PW #162 - Moving lessons for  writers
I opened the freezer door and a sea of green goo  puddled towards me. What on earth was this stuff?
Turns out it wasn't pond sludge or paint, it was  my kids' favourite ice cream -- mint chocolate chip.  And it had oozed down to the bottom of the freezer  because it had melted. This was a result of the  freezer's death, right alongside its guilty partner, the  dead fridge nestled below.
Under normal circumstances, I'd have uttered  a few curse words and called a repair person. But our  situation was anything but normal. We'd just moved  into a rental house -- a move made necessary by  plans to renovate our own home. And since we didn't  actually own the freezer/fridge, I couldn't do anything  except call the landlord.
Day three of our move was not shaping up to be a  great one.
What's more, the dead fridge was not our  only problem. The rental house was too  cold -- you practically needed long underwear to  survive the family room. The kitchen was too small --  more suited to a family of two who ate out a lot rather  than our family of five who mostly eats in. And the  movers (who moved only furniture -- we heroically and  cheaply did most of the boxes ourselves) had  managed to take a chunk out of my pine armoire.
In short, everything sucked.
Do you ever feel that way when you're writing?  You stare at the computer monitor, not knowing  what to say. Every sentence you write is tedious and  dull. You overuse the verb "to be." You go crazy with  audacious adjectives and you use adverbs  disadvantageously. (Aside: that last sentence was a  joke.)
Or perhaps, worse, you don't write at all and you do  other things but you don't do them well or with any  particular joy because you feel guilty . . . for not writing.
In other words, your writing life sucks. So  what's a person to do? Give up? Sorry, no!
We all need to recognize that not every writing day  is going to be a winner. After all, athletes are  familiar with "poor performance" days, and recognize  that this doesn't, by definition, make them poor  athletes.  Most chefs have baked cakes that have fallen flat or  produced main courses that were less than stellar --  but that doesn't make them any less cooking savvy.  Movers have terrible moving days. And so it is  with writers. Some days are always going to be better  than others. Don't let your inexperience or some bad  luck define you.
You are a writer because you are a person  who chooses to put words on paper. If you judge  yourself too harshly that judgment will simply make the  wonderful, creative part of your brain -- the part that  writes -- want to hide.
Remember: things go wrong; it happens all the time.  But in the end, life usually sorts itself out. With writing,  we all improve with practice and a measure of calm.
As for my move, we settled in fairly quickly. I  told my landlords we hadn't managed to sell the  much-loved fridge in our own house, so they could  take it for the cost of  moving it to us. We bought an inexpensive space  heater for the family room. We decided to eat only in  the dining room and turned our kitchen table into a  work surface. And I've concluded my armoire looks  more antique with a few dings and scrapes.
Stuff happens. Get over it. Keep writing.
A former daily newspaper editor, Daphne Gray-Grant is a writing and editing coach and the author of the popular book 8½ Steps to Writing Faster, Better. She offers a brief and free weekly newsletter on her website. Subscribe by going to the Publication Coach. 
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2 comments:
It was good to hear that not all mywriting is going to be a winner, because lately, I've sucked.
No, you haven't sucked. Your writing might have, but maybe not. We're bad judges of our own creations.
Years ago, in my corporate life, we took a course in brainstorming. I think one of the methods they discussed was called "springboarding" and the rules were thus: no one could dis another person's idea, because sometimes out of a "bad" idea would spring a new one.
Writing is like that too. If we censor ourselves too harshly, we inhibit our creativity. And sometimes, out of the shite, arises something grand.
Like Nemo's little friend Dory says, "just keep swimming, just keep swimming."
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