Thumbprints into Their Brain
For the last several months, I’ve been on the query roller
coaster. As most of y’all may know, it’s a dizzying ride and not suitable for
people with egos shorter than 42 inches. One particular gut-wrenching drop last
June forced me into a deep round of self-evaluation. I may or may not have ugly
cried as I asked myself that really awful question: Why the hell was I doing
this?
Surprisingly, my brain answered.
It took the form of a rambling email to the Original Muses
that might be a little soap boxy, but I swear it was all truthful and having
other eyes read my manifesto cemented me to it. I continued on the roller
coaster, only to find more peaks and dips. During some of those low points,
Katherine and Donna have RESENT my email to me—just as a healthy reminder.
Those times, I won’t claim it helped instantly, though it was a good reminder
that I’d felt the G’s in a drop before and lived.
Anyhow, for today’s post about Getting Inspired, I wanted to
share the infamous email with y’all. Maybe it’ll inspire you. Maybe it’ll just
help me find it next time my cart is hurdling for the ground and I can’t catch
my breath.
Here you go* (quick note: I modified it a little for the
kids in the audience and to protect the names of the guilty…or, ummm, innocent)
Hi all,
Below is a long winded, stream of
consciousness that no one needs to read, but I felt like I needed to express. I
sorta wanted to share it with the group so you can lob it back my way next time
I get in one of those fatalistic meltdowns. Or just so that I have some digital
imprint of some (semi) rational thinking regarding why I'm trying to publish.
Anyhow...
I've been doing a lot of soul searching since THE rejection.
Emotionally, I got slammed again and it forced me to ask myself again, why do I do this?
Obviously, the answer is that I love to write. Y'all understand that.
So no more explanation required. It's impossible for me to give up writing and
I won't pretend that thought fluttered through my mind.
So the question becomes: Why am I trying to publish?
Part of me thinks I could easily be satisfied
drafting, getting feedback, revising, and writing the best effing book I
can--and never attempt to set it out to the world. The writing thrills me. The
rest makes me a nervous monster.
Why am I trying to publish?
Luckily, I don't need the money. There's not
that much fame and fame isn't all that much fun either. I've seen what people
go through once published, so I can't pretend that it's butterflies and
lollipops once I get an agent or a book deal or anything. Do I want the glory
of having a book buried in the middle of some shelf with a trillion others? I
do, but I'd also like to have 12-pack abs and a superhero chest. Unfortunately,
I don't have the time or the love of the gym to make them reality. Is it fun to
never earn out an advance? To never get the marketing or publicity support? To
sell a book despite the gatekeepers best efforts to thwart you? To get bad
reviews and to be personally attacked by readers? To produce creatively under tight
deadlines and then have your next concept shot down?
Why am I trying to publish?
Really, it's because I'd like to have one kid
experience what I did the first time I read LORD OF THE FLIES. We were at the
lake and instead of swimming, water skiing, and playing like all the other
kids. I sat my butt on that boat and read it in a day. I nightmared about Ralph
and Jack and the twins that night. My stomach still twists when I think about
Ralph being chased through the woods. Or Simon coming out of the jungle into
the dancing tribe. Or Piggy falling.
Not only do I want to write that effing good, I want to
make someone else feel that way. To dig my thumbprints into their brain so hard
they never wash away.
It's a lofty goal. And likely -- even if published
-- I'll never know I succeeded.
Still though...do I need to achieve this
goal?
No.
I'd die a happy man if I never get
printed.
Conversely, I'd be much less fulfilled if I
stopped writing.
So it hit me this morning.
The fallacy that I've been making is tying tie
my happiness to a want rather than a need. I need food...therefore, not
getting food should make me unhappy. I want a million dollars, but I'm cool
with my present salary. I can't get pissed every time I lose the lottery.
I NEED to write. Anything that stands in my
way of that must. be. destroyed.
I WANT to get published, but refuse to let
that dictate my mood (too much) from here on out.
That's all.
And if you made it to the end, thank you. I'm
impressed.
Happy Weekend.
10 comments
Bret, love this post. So important to distinguish between "I need" and "I want". Thanks for sharing your e-mail. Couldn't have said it any better.
Bret, love this post. So important to distinguish between "I need" and "I want". Thanks for sharing your e-mail. Couldn't have said it any better.
I've gone in search of this e-mail during some of my low points, as well, Bret. It is truly inspirational--and thanks. I think I needed it again this week.
Yes! And when I NEED to write, and the thing standing in the way of writing is unhappiness over rejection, that unhappiness must be destroyed--and the best way to destroy it is to lose myself in the joy of a new project. This is a great manifesto, Bret--thank you so much for sharing it!
I love this manifesto. No matter where we are on the publication journey, rejection is a huge part of the equation. We need to write. We want to be published. These two things are not incompatible, but we all need to be reminded sometimes of which takes precedence.
Loved this. My writing group has a certain email they bounce back to me when I get on a crying jag, but it involves names and possible freak accident scenarios. I don't know why I need to write. Sometimes I think it's more of a compulsion...or maybe I'm just a masochist, but it's something I can't live without. Thanks for sharing.
Bret, thanks so much for sharing this with us – I love the thumbprint in the brain. It's so true, the greatest stories really do that to us. An inspiring post – bookmarking it for when I need that reminder too!
This is right on the money!
There's a brain out there waiting for your thumbprints. Keep riding.
Also, obviously, I need something to read. (And I wrote my AP English essay on Simon coming out of the jungle. The prompt was to write about a party scene in a book ... .)
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