Quite honestly, I feel intimidated. So many authors I look up to have either been professors, or they’ve gone to Ivy League schools such as Columbia or Yale. And then there’s me, working an entry-level job at age 32 and with eight years of work experience, with a BA in Psychology from Ohio State University. I don’t really have an impressive CV, so I start to wonder if I have the smarts to make it as an author.
And the lack of discipline is really a challenge. It’s hard, though, after working all day, to come home and try to create. So I wonder, because I am whining so much about how much my brain is fried at the end of the day, if I really want this?
Good books. I want to write good books, but it’s so hard. It looks easy. It seems like it should be easy. The planning and the ideas is fun. The researching is amazing. The actual writing? OH MY GOD. Let’s just say… um, yeah. It sucks ass.
Ass, I say.
But I know I can do it. I KNOW it. I just need to sit my bootie down and focus.
But I do feel alone. I feel like my turn won’t ever come, mostly due to my fault of not either producing stuff that’s good enough, or producing nothing at all. Both of which is my own fault, both things I can fix with hard work and DISCIPLINE.
Discipline, because getting halfway to my goal and having the almost irresistable urge to bail is BAD. I’ve got to push through, be willing to write thousands of words that may be thrown out someday just so I can get to know my characters, develop them, and mold them into something readable and saleable.
Because quite honestly? I have no intention of working in anybody’s office (except my own) for the rest of my life. This is a decision I just recently made. What this means is that I have GOT to focus, I have got to work my ass off, because writing is the only way I’m going to be able to do that. I want the whole package. I love copy editing, I do. But I don’t want to have to answer to the rigid rules of an office atmosphere. Ideally, I’d be able to survive off of writing novels and freelance editing, but I know that I have to really hunker down to be at that point.
I miss having a writing friend who I can dish about all this stuff with. 🙁 And I don’t mean just the technical stuff, but all the crazy, emotional stuff too.
Just as an FYI, I made a MySpace for writing: http://myspace.com/ronnithewriter When it asks for the last name, put in Davis. Security measure, you know. To avoid the spammers and scammers.
Anyway, I’m off for now. ‘Til next time.
I added both of your Myspaces 🙂
Okay, I couldn’t add your personal one but I did add the writer one.
Yes, you can do it. And you’re completely right. Just sit that bootie down and focus! Write on!
Snoop says, Gooooooooo, Ronni!
My Credentials for being an author-
–Always wanted to be a picture book writer/illustrator–never wrote a thing that wasn’t required for school/doodled excessively, but never tried to create finished art not required in school. I have inattentive ADD and writing long hand hurt. (I’m dating myself here–computers were just getting going when I was in college.)
Four years of college to be a teacher–no masters (but I did get nominated for teacher of the year my last year of teaching)
Age 29–Take off a year when son is born to turn a poem I wrote for a college art class project into a pb. Spend a year revising and making a dummy. Get a few personal rejections.
Year two of near poverty–start book two and illustrations. Get more nice rejections and a few requests for more work.
Spend year three writing a pb that turns into a novel. Spend a lot of time loving novel writing and figuring it out.
Next few years–blur–daughter born with cp–write off and on–feel depressed but keep at it when there are times of motivation.
Novel two sells. So glad I didn’t give up along the way when there were soooo many chances to and naysayer.
Keep at it!
I was married and working at age 17, skipping college. It hasn’t been easy but I’ve learned enough about writing on my own to sell over thirty books. Believe in yourself and just have fun writing.
You can do it! Although there are lots of brilliant writers, I don’t believe it’s a requirement. I have always believed the line about working harder than everyone else. If you are persistent and work hard at it, you WILL be published! You don’t have to be the best (no matter what it is you try to do). You just have to give 100% or 110%, whatever it takes to work harder than the others.
Lack of an impressive degree certainly doesn’t mean you don’t have the smarts to be a writer…there are a lot of different things that a person can bring to a book…some writers are good with clever descriptions, some are funny, some bring great emotional depth…and most of it isn’t something a degree will necessarily teach you.
Lack of discipline is a problem…I struggled with that for so long…I know how frustrating and downright painful it can be. I got over that part somehow, but I still don’t really know how…
I think I’ll put this in list format; and I’ll apologize in advance for the rambling that’s about to occur — it’s that thing about “brain fried at the end of the day.”
(Too d@mn long… continued below!)
(… continued from above!)
The next time you pick up a new book to read, why don’t you set it down and fire up the word processor instead. After pulling out the ethernet cable.
Okay. This reply is probably over-length. [EDIT: yup!] Gosh, look at how many words [EDIT: 1200!] I cranked out in response to a LiveJournal post! You’re right, writing is easy! It’s figuring out how to get paid for it that’s tough!
Thanks for a thought-provoking entry, and for the kick in the unfocussed bootie you’ve provided.
Now stop lollygagging on teh interwebses and go write something!
To answer your questions:
1. I actually don’t get to hang out with writers often, unless I’m at a convention or an author signing, neither of which happens more than once a year for me if I’m lucky. I see only every six weeks even, if I’m lucky, and he’s my boyfriend.
2. As for the tattoo, my friend is going to buy it for me. 😛
3. As for the book list, no, I don’t believe I read too much. I read FAST, that’s what I do. I also read books FOR work, LOTS of them, and that’s what’s contributed to my 100 book goal.
4. I haven’t been published since right after high school, when I wrote a couple of articles for the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
5. I know there are people who go for the quantity vs. quality for whatever, but I cannot, not at this point. To break in, I have to be GOOD. And it’s possible that I am trying too hard to be good, but I can’t accept any less from myself. I don’t want my book on the $3.98 table a month after it’s come out.
I think I need to start taking in caffeine. Work drains me, especially the days I don’t even HAVE work, so by the time I get home, the last thing I want to do is spend time working some more, no matter how much I enjoy it once I’m in the midst of it. I come home and go straight to bed for an hour. And my job is not that hard, just very mentally taxing sometimes. But if I had more energy, I think I’d be able to write more. Seems like all the good writers drinks lots of coffee. For me, it’ll be Red Bull, though.
P.S. lilrongal = me. LOL.
Maybe try exercise, instead of caffeine? It’s an energy boost without the crash at the end.
That would make me do nothing but head to the kitchen and stuff myself, which would put me in a food coma and cause me to go to bed.
I’m not really into excercise, unfortunately.
I think we all feel like you. I know I do… especially today…just rejected by EE and I wonder if ALL I will ever be is second best and a Mom to my 6 month old. (he liked my writing, said it was strong.. liked my plot, but the book just did not click enough with him to sell it) Somehow we keep going, you did AND landed an agent. That is huge working full-time and being a Mom. I see the window of opportunity closing a bit each day as the writer fades and the Mom takes over. But I want to be published…
I guess we just have to yip out loud and keep moving forward.
Thank you for validating. *hugs*
And you know what? Being a mom is a VERY important job. 🙂 But I’m sure you know that. Feel free to email me anytime.
Gosh. I know what you mean. I have an easy job now that is so great for writing, but it was a lot harder to write when I worked at Sears. I was so physically exhausted from all I had to do, and so emotionally drained from how mean customers and upper management were. I hardly wrote at all in the 4.5 years I worked there.
And I can’t drink caffeine–it gives me heart palpitations, not energy. So I couldn’t even turn to that!
Re: #5: Holy crap. I swear I had those precise thoughts just today! I’ve had horrible visions of the $3.98 table.
Then I realize that I’m not even agented yet, because I’m not finished with either manuscript I’m doing, and I feel arrogant for ever having thought my book would end up in a store period.
You are too cute! I am sorry you’re frustrated but your journals are enjoyable.
Aww, thanks!
You’re not arrogant. You’re thinking ahead. 🙂