6.22.2011

Don't Think. Just Write.


"Just write."

I was sitting in my advanced composition class, my last semester of my senior year of high school. Our teacher, Mr. Z., bore a stark resemblance in appearance and character to Mr. Forrester, which I loved. Sometimes I wondered, was it intentional? He never implied it. Years later, I think it was his best attempt at invoking a passion for writing in his students without making himself vulnerable by saying so. Mostly stoic, slightly sentimental in subtle ways, he never embellished praise over our work in the classroom, but we could see the hundreds of photos of past students he had taped to his cabinet year after year. Yet he was revered in ways that made the slackers straighten up, and made introverted writers like myself believe that even if my classmates hated my essays, his opinion was the only one that mattered.

His snow white mustache twitched in amusement as he stood before us and  repeated the phrase.

"Just write." 

I looked around the room. Every eye was fixed.

"Don't think; just write." 

The cogs collectively turned. Is he telling us that we don't have to try? That he appreciates a lack of thought? That the grades don't matter? Or better yet, he won't grade us? Please elaborate before I screw up the assignment, I begged silently.

Thankfully, he explained himself. The rest of his speech I don't remember word for word, but that moment is forever echoing in my memory.

Except for weeks like this when I'm caught up in a frenzy of checking my blog stats and reading from writers that are way better than myself and drafting post after disappointing post that quickly coagulate into rotten, useless garbage as soon as I have written them. It all stinks. 

I've read several posts this week that have given me pause for writer's reflection: What am I doing here and why? The posts I read, while convicting, while true, while inspiring, exposed my deeply rooted insecurities, making me even less sure that I wanted to answer the question. I don't want to admit that I'm doing it wrong.

With the world at our finger tips online, it's too easy to get caught up in being creative for the purpose of gaining readership and reaction - affirmation - especially through blogging. So much so that I rarely write just to write, but more often write about writing to gain readership and response from other writers.

When the blog stats tick up and then down and then dwindle there in that sickening flat line, I wonder where the vitality in my writing was lost. And then my insecurity spins wildly out of control and I question who I am and why and how I'm trying to do this thing called writing.

There, I admitted it. Step one is done.

Step two: How do I get myself out of this mess?

I tried to write it out all week long, battling against the part of me that says, if you blog about this, aren't you bringing yourself back into the cycle of writing to be read? Nothing I wrote felt real to me when I went back and read it.

Looking through my arsenal of half-written posts that have never been published, I found the beginning of this draft that I abandoned a couple of months ago, with only his words,

"Just write."

And I am that seventeen-year-old girl again, standing in front of my peers, essay in shaking hand, worried that what I've written and am about to share is completely worthless. And somehow, six years later, he's still reminding me, quietly, in few words but in many, many ways, it's not. With a steadying breath and his words reverberating in my mind, I tell myself,

Don't think. Just write. 

P.S. I'll love-link to those helpful posts I mentioned tomorrow.


[Image: Insecurity Photographed. Otherwise known as: A screenshot of what my desktop looks like when I'm dissatisfied with my writing, so I begin yet another untitled draft.]

[Image within the Image: desktop wallpaper found here.]

2 comments:

Katy said...

I've just discovered your blog because of a comment you left on a Shauna Niequist post. But I love reading your posts and really appreciate this one in particular.

Writing isn't a profession for me, as much as a way of self-analysis. But lately it has been a bunch of nothing about nothing.

I actually just wrote about this in my own blog too! Maybe you'd find a kindred spirit behind it --> http://girlsguidetofaith.blogspot.com/2011/06/starting-again.html

Thank you for writing! I'll be back. :-)

Katy - girlsguidetofaith.blogspot.com

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