A Ruthless Look at my Dream of Writing. Or: Rich? Yes Please. Fame? Pass. Mostly Just Do the Work.

I love the idea of being a prolific writer but the tactical work of it—the butt in the chair, boots on the ground terra firma-ness of it—well I find myself evading all that. I love imagining myself staring at my bookshelf filled with works I’ve written, completed and published, but I’ll spend all day polishing the windows (or usually just thinking about polishing the windows) and avoiding the work to actually get there like the plague.

My dream for myself as a writer has morphed significantly since I was a child submitting my work to Written and Illustrated By, a kid’s publishing contest that ushered in the likes of the great Dav Pilkey (genius behind the illustrious Captain Underpants series). Back then, I wanted to be rich and famous through writing. That was my north star for years, and it took me several decades to really question that assumption—several decades to realize how much I treasure my anonymity. It really solidified for me in a castle in Ireland when Bono showed up for a pint in the castle’s pub. He was rolling with a small crew and spent not ten minutes relaxing until a crowd of camera-wielding fans arrived to take his photograph and steal his soul. The idea of being hounded by crazed fans—by being unable to pull into a Hannaford and review, unfettered, heads of lettuce for blemishes—that idea gave me the heebie jeebies. The rich part has not yet given me the heebie jeebies, but I’ve realized I’m not into the whole hustle thing. I’d rather opt for a slow burn. I’m not clacking away on my keyboard until midnight and I’m just not an anything for my business! human. I’m a I could be writing this morning but let’s rock dawn patrol instead, do my day job, see my friends, and fall asleep in the 8s or 9s kind of girl. I think (I hope) you can likely still make it work, still achieve some version of whatever success you’ve defined for yourself but it will happen slower than for all the people who get interviewed by Tim Ferris on his podcast to discuss hyperproductivity. And I’ve started to be ok with that. Plus, I have to be ok with it, because I’m not showing any signs of movement towards an otherwise.

So ya—I spend most of my “writing” time journaling little pep talks to myself, which isn’t really the work, it’s just a warm up before the work, a time to galvanize and clear my head, or looking out the window. The work—the essay, or the long form book, or the poem—that might get ten minutes or a half hour on a good day. It’s better than what I did for twenty years or so which was simply dream of being a writer without lifting a pen, thinking somehow it would just “be so!”, like magic beans or abracadabra. I told myself “If I actually tried, I would be great! If I didn’t have to go to this silly day job, I’d actually have the time to write my works, get my deal and be on the world tour!” It was a big old bundle of excuses. To call one point out specifically, I’ve had days that stretched for miles in their vastness of “nothin’ much going on today” and didn’t once find myself “writing all day”. Maya Angelou let a hotel room, Stephen King works 3-4 hours a day, but my good day is 15-30 minutes, in the morning, while my loves are still sleeping and the blue of dawn is unfurling.

I once had an interview for a job in New York at the founder’s beautiful apartment. There were expensive, boldly colored tapestries on the walls and floor, and heavy looking pieces of furniture. I recall there was endless air and space in the apartment, despite its being filled with color and wood, and in that air hung the suggestion of great wealth.

I think the company’s owner size me up instantly as ill-fitting for the job (which has been true for every day job I’ve ever held—he was not unique in his astuteness).

“What do you really want to do?” he asked, leaning forward.

Since he’d clearly already marked my resume with a “Next!” at the top, I opted to be honest at question rather than protesting “No no! I seriously love researching rare earth metals, which is the primary responsibility here according to your job description! I love anything with the potential for fracking!”. “Well, I love to write,” I said.

“Ah,” he leaned back in his chair. “I knew it. Me too.” If he’d had a pipe, I think he would have lit it then. “Don’t ever do that for your job,” he said. “It’ll rob the joy of it.”

And I reviled against that advice then. You have no clue who I am and who I’ll be! I wanted to shout. But I’ve turned his words over—over and over—through the years, like a stone, and there was a thread of important truth in that advice for me. And it was this: Don’t let your dreams of being a writer 1) distract you from the actual work itself 2) unleash a Titanic sized weight of pressure on your back that will feel so heavy you can barely lift your pen. Uncoupling that dream of fame and riches from the work itself has been the single most important mindset switch I’ve made as a writer.

I think I thought that being a good writer would somehow get me out of a day job, the need to worry about paying bills, the need to save for retirement. I told myself “Soon I’ll be a rich writer, so I don’t need to think of these earthly worries.” It was kind of like my own version of the crystal shop owner’s dream of Mecca in The Alchemist. The dream sustained me, kept my going, but actually putting the time in to realize it? Bah!

Again, my dream has morphed significantly since I was five, plagiarizing Black Beauty to impress my family. Now, my only dream and goal is to actually do my work. To sit down, to write and complete my work, and to share it. I’ve unhitched my star from fame, though I remain steadfastly hitched to the notion of fortune (why not?). I’m simply following the mantra of “Always produce” as essayist Paul Graham would say.

I’ve heard that “The work is the gift” and I find that’s true. My writing time is my quiet time—it’s like being a in a holy cave where I can focus, and the opportunity and ability to focus is now, quite possibly, the most elusive thing on the menu of life, with everything that’s aimed at distracting you. When I’m writing, I don’t feel like a weirdo or an outsider—I feel like an instrument that’s in tune. As social connected beings, hardwired to prize acceptance in the group, a lot of us spend time wondering “Am I weird? Was that the most awkward thing ever to say just then? Why does it feel like everyone else is swimming and I’m thrashing about with heavy rocks tied to my feet like a Salem witch?” But when I’m writing, there’s none of that—just a calmness and a sense of belonging, a feeling I’m doing what I was made to do. And so I would agree that writing is the gift, and honing the craft the true responsibility of any artist or maker, and really the only piece you can control anyway.

Further inspiration

Cheryl Strayed: Write like a Motherfucker

Jim Carrey, The Real You

Tim Ferriss’s interview of Jerry Seinfeld

Steven Pressfield, The War of Art

Digging into FOMO, plus an Actionable Exercise

Digging into FOMO, which stands for fear of missing out

I am definitely not the only one who experiences FOMO—that irksome itch behind the sternum that arrives when you’re looking at social media.

Life feels absolutely grand and great, you feel like the luckiest person on earth, then BAM—you open Instagram, you see some hot blonde chick skating down the boulevard with palm trees behind her and you think—what am I doing wrong?

I get caught up in this trap all the time—my feed is filled with surfing, surfers, sustainable living, artists/photographers/writers—and they always seem to be doing something totally rad, way radder than what I did today.

They fall into a few different categories:

  1. Hot girls looking like they could care less:

Photo by Roberto Nickson on Unsplash

Photo by Roberto Nickson on Unsplash

2. Anywhere that I don’t recognize. WHY HAVEN’T I BEEN HERE (TWICE!) BEFORE!?

Photo by Aron Visuals on Unsplash

Photo by Aron Visuals on Unsplash

3. Everyone partying! ie Tonight’s the night! I can take you there! I can feel it!

4. EVEN THE PINEAPPLES ARE HAVING MORE FUN.

5. And, oddly, this one. But like, why?

Photo by Jakob Owens on Unsplash

Photo by Jakob Owens on Unsplash

But then, a thought came to me today like a bird to the window—isn’t it possible I’m already doing a lot of this stuff? OR isn’t it possible that when it comes down to it, I don’t WANT to do all this stuff, or maybe I want to do it, but I’m not willing to put in the time it would take to get there?

That little mini thought exercise was enormously helpful. I chose a couple feeds I like to look at and asked myself these questions about the posts:

1.     Am I feeling FOMO, which suggests I don’t do this thing, but do I actually do this and therefore there’s no reason to feel jealous?

2.     Do I actually want to do this?

3.     Do I want to do this, but I don’t want to do the work it takes to get there? In which case I should either reevaluate or just get comfy with my choices?

I know it feels like way too much effort to ask these questions when you’re looking at Instagram or Facebook posts, but I assure you, it’s worth it. It staves off those awful gremlins that make you think you’re not doin’ cool shit when you actually ARE doin’ cool shit and BEING cool (there’s only one of you, in and of itself, that is cool and miraculous). Doing this little question exercise staves off the awful gremlins that make you jealous of ghost lives before you remember wait a second—you don’t want to be an astronaut in the first place! OR, you WANT to be an astronaut, but you don’t want to leave Planet Earth for 10 years-but-it’s-actually-100-in-space so everyone including your cat Foggybottoms is long gone when you return?

I think it’s incredibly important to question these gremlin thoughts that might have zero credibility when you actually spend a second turning them over.

::So give it a try::

·      Ask “Do I actually already do this?” (IE, this is a picture with someone with their friends, and oh ya, I hung out with my friends last night?)

·      Ask “Do I even want to do this?” (IE, this is a picture of someone swimming with sharks, and I just realized I actually have no desire to voluntarily hang with a gilled apex predator?)

·      Ask “Do I want to do this, but I’m not willing to make the sacrifices I need to get there?” (IE, So and so is circumnavigating the globe in the water on their Frisbee and unicycle, and while circumnavigating the globe sounds awesome and all, and maybe I’ll do it in a year, but this year, I actually want to hang home with my loves, see when the garlic’s ready for harvest, surf my home break, and watch my friend’s baby grow up?)

It’s the difference between being satisfied with your life and unsatisfied—it allows you to be grateful for what you’re doing, remember why you made and continue to make choices, and maybe it even allows you to go for something you should be going for, which all seems worth more than a bag of bones to me.