Monday, September 3, 2012

Mysterious Monday - On Desire, Failure, and Success

Back in March my fellow mystery author Shannon Baker wrote a blog post about the struggle to become a better writer. It it she quoted NPR commentator and very wise man Ira Glass. That got me thinking about the whole business of wanting to do things and sticking with them long enough to get really good. Although Baker and Glass were talking about writing and creative work, the concepts they emphasize - hard work, failure, stick-to-it-iveness - apply to anything we want to do well, or at least better than we do it now. Unfortunately, a lot of people these days want to skip the hard work and disappointment. That's understandable, but that attitude doesn't promote excellence. It doesn't even promote "betterence."

"I want to write a [novel, memoir, poem, book about...]...." When I teach workshops or participate in mixed-level writers' groups, I hear this all the time. The impulse to do something, and especially to create something, isn't unusual. I’d even argue that it’s a fundamental human drive. It’s hard to find a healthy child who isn’t eager to learn and make and do things. I would definitely argue that the creative urge plays out in more than the fields we typically think of as "creative" – writing, visual arts, dance, music, and so on. Take dog training.



My new Animals in Focus Mystery series focuses in each book on a different animal activity, with dog obedience in the spotlight in book one, Drop Dead on Recall. In fact, the title is a play on "drop on recall," the name for one of the exercises in open- (mid-) level obedience competition. For more than a decade I taught obedience classes, mostly to pet owners who wanted gain some control of their dogs. Many did fine, and emerged at the end of the class with slightly improved skills for communicating with their dogs.
Some were inspired to continue training, and a few of those eventually went on to compete. At each step up that ladder from "my dog is dragging me down the street" to "my dog just earned an obedience title!" there were dropouts, because I’m here to tell you that as easy as it looks when you see a well-oiled dog-and-owner team perform (like my friend Gayle Watkins and her lovely Corey), it took them a lot of hard work to get there.

So it goes with writing. Many people begin with an urge to write. Some have a specific project in mind – often a memoir – but some just feel they’d like to try writing and find their subject as they go. They take a class or two, or join a writers’ group, or go to a conference. It’s fun at first. Then the fun becomes more complicated. And painful. Not all criticism is "constructive," and even when it is, it’s hard to hear. Don’t even think about rejection – although if you’re serious about publishing, you’d better get used to the idea! (Ah, another topic for another day.) So like the doggy-school dropouts who don’t want to spend time teaching the things their dogs don’t learn (or obey) quickly, a lot of beginning and intermediate writers dropout when the pleasures of writing begin to bump up against disappointments and plain old hard work.

And it takes a lot of hard work to be good, much less great (at writing, at anything). Many people quit when this becomes evident. I'd say that's sad, but I'm not sure it is. I think we should try something new every so often. I encourage everyone to do so, especially anyone who teaches – take a class in a genre or an art form or a sport or a subject completely new to you. It will expand your own frame of reference, and it may lead you to a new passion. It will also remind you how hard learning is so that you’ll see what you teach from a newcomer’s perspective.

As for the quitting, I think that’s okay too. Because quitting doesn’t mean failure. It means we have successfully identified our lack of interest or skill in a particular activity. It means we can move on to try something else, or we can go back to what we already know and love. Poet Jack Gilbert wrote, "Everyone forgets that Icarus also flew....I believe Icarus was not failing as he fell, but just coming to the end of his triumph."

I agree.


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Thanks to Gayle Watkins and Corey (U-CD LornaDoone Encore! Encore! CDX SH MX MXJ NF WCX OD VCX CCA TT) for permission to use the video.


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An earlier version of his piece originally published March 21 online at Inkspot, a blog by mystery authors whose books are published by Midnight Ink.  -Sheila
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11 comments:

  1. Hi, Sheila,

    Writing is definitely hard work, demanding work. You really have to love it to hang in there--or be obsessed (like me). Best wishes for success with your mystery series.

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    1. Thanks, Jacqueline. Fortunately, it's also very satisfying work, and often just plain fun.

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  2. You are so right, Sheila. Everybody wants immediate success, but most writers should be glad their early, amateurish work never made it into print. They would be happy at the time, but embarrassed by it later, when they've realized how much they still had to learn.

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    1. Exactly right. I completely understand nervousness about criticism, no matter how constructive. What I don't understand is resistance to learning, although I have had people tell me "oh, I dont want to learn [grammar, the business, how to type, take your pick!], I just want to publish my book." My stock answer now is, "good luck!" Twenty books & a gezillion articles into this world I feel I know so little!

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    2. Or, in my case, typing and proofreading :-)

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  3. Great post. Writing is easy for most people--after all, we learn how in grammar school. Writing well enough to be successful takes a lot of hard work, studying, and persistence. I love it when I see someone who wants to learn, who soaks up the knowledge about how to write well. As you say, though, for the ones who can't/won't do that, all we can do is say, "good luck."

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    1. Thanks, Jan. I've taught a lot of adult classes, everything from freshman comp to technical writing to noncredit classes, and there's an enormous range in attitudes. This summer I had the pleasure of teaching a 5-day, 3 hours/day class called "Get Wild in Writing" for middle school students and it was a BLAST. I'll be blogging about it at some point. But my favorite comment on an evaluation form was, "I learned that writing is actually fun!" Yahoo! If that sticks, I will have done something good. :-)

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  4. I enjoyed your post, Sheila. Now that I've retired from teaching, I spend most of the day writing, AND, I've never worked so hard. Creating the stories is easy, making them work and fine-tuning them is difficult and timely. I often have to tell myself, "patience is a virtue." Your Animals in Force Mystery series sounds fun. I will check it out.

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    1. Thanks, Kathleen! I love"Animals in Force," but the series is actually "Animals in Focus" - my protagonist, Janet MacPhail, is a photographer. :-)

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  5. Hi Sheila, I agree with every aspect of your insights. I love writing, and have found after 8 years, that it is your motivation and dedication to the craft that moves you forward. I continue to submit my middle grade novel and get such positive feedback,but...so I resend in hopes to find the right person. What keeps me writing are the constant new ideas that float around in my head and the fun of starting a new project. I love reading your blogs. This one motivated me to keep working. Thanks..

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    1. Oh, Sheri, that's so nice to hear! (Invite all your writerly - and maybe readerly, too! - friends!)

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