Thursday, September 30, 2010

The Terror of Going Within




            I used to hear writers talk about sitting down and “opening up a vein” and it used to fill me with a certain disdain.  I rejected that statement because it seemed self-indulgent, self-pitying, and melodramatic.  I wanted writing to be a joyous activity where I “brought forth” what was within me and it soared to artistic heights my body could not achieve.  I do still hold that aspiration, sometimes.
            There has been a terror for me though, a type of avoidance that is not like the productive avoidance I do when I busy myself with things which I bargain for internally.  (Things that I tell myself lead to writing, or need to be done so I can write, but which are not actually writing.)  These activities usually make me chuckle at myself, then I go to my desk like a petulant child (oops, I got caught) and I get to work.  The avoidance I feel lately though is different, darker, and it brings a different recrimination inside before I get to my writing. 
            It has to do with wasted time, or a distasteful chore.
            It’s not that what I’m writing at the moment is distasteful.  It is in fact something I signed up to do, volunteered for, suggested, pushed for, campaigned for, even at one point felt a great rush of adrenalin for.  It is my doctoral dissertation on poetry, drama, and opera.  I like the project.  I like the writing.  I like what I’ve written so far, and what I am now editing.  What I don’t like: the other eyes I feel over my shoulder while doing the work; the self-recrimination at not having finished sooner, for having invested my time in a collaborative project which didn’t pan out, the self-blame for having mismanaged my most valuable resources, my time and my talent.  It’s the litany of “should haves” repeating like a mantra in my head that terrorize me, panic me, and which I must overcome in order to finish this one particular project.
            As my significant other likes to say, “There’s nothing else for it.”

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

The Terror of Going Within




            I used to hear writers talk about sitting down and “opening up a vein” and it used to fill me with a certain disdain.  I rejected that statement because it seemed self-indulgent, self-pitying, and melodramatic.  I wanted writing to be a joyous activity where I “brought forth” what was within me and it soared to artistic heights my body could not achieve.  I do still hold that aspiration, sometimes.
            There has been a terror for me though, a type of avoidance that is not like the productive avoidance I do when I busy myself with things which I bargain for internally.  (Things that I tell myself lead to writing, or need to be done so I can write, but which are not actually writing.)  These activities usually make me chuckle at myself, then I go to my desk like a petulant child (oops, I got caught) and I get to work.  The avoidance I feel lately though is different, darker, and it brings a different recrimination inside before I get to my writing. 
            It has to do with wasted time, or a distasteful chore.
            It’s not that what I’m writing at the moment is distasteful.  It is in fact something I signed up to do, volunteered for, suggested, pushed for, campaigned for, even at one point felt a great rush of adrenalin for.  It is my doctoral dissertation on poetry, drama, and opera.  I like the project.  I like the writing.  I like what I’ve written so far, and what I am now editing.  What I don’t like: the other eyes I feel over my shoulder while doing the work; the self-recrimination at not having finished sooner, for having invested my time in a collaborative project which didn’t pan out, the self-blame for having mismanaged my most valuable resources, my time and my talent.  It’s the litany of “should haves” repeating like a mantra in my head that terrorize me, panic me, and which I must overcome in order to finish this one particular project.
            As my significant other likes to say, “There’s nothing else for it.”

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