In the interlude between the last time I posted anything on this blog or my beautiful baby bird of a YouTube channel and now, my cast has been removed, I'm 3/4 of the way through a summer Biology course at OSU-OKC (please don't stalk me), my sister's room has been repainted, homosexual people finally getting some rights, a murderer received a verdict of not guilty, my broken foot was replaced by the worst sunburn in the history of History, I still don't have my driver's license, Egypt is having a revolution, and John Green had another kid.
Well, jeez, guys, I turned around for two seconds, let's tone this party down before the neighbors file a complaint with the police. Also, use coasters, that is mahogany.
And guess what? I am a mind reader. I know exactly what you're thinking. Part of you is concentrating on not spilling any of whatever snack you're eating while you're reading this on the gadget of your choice, another part of you is squinting and going "Nah, she can't read my mind... wait, can she? I think she's doing it right now. Oh crap. What if she knows about that one time..." (yes, I do, and yes, that was very bad). And there is also a part of you going "What could Sarah have possibly been doing for two and a half months that was so important she forgot all about us?"
Well, to answer your question, I did not forget all about you. In fact for a while there I felt incredibly guilty, as my hiatus went from two weeks to two months. That really was not the plan.
The thing is, Mommy's been taking a break, but that doesn't mean she loves you any less.
My thought process was something along these lines: I just... didn't feel the need to post every second of my life for a while. And I haven't really had too much to say. On the one hand, yeah, I probably could have done some witty Doctor Who-related post or criticized the latest horrible decision made by the U.S. government, but I just didn't. And who honestly cares about my biology professor and his long tangents about how back when he was a kid there was no television and the job he had when he was fifteen, and how by the end of the year I'll probably know the names of his three daughters and his two step-children? I could rant about it, and probably do it in an eloquent and funny way, but so what?
Basically, I experienced a bit of creative nihilism. But I'm better now.
I've stolen a lot of advice from a lot of creatives who are both smarter and better at what they do than me, but I think the best advice I've gotten came from this video by Ze Frank.
If you watched it, you're probably in shock because of the awesomeness of what he said. If you didn't, I'm annoyed with you, but whatever, I'll just point out the part that I need to point out so we can all just move on with our lives.
Basically, toward the end of the video, Ze Frank said something that still kind of blows my mind a tiny bit: "It's okay to take breaks, but make it your choice. Don't do it because you're scared or lazy or think there's some other path to it. If you want to write, write." That statement, I think, identifies my mistake, because I feel like a bit of my creative nihilism-- okay, maybe more than just a bit-- was rooted in being scared.
Originally, I did choose to take a break from writing for a couple weeks to focus on studying for the ACT (which helped me earn an overall score of 27, put that in your pipe and smoke it), and I feel like it was a good decision. The problem was getting started back up again.
I'm fairly certain that, as different as writers and their styles can be, the one thing that unites us as a group is that we absolutely hate rereading our old work. It falls under cruel and unusual punishment. Water boarding is more humane than making me reread a file I have saved from 2009. Heck, rereading something I wrote last month can even be painful. And I'm pretty sure that's a contributing factor to why 3/4 of writing is re-writing.
But I feel like that other 25% doesn't just involve writing. It involves all the different voices in your head that don't necessarily come from you, pointing out your mistakes and telling you that your work sucks and no one will like it, and the different ways people have of drowning out those voices. Drowning out the voices is half the battle, because they can keep you from creating anything at all, and they can make the editing process more complicated than it needs to be.
So I've got these voices, and they're telling me "Who cares about your dumb biology class and the horrible sunburn you got on vacation or the story that you're writing about those kids who do that thing or the videos you were planning to make about what you do when you're home alone and the huge library of embarrassing and funny stories from your childhood and the things that annoy you?"
I'm just sort of irked that it took me a two-month Internet hiatus tantamount to "finding myself in Tibet" to realize that I'm actually the one that cares, and that's good enough.
I seem to write quite a bit and I don't even consider myself to be a writer or even much of a critic, yet, I've probably written more than most people who claim to be writers.
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