“Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.” – Groucho Marx
Every so often, someone comes up to me at a social event and after talking for a while, they come out with “I have a novel inside me; I just know it.”
One of these days, I am going to look at that person and solemnly paraphrase Groucho Marx: “Inside of you, it’s too dark to read it.” Instead, I usually respond with something like “When are you going to write it?” or “Then you should write it.”
Nobody ever responds with “Yes, I should,” much less goes away and does it. Instead I get “But I don’t know how to start” or “I don’t have time right now” or “I have to finish X first (where X is anything from “reading the latest bestseller” to “an important project at work” to “remodeling my house”)” or “I don’t have the right equipment or the right place to work in.”
I always tell them very nicely to go and write anyway, that people find or make time for the things that are important, that I’m sure they can do what they set their minds to. And they nod and go away happy and I don’t think any of them ever write anything more than a grocery list.
What I want to say is:
Honey, you’re making excuses, and as long as you’re making excuses, that novel inside you is going to stay right where it is. Because nobody knows how to start a novel, until they sit down and do it; there is never enough time, until you decide there is; something else is always going to be more important, until you decide it isn’t; and the “right” place and “right” equipment will elude you until you realize that the right place is wherever you are and the right equipment is whatever you have at hand to make marks with and on.
You made enough time to come to this event (dinner, party, convention, meeting, whatever). You didn’t have to finish X before you came to this event. You could have stayed home and written for two hours. Have you got a pen and paper in your pocket? You could take them over in that corner and get some notes written right now. You could…but you won’t.
And you won’t because…well, because of a lot of things, but they all boil down to the fact that you aren’t a writer. That novel inside you? It isn’t a novel. It’s a vague feeling that writing a novel is something you could do, and that it would be a rather nice thing to do. It’s the same way you think that you might like to visit the space station, or learn to do brain surgery, or become a virtuoso pianist. You think it might be nice, but you don’t really want to put the work into actually doing it.
You’re actually perfectly happy coming to events like this and cornering people who’ve actually done those things and whining about how you could do them, too, if you just had the right equipment or the time or less to do. Because we’re all too polite to tell you what I’m saying right now, so you can go home in a comfortable glow, knowing that a real professional writer told you you could write if you wanted, and believing in your heart that whatever you’re doing instead (bestseller, work project, home remodel, etc.) is more important than writing. And since you could write, but you have more important things to do, you don’t have to take the chance that you actually aren’t very good at it, and you won’t have to put in the work to learn to do it well.
And you know what? That thing you have to finish instead of writing? It is more important than writing…to you. You just won’t admit, even to yourself, that it’s your choice. Until you do, you won’t ever be a writer.
That’s what I want to say, but I don’t. Partly because I was born and raised in the Midwest, and you just don’t do that to people who are trying to have a pleasant, innocuous conversation at a social event; partly because I’m not really into conflict and tearing people down; partly because it’s not my job to deprive people of their illusions.
But also partly because at least some of those people will eventually realize on their own that all those excuses are just a way to keep from taking the scary first step. And no, I don’t mean sitting down in front of a blank page/monitor to actually write something (though believe me, that’s plenty scary). I mean the very first part, the part where you say to yourself “OK, come hell or high water, I am going to write a novel” and mean it. The part where you commit to actually writing something, instead of thinking vaguely that it’d be rather nice to do so.
Those people will get that novel inside them out onto paper/pixels where others can read it. Some of them will have professional careers. A few of them will be brilliant. And since I am not smart enough to pick out those people in advance, I want to give everybody the benefit of the doubt. Also, I’d really like to encourage those few people who aren’t looking for another excuse to continue doing what they’re doing (i.e., not writing), but who really do need a little reassurance that writing gets done by ordinary people just like them, and so they might as well try.
Sometimes, though, it gets frustrating enough that I just have to rant. So I do it here. Because I don’t mean any of you folks. 🙂
AMEN! I’m not even published yet and I can’t tell you how many of my friends/family have come up to me and said “you know, I’ve been thinking about doing that too,” whenever we’re talking about my writing. Have any of them done it? Nope. I think a lot of people have ideas, but they’re just not serious enough when they learn that it’s actually *work* to write. They think it’s something they can just sit down and bang out in a couple of hours and then boom! they’ll be published. LOL.
There are about a dozen people in my life who know that I write, and two of those have said similar things to me. I really hope that this ratio doesn’t hold true for the rest of the world. One person in six? Eeek.
My favorite, beloved, best great-aunt once said to me, “I think that all of us have a book inside us.” I blanched, because this was when we were short on money, and she had money, and she had recently asked me about ghost-writing rates. Then she went on: “In my case, I think that’s where it ought to stay.”
I love my aunt.
“Sometimes, though, it gets frustrating enough that I just have to rant. So I do it here. Because I don’t mean any of you folks. :)”
Yes, you do.
I have had ideas for longer pieces of writing. I just have never had enough that I felt I could really do the job justice. Shorter pieces are more my style. I was keeping a writing journal for a while. It was short stuff and nothing that I felt was of sufficient quality.
I probably program computers better than any of you, but 100,000 line accounting systems do not count for much around here.
I’ve heard that of 1000 people who want to write a book, one will sit down and start.
Of 100 people who start a book, one will finish.
Of 10 who finish a book, one will submit to agents/editors or indie publish.
“Anyone whose has written a novel is a colleague of mine.”
Who said that? A renowned and generous writer, yes. But who? I know I’ve utterly mangled the quote. And why can’t I remember the writer’s name? But, yes, my memory really is that bad!
Many people who think they want to write actually want to have written.
I don’t even have a good outline of a book inside of me. Lots of ideas, but doesn’t everybody? Ideas aren’t books.
Here’s one of Ms. Wrede’s posts on how to get from idea to story.
http://pcwrede.com/blog/water-fertilizer-and-other-care/
Many people who think they want to write actually want to have written.
I suspect even a lot of authors would like to have written. *beth prods the Work In Progress and mutters to herself*
I saw you speak with two of your friends at the Denver WorldCon. I can’t remember the details, but one (or all?) of you talked about how you’d get together for lunch, and just take 20 minutes to write-write-write at the place you ate lunch.
I’ve probably got the story all wrong, but my version still means a lot to me. It was such an eye-opener to hear how just a little bit of time, taken daily, could lead to a book — to wonderful books. It inspired me, and got me on track to completing some short fiction — and eventually to two NaNos, and now I’m writing my first real second draft.
Anyway, I think you’re doing the important thing: telling wanna-be writers the hard truth that WRITING is involved. You never know who you’ll touch (-:.
I was, and continue to be, grateful for that little reassurance that “ordinary” people can be writers, too. Thank you, Pat.