Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap, but by the seeds
that you plant. Robert Louis Stevenson
Even though I taught writing for decades, I kept my own writing—poetry
and ramblings—to myself, bound in stacks of brown, wire-bound notebooks. Publication
never interested me.
Then one day in the mid 1990s, I set a goal of getting
something published by the year 2000, and luckily, hit the mark.
After that first essay was in print, I was surprised
by my strong desire to have my more of my writing accepted, a motivation that
fueled my writing days for the next decade. At the same time I found an
absorbing book project that defined a good chunk of my life.
Obstacles interfered, life got complicated or I let it, and I lost
the constancy of that drive and focus. It’s nothing I regret as I think I was doing what needed to be done,
but I’m ready once again to organize my free time around writing.
I miss being in that zone, that attractive groove I've touted recently. I miss settling
into it, into the absorption and pre-occupation in creative thought that
remains more nourishing than the harvest. I remember the disconnect I felt
when my book was published, knowing for sure that all the pleasure had been in
the process, and then having to summon enthusiasm for its promotion. The story I’d spent
a decade eagerly researching had become a sudden artifact to me the day I
sent the final manuscript to the publisher.
It’s important that writers appreciate the reward in the doing,
that we don’t judge ourselves by the quantity of our publications or by the possibility of sales. Though it's said that "art without commerce is a hobby," making art with commerce in mind too often warps creativity. It’s more productive to develop the habits of a writing life, to find patience with ourselves as
workers, to plant seeds in our thoughts, on the page, and in conversation. The
best writing comes when we can harvest a few seasons’ worth of such plantings.
2 comments:
I love this! Posted a link on Facebook. Could you add a LIKE button?
Linda
Thanks, Linda, for the FB link! As soon as I figure it out, I'll add a LIKE button
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