Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Writing When You Don’t Wanna: Reflection on the Past 120 Days

           If you’ve read this post, you’ll know that I’ve spent the past four months tricking myself into writing every day. I still use the word “tricking” because, although writing everyday has begun to feel a lot more natural and enjoyable, getting that checkmark has often been tiresome and painful. Not breaking the chain has meant writing at eleven o’clock in that borderline laughter-crying state college students have mastered. In the car on the way home from spending the day at my best friend’s school and I have about fifteen minutes to type something out on my phone that will probably make no sense because I’ve slept about three hours. But I’ve kept the chain going so far, and with each mark I have new motivation not to skip a day. This may be the first time during any academic year that I’ve managed to stay creatively grounded despite all my school stress. And all that is because I’ve learned to write even when I just don’t want to.
            Before this year, I fell into the mindset that many young writers have, that I shouldn’t write if I’m not feeling inspired. Writing without all consuming desire would just feel like dry heaving. All my efforts would produce would be dry prose that offends all literary decency by virtue of existence. So it’s better to not write and just keep watching the same episodes of Parks & Rec over and over again, right?
But I never really found the perfect moment to start. There was always some distraction, some anxiety, some looming responsibility that inhibited the creative mojo I wanted to just flow onto the page. As a result, I never wrote regularly, getting work done only in the summer when I was bored enough to finally open a Word Document.
I didn’t know that this isn’t how writing careers work. Fancy authors with their book deals and stuff are swathed with deadlines and contracts. Waiting for inspiration isn’t an option when your agent keeps calling. Authors still seem to deliver just as well, if not better, on their second and third books.
What I defined as Waiting for Inspiration was just repackaged pretentiousness and apprehension. Forcing myself to write every day required me to accept that all first drafts are crap, but crappy writing is better than no writing because at least I’ll have something to revise later. Inspiration isn’t something that falls at a person’s feet; one has to find it on their own.
A strange thing happens in the absence of inspiration. A writer has to take risks they would otherwise not take. I chose to write a coming of age story, a novel that takes place all in one night, because despite all the anxieties I have about those tropes, they are the best ideas I have right now. I’ll probably screw it up, but that’s okay. I can fix it tomorrow anyway.
So this is my advice, which will sound hypocritical since this is a whole blog post about thinking about writing as opposed to actually writing, but:

If you want to be a writer, then write already. Quit waiting. Quit thinking. Just write. Now.