This quote is universally attributed to Ernest Hemingway, and there is no evidence that he actually said it. But no one cares, because it’s exactly the kind of thing he would say, and we do know that’s what he believed.
On
this matter, he was correct. If you
spend an hour a day messing around on the guitar, you’re a guitar player. If you go to the driving range every weekend,
you’re a golfer. If you write all the
time, because you‘re compelled to do so, you’re a writer. Before I was published, I didn’t feel this
way, which I regret. It wasn’t fair to
my unpublished self, because I sure as hell worked like a son-of-a-bitch to
remedy the situation.
I have a young friend, unpublished,
who’s been working on a book for many years, putting in the hours of writing
and rewriting, casting about for help and advice, cramming in writing time
around a demanding job and busy toddler, feeling buoyed and desperate in equal
measure, and generally going through the paces of apprenticeship. To me, he’s a writer, because he’s always
working at it, no matter what.
The thing is, writing is rarely
easy. There are moments when we all feel
as if some supernatural power has taken hold of us, directing our hands to
tap away effortlessly, composing as easily as breathing or strolling down the
street. We’ll also agree that this
hardly ever happens. Instead, it’s not
unlike digging a ditch. You have to put
the shovel in, push down with your foot, and haul the stuff out of the ground. This is hard work, and you know how hard it
is with every word and shovelful.
Pausing with your hands over the keyboard while staring into the void is something our life partners have often witnessed. They think we’ve slipped into a trance, but we know we’re only trying to come up with the next word, phrase, analogy, simile, descriptive sentence, or clever tie-up to the end of a chapter. You feel like your mind is now trapped in concrete, and not another thought will ever occur to you. But it always comes anyway, you just have to wait for it.
Some people don’t feel well unless
they run a few miles a day. Some of them
are friends of mine, and in their 70s have sleek, toned bodies and the glow of
clear heads and arteries. I’m not one of
them. I think a car is a much better way
to travel from point A to point B, and will never run unless being pursued by a
wild animal, which is a distinct possibility where I live in New England. But I understand their addiction. I’m the same way about writing. If I don’t write something, anything, at
least once during the day, I feel like I’ve not slept or eaten. I get jumpier than an addict, which I guess I
am, sort of. I know it’s a mental
problem, but I’ve heard of worse.
Though as noted above, running for a few hours or crunching through a narrative is difficult, even if you can’t help yourself. It usually starts smoothly, but there’s always that point when you start to fatigue and mild regret sets in. Your breath shallows or your hands begin to get sore. Your brain starts to wonder why you launched this effort in the first place, when you could be on the couch watching NFL Highlights or Antiques Roadshow.
But then, endurance kicks in, and you keep going, because why not.
You’re already out on the road or at the keyboard and it seems better to just
push through. You start to think of new
things to write, new connections and old ideas that can be pulled out of the dusty
attic of your tired brain. You tell yourself:
this isn’t that hard. You just have to
keep going, and if it sucks, you can always erase it all and start over again
tomorrow. There will aways be other
ideas, other notions, other turns of phrase, something else you can put down on
the page, because this is what writers do.
They write.
Chris, you've eloquently described one kind of writer, and I take no issue with that description. I'm a writer too, and I don't fit your mold. I feel fine on days I don't write, and I feel driven only when I get an idea, which happens intermittently. I wrote my seven novels butt in chair, day after day, fired up or not. But the sixty short stories and three books of poetry (let's say 150 plus poems over fifty years, at least half first published in journals) all started with a divine spark or a character's voice in my head. I wrote a poem yesterday that utterly satisfied my soul, and my body was flooded with endorphins when I knew I had it right. A writer writes however it works for her.
ReplyDeleteWe all write in our own unique ways / rhythm / time / habits. The key is, we get stuff out. And ideas come from strange places. I just realized that one of my characters in a new story is a former beauty queen... I have to talk to her a little more and figure out what happened, cause she sure ain't one now.
ReplyDeleteChris, twenty years ago I was told by a veteran: If you write, you can call yourself a writer. The expectation is, if you are published (traditionally) then you can call yourself an author. And I so agree: writers write! Sometimes my students don't want to hear that. It seems like actual work- smile
ReplyDeleteII agree about the distinction, Melodie. And yet...I still remember how it felt at cocktail parties in my youth when people would ask, "What do you do?" "I'm a writer." "What have you published?" "Nothing yet." And their eyes would glaze over. In contrast, when a legendary editor at a Big house took my first novel, I had instant cred. But the legendary editor was 90 years old. (It takes time to become a legend.) I'm currently rereading that first novel aloud, and OMG could it have used an editor who edited.
DeleteYou write… and it shows.
ReplyDelete