Why I’m not a real writer
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Several years ago I attended a prestigious
writers’ conference in Seattle. It was time. I was committed. I paid a bundle.
The
conference offered a chance to mingle with real writers, to talk with agents
and editors, to attend numerous workshops; an immersion in the literary world.
Already I
knew I was not a real writer. I did not set a schedule to write daily, come
fire or flood or dark of night. When my babies were babies I did not lock
myself in the bathroom with my portable typewriter at 3:00 in the morning to
write undisturbed by night terrors or pounding of tiny fists by little
creatures who seemed to think the best time for intimate conversation was when
mommy perched on the throne. Real writers do such things.
I wrapped
myself in the fantasy that I was ready, ready to commit hours of each day,
sitting at my computer, composing fiction peopled with characters I already
glimpsed and loved. (By then my babies were independent people.)
Oh, I wrote
poems. See how far that will get you in the world of real writers. But I had
ideas, notions, for short stories, perhaps even a novel or two. So I sailed
across the waters of Puget Sound to the conference rooms of an imposing
high-rise hotel to rub shoulders with my kind of nobility. Real writers.
How often
have you heard somebody exclaim, “I should have been born a hundred years ago.”
All my life I’d wanted only one thing, to write fiction. However, all my same
life I made decisions which took me different directions.
Of course, olden-days
are a fantasy too. Earlier times meant submitting manuscripts to enough
publishers until finally an assistant set one of my manuscripts on an editor’s
desk with, “Take a look at this. It’s good.”
The
conference soon disabused me of that dream. Times they were a changing. Book
publishing as historically known soon would be a thing of the past, taking
place alongside other dinosaurs. E books had arrived. Self-publishing an option
chosen by many. By most?
I attended
workshop after workshop after workshop. I talked with agents. I talked with
editors. At the end of the conference I rode the Washington State Ferry back
home, settling my mind into acceptance.
A real
writer in our brave new world must also be one’s own publicist, promoter,
designer, formatter, stylist, typist, copywriter attorney and financier.
Writing that
novel can easily take second place to the business of getting that book out in
front of enough eyeballs and page turners to enable one to take time off to
write a second novel while juggling the on-going financial and promotional
aspects of keeping that first book moving up, up, ever up in sales. Made me
breathless.
If one has
buckets of money, one can hand all the business aspects over to those who know
what they are doing. If one is a pauper, it still costs buckets of money to do
what one doesn’t know and to do that poorly.
Comes down
to choice. On my ferry ride home from that Seattle conference, I made a wise
choice for my own sanity. I am not a real writer. I simply write.
I write when
my muse whispers in my ear. I write poetry. I write because I must. I just
wrote this poem. And if you see any irony between my piece on cognitive
dissonance, that mental pretzel we create when our actions and words don’t line
up with how we like to think of ourselves, and what I wrote above, so do I. So
do I.
Cognitive Dissonance
Doesn’t
matter what side
Of any fence
you find yourself
Either side
is chaos.
Either side
is convinced
Their view
is righteous, ethical.
Reasonable,
logical, the One.
Think about
it.
Take away
the fence.
You have a
field,
An entire
field
In which to
play.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
September
17, 2020
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment