There's battle lines being drawn.
Nobody's right if everybody's wrong.
Young people speaking their minds
getting so much resistance from behind

Monday, March 26, 2007

One of those nights

Since I said I would talk about the bits of becoming a writer, I need to talk about this. Last night was one of those crisis moments. I was dead tired. I missed my writers group meeting (and I had a story we were going to critique). And there were two rejection letters this weekend. The gremlins started jeering.

Normally I'm pretty good at ignoring them, but I had given them some good ammo. Why did I think I could be a writer? What the heck am I doing? I'm not dedicated enough or I would have gone to the meeting, flu be damned. I could make more money focusing on the day job. I could have a more satisfactory day job. I could devote more time to the village, to my wife, the my house, to the cat. Just what did I think I was doing except wasting time, energy, and money trying to be a writer?

So I didn't get much sleep, and I still hurt. Damn gremlins. They're quiet now, but I know they're still there. I'll be okay. I'll keep writing. I know I can do this.

On the drive in to work I was thinking about a class mate I had for a fiction writing course. He just didn't get it. His prose was horrible and at best plagerized (yes, and I had to call him on it during critique). And I was wondering if I was acting the same way he did, performing the same function he did in that class, but now I was doing that on a wider stage. Damn gremlins.

5 comments:

Dan said...

A probably hackneyed but useful thing I always tell my students...

You are your own worst critic.

(Trying up my comment quotient.)

Steve Buchheit said...

Yeah. It's one of those things I can push off most times. Rejection letters don't tend to bother me all that much (there's always another market). I think it was the conjunction of all three things (2 letters and not going to the group because I wasn't feeling well).

Camille Alexa said...

Steve,

I don't think it would help to say that the human condition in general is one of struggle and anxiety. I will mention that everyone I know gets the dreads. If someone tells you otherwise, they are either lying or on better medication that any of my friends.

Don't give it up. Not that I think you can; as the great Steven Utley says in his poem "Lust and Compulsion",

Fellow writers scoff
When I tell them, “Writing is
A mental disorder.”
“That’s crazy,” they say.
“Well, answer me, then, could you stop
if you wanted to?”

Steve Buchheit said...

LBB, I can stop anytime I wanna. (hands shake, then a full body shake like I'm possessed with the giant willies).

Well, no, I can't.

Yep, like I said I'll keep writing. Whenever I sit down to write I hear one of the gremlin voices, but I can always shout them down (in my head). Last night it was a little harder to do that.

Yesterday I also was reading a lot of Steven Brust's Dzur. So there was also a little, "man, I wish I could write like this," and I don't think Dzur is his best work.

The bright spot of today was I realized I could send the Pirate Story to Writers of the Future. (insert evil laughter here).

Todd Wheeler said...

Give yourself permission to rest and recover from the flu.

I know, easier said than done.