In which there’s a free-form ramble on the topic of writing. This is a zero draft with only basic editing.

People keep telling me to write, that I should write, that I should “be a writer,” and I do write. I write hundreds of thousands of words every year, but the secret I know is that I’ve read great writers and I’m not one.

I loathe my own mediocrity, I suppose, though I grok the math of the curve and accept my position here in the middle with everyone else. It’s cool here, it’s groovy and chummy; we can’t all be the cream in this pail of milk, the world just isn’t made that way, it’s made of gradations and variations and grades and levels, and if I’m to be allowed to be very good at something then it follows that I must also be not good at something else, those are just the rules. If I’m going to be average, why can’t I do it in an office somewhere, an office with a big fat OC3 pipe to the Internet and a 401k and phones that don’t ring very often? Why do I have to write?

Like I’m not writing? I am writing. I write all the time! You’re looking at nine years of writing right here, and it’s not brilliant: I know brilliant. I eat brilliant for breakfast. I’ve read a hundred pounds of brilliant books and what I do here, my noodling, sure, it’s good in places, really good in others, I’ll give you that, but if you want to read a writer, a real writer, someone who shines, a proper real life honest-to-God writer, well, I have a list for you. In the world there are paragraphs that change the way your brain works, chapters that make you weep, phrases exquisite and ephemeral and surgical like the light in a Caravaggio.

That is not what I’m doing around here.

Just thinking about “being a writer” makes me think of the writers I’ve read, and let me tell you something, buddy: there are the brilliant, yes, but then too there are the rest: a whole big bunch these days that are crappy banal crap. So many people devour so many words each day that embarrassingly common strings of them are just available for sale any old place, just as cheap and poorly-made as any cheap poorly-made imported t-shirt with the thin fabric and the crooked seams and a flaw in every single one of the damn lot of five thousand.

My point is this: even though they sell, no one wants to make those cheap fucking t-shirts because the work sucks!

You can get bad writing all over the place, and be just as pissed as I am when I snuggle in, expectant and open, to read, only to discover that I won’t be enjoying it. If I were a writer, if I were writing I would be only slightly better than that. I love to read, I love it perfectly and without reservation: how could I stand myself to sully it with a torrent of words only barely lyrical? What is the fucking point of that, I ask you!

I do write. I’m writing right now! What you’re actually asking me to do is monetize it, turn it into a job, and do the best I can at a volume of labor that forces me, enforces me, to work at my own median level, which is the very median of all possible writing, the mean, the middle, the mediocre, and I can’t figure out why I should do to the world something like that.

Sometimes, though, sometimes: sometimes I do approach something lyrical with these words here. I’m such a late bloomer, though. Now that I’ve glimpsed it and named it and scritched it under its chin do you suppose it will take me another thirty years to tame it?

 

4 Responses to On writing.

  1. Mush says:

    Heh. That turned out pretty cool! I pulled some nice turns of phrase and imagery outta my arse. If I do say so myself. 🙂

  2. David says:

    You’re thinking about it too much. If writing is fun, then do it. Quit worrying about it so much.

    Huh? I do. I write all the time. This entry was a writing experiment. -m

  3. Buzz says:

    I started a novel but got stuck after realizing the protagonist has zero redeeming qualities. It may end up a short story now.
    You should read a book by the same name as this blog entry, “On Writing” by Stephen King. It’s great instructional theory on the craft. I can get you the audio version if you like, as read by Stephen King.
    And while you’re at it you might as well pick up “Elements of Style” by William Strunk.

    I’ve owned and lost at least three copies of “Elements of Style” over the years. I’ve also got King’s “On Writing” on my wish list, along with several other books on writing books. Protagonists with no redeeming qualities are creepy to read about! -m

  4. josh says:

    I was just talking to Enricoz about this exact same thing earlier! I feel so bogged down with life that I can’t get the energy to write any poems, and then when I suddenly get the inspiration to write, it never turns out like the amazing pieces that I’ve fallen in love with. Le sigh…let’s be self-loathing [non]writerz together!

    Josherz, you rock. I’ma go over your blog and say it again. -m