Monday, November 23, 2015

and then I do—

I'm a writer, but I don't know what kind of writer I am.

I tend towards the high-falutin', the introspective, the self-praising and self-pitying, because if you write what you know, then you write about yourself. I write about baseball in any number of ways, but none of them seem to really fit. I'm a writer who can go weeks without writing - cursing my inability to write while not bothering to put ink on virtual paper.

I'd like to be the best, but the distance marker keeps moving, and I wasn't going to make it there anyway, so what kind of writer am I? I want to have that fountain of ideas, thoughts pouring out my fingers like the benedictions of some blessed something or other, but I get blocked. I get blocked, and I get frustrated, and I write self-pitying lunacies that no one reads (and nor should they). I'm still not sure which side of the parenthesis to put the full stop on, as well.

I read so many great writers and good writers and writers of meaning and purpose and thought and weight and I wonder what am I doing here? All these filled niches and where do I belong? I can't be the best baseball writer, there are at least ten already out there. I can't be the best feminist-thought-sports-ramble writer, because there are so many stronger and smarter women out there being that before me. I just have this little blog, this little thing, this little voice, and when I'm afraid I'm losing it I don't speak out, I just let it shrivel up inside me, ineffectively breaking up my thoughts into 140-character missives that splash and sink, like pebbles in a pond.

Maybe, as writers, we were better off before page views. There is so much more to read now, which is both great and terrifying - what if I am good, but am lost in the noise of those who are better?

See, though, there comes in the Southern and (semi-)Evangelical and Female Upbringing - the immediate urge to quash the "I am good" beneath the "No, not really, don't ever think that I'd be willing to promote myself, I'm just nobody." Because I'm not good, not compared to the giants I look up to.

I don't know what I'm looking for, in writing, other than the fact that in so many ways, I'm looking for the terrible thing I've been looking for my entire life - someone to validate my existence in some way that sticks, that this comment or that one or this retweet will be the thing that finally tells my heart-sick soul that "You matter!" "You belong!" I think too much, though, and I know that it won't happen, so I don't write because inaction is better than failure.

and then I do—

I do write, and I make myself hit "publish" and I move on and I try.

No comments:

Post a Comment