I am a writer. Those four words
instill a lot of fear within me. I have some doubt as I make that declaration
since I tend to assume that a writer must be someone of Faulkner or Steinbeck
stature. But a blog that I follow that is challenging me to 15 days of blog
posts, http://goinswriter.com/, told me
to go ahead, be brazen, and call myself a writer.
As soon as I read that I immediately
disagreed. I’m not a writer. I
don’t have a novel on The New York Times Best Seller’s List. I haven’t sat in
one of Ellen’s comfy, red chairs and proclaimed my book will be turned into a
movie starring Zac Efron. I haven’t even gone on a book tour and read excepts
of my novel at Barnes and Noble to people looking for the latest Vogue magazine
while their children cry in their strollers. And yes, I want to do all of those
things. I want to get a phone call saying my publisher must print an additional
50,000 copies of my novel, that Ellen needs me to bring my most embarrassing
high school photo to the set, and I want to be ignored while reading an excerpt
of chapter seven of my next novel. Then I can call myself a writer.
But is that really what it means to
be a writer? For so long I’ve focused on the glamorized version of writing. The
interviews, the million dollar book deals, the fame and glory; but what about
the craft of writing itself. I’ve lost sight of what it means to write. The act
of putting pen to paper, or fingertips to keyboard, and pouring out one’s
feelings, heartache, emotion, and a myriad of other sentiments is writing. And
writing shouldn’t be for the pomp and circumstance; writing should be for me.
Writing has always been for me. But I’m just now beginning to realize that what
I write makes me a writer. The glory doesn’t make someone a writer. It is just
simply the act of writing that makes one a writer.
But even as I pen (or type) this
blog entry I still hesitate in labeling myself as a writer. What if no one
reads anything I write? What if my journal is the only place where the sincerest
form of writing actually happens? What if what I write isn’t any good? Am I
still a writer then? Typically I would say, “No, Mira, you aren’t a real
writer.”
But not today: because today I officially declare myself a writer.
Um...I.love.this! And I love you! You are most CERTAINLY a writer. And everything you wrote in this blog post is true. Looking forward to reading your blog posts for the next 15 days...and hopefully for many more after that! :)
ReplyDeleteYay! I love it. :) Welcome back. Looking forward to reading more.
ReplyDelete