To Noise Making (Sing) [Hozier]
It’s been about three months since I started this blog. It’s been about three years since I returned to the art of the craft. And in that short span of time, I can’t say how many times I had to defend my writing from onlookers. Why? Why am I writing so much? I defend it from everyone, no, not just the people on the subway (I really did have someone stick their nose over my shoulder to see what I was writing, really), but I’ve defended it in front of people I see on the regular: coworkers, acquaintances. Even not-so-close family members.
It’s a little embarrassing to mention I enjoy the craft. It’s not like admitting that I also enjoy knitting, 80s pop, or heck, play video games, but to write is on a different level of unacceptable. Most of the time it earns me a strange look. Sometimes people express a mild interest. I once even got sympathy! As if this endeavor was sure to become something that would soon be dust in the wind.
Well, I don’t exactly call this a pipe dream for nothing.
There are few things I know for certain I enjoy in my short life on this earth. A good strategy game (hook me on some XCOM, a good SRPG, and I can guarantee you I’ll be there for a long while); a great story between the covers of a book or on the big screen. I also know I enjoy the narrative voice in my head that returned to me once a many mornings while I waited for the bus en route to work, always playing somewhere in the background. Its persistence encouraged me to go on ahead and pursue this road: it felt like such a waste for it not to come to life.
But that alone probably wasn’t what pushed me over the edge or spur the ambition, the near obsession that I have, spending one or two hours a night every day to put words on the page. I probably wouldn’t be writing if I didn’t have my mid-20s life crisis. The “what do I want to do for the rest of my life” sort of crisis. Because I had done it. I went through school, I graduated, I finally landed the job. Or some semblance of it at least. More importantly, I was finally earning something. I was an “adult.”
And I wasn’t happy.
At first I attributed it to a lack of a yardstick. At that point, life was driving to some far away beach: every milestone another sign dictating how much closer I was to the destination. Once I was there though, at the edge of the ocean, the signs disappeared, each one now a buoy, separated by a stretch of space more vast than the one before it.
When I was younger, I wrote to escape from my life. Looking back, I can’t ignore the irony. As an adult, it’s still an escape for me: the pipe dream away from the rat race of my day-to-day life.
Yet I enjoy the challenge. The high risk, high reward of a goal. I don’t mind the slog getting there. I try to ignore the sleepless nights where I wonder if I what I’m doing is the best move for my near future: with a partner, with kids, or with my aging parents. I try to focus on the fleeting words spinning from my muse, the challenges I set for my characters, and the greater challenges I set for myself, as the writer. In a day-to-day life where everything is wonderfully mundane, I love to keep myself challenged: whether it’s a small thing, like the topic of this week’s blog, or a big thing: like how is my favorite character going to get out of the pit they dug for themselves.
But there’s always that hope I could one day escape my current life to pursue what I think is even better.
That day might not ever happen. I would love to think my work is redeemable, that it has some merit, that it would be loved by readers far and wide, but the outcome is only born out of both luck and hard work and I only have so many years to get it right. I can’t say exactly what keeps me from moving on from that deep, dark place, but I know I don’t have the time or energy to keep worrying about the possibilities.
I note the irony of writing this blog post. This bit in the endless void of the great interweb, where people will find infinitely more entertaining things and pass my words over for an adorable costumed dog chasing its tail for the umpteenth time. Where my thoughts and words, however heartfelt they are, will fall on deaf ears and blind eyes. But this blog was meant to be my little space and my space alone. And maybe, if I’m lucky, if I keep at it, maybe this will reach someone who knows that deep, dark place just as well as I do and realize that they too, are not alone.
After all, isn’t that why we all write?
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