAILURE IF I DO NOT GET PUBLISHED.

Really?

Was Emily Dickinson a nothing, a failure because she never gave up writing her poems her way and was never published in her lifetime?

 Creative writing is one of the best exercises we can do for the aging brain.

Don't take my word alone for it: 

Jenni Ogden, a writer AND a neuro-psychologist has found it so.

Writing adds to the intellectual and physical exercises 

that slow down the brain’s aging process most often experienced

 by the forgetting of names and words and where you put the car keys – or the car!

Use it or lose it.


LIE #2 

IF I HAVEN'T MADE IT (GOTTEN AN AGENT, BECOME FAMOUS) BY NOW, I NEVER WILL.

Oh, come on now!

A novel is more than just sitting down and cranking out a word count. 

There are those little pesky things like plot, and character, and pacing, and dialogue and so on and so forth. 

All of those things take time to develop.

 While you’re doing all of this as a budding novelist, you are also most likely doing all the other things in your days that constitute your life

A day job, spouse and family, hobbies and friends, reading and television and video games and even (wait for it) sleep. 

It all adds up — and it all subtracts from the amount of time you have to write.

 Writing those three or four or five novels an average writer has to burn through 

before they write a publishable novel will likely take years.

No matter who you are as an author, you pay your dues at one end or another. 

To put it another way: it takes many years to be an overnight success. 

Maybe you haven’t “made it” yet. 

That doesn’t mean you never will.

George Elliot didn't publish 'Middlemarch' until she was 52.

Anthony Burgess (published at 39), 

Helen Dewitt published 'The Last Sumarai' at 41,

 William S. Burroughs 
("When you stop growing, you start dying.") published his first novel at 39.

 Laura Ingalls  

("There is no great loss without some small gain.”), was in her mid-60s when she published 'Little House in the Big Woods.'

 Marquis de Sade, (Ah, let's not go there!)

 Raymond Chandler (published 'The Big Sleep' at 51)

-- all gained fame older.

Bram Stoker, too (Who didn't write 'Dracula' until he was 50)  and said "We learn from failure not from success."  Gee, I must be a genius!



LIE #3

I DON'T HAVE TIME

Does Dean Koontz have a magic stopwatch that stops time to give him 30 hours a day to write?

Let me tell you about Robert Louis Stevenson --


A year after Kidnapped he left Scotland and southern England for America 

in search of adventure and a better climate for his tuberculosis.

Writing continued on land and sea at 400 pages a year for twenty years, 

reckoned his first biographer. From one letter home a year before Stevenson died:

    "For fourteen years I have not had a day's real health;
    I have awakened sick and gone to bed weary; and I have done my work unflinchingly.
    I have written in bed, and written out of it, written in haemorrhages,
    written in sickness, written torn by coughing, written when my head swam for weakness;

     And for so long, it seems to me I have won my wager and recovered my glove....


    And the battle goes on 'ill or well.'

     It is a trifle; so as it goes. I was made for a contest."

So what is stopping you from writing?


17 comments:

  1. I keep trying to remember that. But my book is coming along. I'm going to get back to it. This week. I hope.

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    1. Word by word you can do it, Liz. It has taken me so long to be at page 104 of my own WIP!

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  2. You wanna know what stops me from writing? Editing! Proofing! Self-publishing!

    Just joking. I'm now editing/final polishing my second Charity MacCay novel, and I must say it's much easier than the original writing. But then it's an historical and I had to do so much research! This is easy in comparison.

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    1. For me, research is the fun part! I get to pluck jigsaw pieces of history and arrange them in the pattern I want. :-) Best of sales with your 2nd Charity MacCay novel!

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  3. Such an inspiring post, Roland--I love it. Lately, sheer fatigue has kept me from writing. I do other stuff first and then run out of energy.

    You have motivated me to do better. Thank you.

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    1. As a rare blood courier who worked 26 of the weekend's 48 hours, I know fatigue! Do your best and know I have your back.

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  4. You know, I think I've accepted I will never be published traditionally, but perhaps again by self. However, I will always write if but for myself. Love this post, Roland!!!

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    1. I went the self-published route myself, having faith that my writing was worth buying. :-)

      Thanks for loving this post, Teresa!

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  5. I must be a genius - funny!
    Use it or lose it is true of all the talents God gives us.

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    1. Yes, it is, isn't it? Thanks for liking my humor. :-)

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  6. I would like to know where I can squeeze more time out of 24 hours? I need a retreat, I need some personal space, but none of those are available. Motivation is good, but doing something with that motivation takes time.

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    1. John D McDonald wrote a sci fi/fantasy novel where a man left his nephew a pocketwatch that could stop time for a subjective hour. Wouldn't that be great. But the uncle used it too much and seemed to age faster than those around him ... which he had, of course!

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    2. Shades of Dorian Grey. And that didn't end well. . .

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  7. Great post and very well said. I should blame my laziness and not the lack of time for not writing.

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    Replies
    1. Sometimes the inertia of writing is hard to overcome, isn't it?

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