What It Really Means To Be A Writer
One of the first things you learn about op/ed blogging is to write about what you know.
One of the things I know best is myself. I was lucky enough to discover at a very early age what I wanted to be in life, and that was primarily a writer.
Not a Canadian writer, or a white male writer or a Scottish Italian writer, although I am all those things. I really just wanted to be a writer who could learn to express himself honestly.
This is not as easy as it sounds. Because most writers go through a phase where they are looking for their voice, and so they mimic the voice of the writers they admire.
Me & Bob
I mimicked Bob Dylan for a long time, mainly because I thought that the best way to learn to write like that was to imitate something I thought was very good to genius. Now I knew that wasn’t really going to make me famous or anything close. But at the very least it would be good practice for whatever came next.
Because there are stages and phases you have to go through to find your voice. And there are many media to try writing in before you find your preferred modes of expression.I honesty never started out with the intention of writing op/ed articles like this one, or really any of the stuff I have been writing for most of my life.
And there has most certainly been a lot of water under the bridge since my first pathetic attempts at Dylan homage.
But that’s how it goes sometimes. Especially if you are willing to trust your own instincts, move through the phases and refine your voice by learning what you can from everything you try.
One Key Insight About Writing
There’s no rule book for becoming a writer. There are books on style and story and all kinds of technical aspects of writing. But the real meat of it all is self-generated.
You have to want it. You have to live it 24/7. And you have to keep writing because if you want it and you live it and you keep on doing it, you will get good at it.
If you are among the very small percentage of people who write with genuine talent, you will get famous for it.
And if you are lucky enough to actually connect with your authentic self and be able to bottle that somehow, you will likely inspire people.
But fame or inspiration, while lofty ideals, are not the goal.
Feeding the beast and keeping it full is the goal. Because writing, like so many other creative pursuits, is an obsession.
If it’s anything less than that in your mind, well then you are just messing around with it, and you will eventually drift away from it. And if it’s just something you’re good at but not obsessed with, you may make a living at it, but you will eventually retire from it.
Writing As Obsession
Writers don’t retire. Because writing is like a marriage with someone you genuinely love. Til death do us part, and all that other stuff.
In my adult life, I have only ever been a writer and I have been lucky enough to have gotten very well paid for a lot of it, to have a career where I am called a writer and have my writing support a family, a comfortable lifestyle in the big city, and an even more comfortable one in a smaller city.
And though I have been at it for a long time, I wake up every day with the distinct feeling that I still have miles to go.
I feel this way because after all these years and all those words and ideas and verses and choruses and screenplays and concepts and ads and commercials and memes and posts the most important thing I have learned is that writing is not about the goal.
It’s About The Trip.
The trip is life long. It is filled with amazing experiences, strange people, weird dreams, occasional visions and flashes of brilliance, more frustration than you can imagine, and, for me personally, the desire to lay down something anywhere in the Dylan Ballpark.
In today’s world, writing is a core skill that everybody needs to have. But for some it’s simply what they were born to do. They would do it for nothing but the pure, unbridled joy and sometimes gestalt, of self-expression.
So regarding the question of what it means to be a writer, I can only speak for myself. And what it means to me, is that I will always, regardless of how many people I reach, have an outlet that allows me to the freedom to express myself, hopefully in a positive and interesting way.
And if that is in the aid of helping others grow their businesses, or pointing out some injustice, or just sharing whatever wisdom I have managed to accumulate on the trip, that’s cool too.
So that is my best advice to all of you. Write to express your feelings. Because if you learn how to do that, and you stick with it for the long haul, you will become what is commonly referred to in the writing business as the real deal.
You can follow Jim
On beBee: https://www.bebee.com/bee/jim-murray
On LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jim-murray-b8a3a4/
On Twitter: https://twitter.com/Jimbobmur
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Comments
John Rylance
4 years ago #12
Your comment reminds me of beer commercial with the tag lines. Have you drunk Fosters all your life? Not yet. So if asked have you been a writer ( or anything else) all your life the retort should be Not Yet.
John Rylance
4 years ago #11
Graffiti maybe comes in the area of a picture being worth a thousand words. Banksy's Graffiti certainly raises talking points.I can imagine asking a Graffiti Artist, "well what's the backstory to this piece?" .We all express ourselves in different ways often to tell a story
Robert Cormack
4 years ago #10
John Rylance
4 years ago #9
Paul Walters
4 years ago #8
Jim Murray
4 years ago #7
I don't drink and I have never so much as held a gun. The best thing about writing is that as long as your brain doesn't give out, you can do it forever.
Jim Murray
4 years ago #6
Don't sweat it, Ken...you're in good company.
Ken Boddie
4 years ago #5
Ken Boddie
4 years ago #4
Jerry Fletcher
4 years ago #3
Jim Murray
4 years ago #2
Since the shrinking up of traditional advertising, it is harder to get 'well paid'. Mainly because most of the stuff people need to fit into their marketing plans if dicey in terms of it's effective reach. People don't want to pay a lot to shoot craps on line. I'm kinda glad I got off the treadmill when I did. It all started going to hell after that.
Royce Shook
4 years ago #1