Your struggles are what make you a better writer
Recently, I got a text from someone who is currently
reading my novel, Shadow of Samhain. She commented on how the nightmare scene was "brutal." I joked that I’ve
had so much experience with nightmares that it has helped me to be able to
write fictional ones.
The meaning behind that little joke never really hit home
with me until I saw the Doctor Who episode, “The Unicorn and the Wasp.” Up
until then, I’d only seen bits and pieces of that episode. I was always too
busy to watch it. But today, I had the time, so I planted myself on the couch
and made sure I watched the whole episode from beginning to end.
For the non-Whovians, this particular episode had the
Doctor and his companion, Donna, in 1926, at a party where the famous crime
writer Agatha Christie was a guest. I was delighted that this particular
episode was like a whodunit. Crime was afoot! There was a murder mystery to
solve! How cool to see the Doctor teaming up with Agatha Christie to solve the
mystery.
But there was something in this particular episode that
grabbed me. That really spoke to me on such a deep level. At one point, Agatha
is sharing her doubts about her abilities as a writer. She thought her books
would be forgotten after she was gone. Now, I know this is fiction, but I would
not have been surprised if the real Agatha Christie had gone through such
episodes. I, too, have been there. And I am currently there now. A writer is their
own worst critic! And lately, I have been hating everything I’ve written. I’ve
wanted to tear it all up and BURN it! I want to punch myself in the face for
even wanting to self-publish yet another poetry book that probably will not
sell at all.
But then … then … the Doctor said something that really
spoke to me. One of the other things I have been struggling with is the “why”
in life. Why did this happen? Why did that happen? Why did I have to go through
that bad thing? Why did I have to have that kind of experience?
What the Doctor said gave me my answer.
In one scene, Agatha was insisting she’d be no good to
solve the murder because she is just a “purveyor of nonsense.” To this, the
Doctor told Agatha Christie, the fictional Agatha Christie, something that
really hit home for me: “No, no, no,
no, no, no, no. Because plenty of people write detective stories, but yours are
the best. And why? Why are you so good, Agatha Christie? Because you
understand. You've lived, you've fought, you've had your heart broken. You know
about people. Their passions, their hope, and despair, and anger.”
This really gave
me pause. It made me realize that I went through ALL of those things because I
am living the life of a writer. A writer cannot possibly expect to write deep,
gripping and emotional writing if he/she has had an easy life. Everything in
life is something to be written about. It’s all grist for the mill.
I thought about
how so many writers are able to take all the things they have been through in
life – the good things, the bad things, the happy things and the things they have
lost – and put it ALL into their writing. We are able to capture those moments
so well and write them so realistically because We Have Been There. We know
that pain. We understand that struggle. We have lived it, suffered through it
and survived it.
Bringing it all
to life through our work, through our writing, is easy because we KNOW these
things. We UNDERSTAND these things. We have SURVIVED these things.
Truly, it is our
struggles that make us a better writer. We have seen the dark side of humanity and
therefore can put it into words on paper.
So instead of
asking “why did this happen?” or “why did that person do that to me?” or
proclaiming that something is not fair, instead, embrace it. All of it. The
good things and the bad things. Know it and feel it to the core.
Because only
then will you be able to write about it later. Only then will you make it very
real for someone who has never been there. You can write about what it’s like
to have a broken heart for someone who has never been in love and make them cry
right along with you. You can write about the despair of losing a child because
you have had such an experience, and through your words people who have not
been in your shoes will know your pain and grieve with you. If you have been
bullied, you can write about it so realistically that readers will be outraged
over such cruelty.
This has made me
appreciate everything that I have been through in life. Even if some of those
things are still painful or some of those things are a terrible injustice. I
appreciate them, because as a writer, I can write about them in a way that will
touch readers on a deeper level. You really need to go through some kind of
experience in order to really understand it and know it well enough to write
about it. That’s what the struggles in our lives can give to us, the writers.
That is just one takeaway value.
Don’t toss aside
your struggles in life. Embrace them. Use them in your writing. By accepting
your struggles and embracing them for all that they are, only then can you
truly bring them to life on the page when you write about them.
Labels: Doctor Who, writers, writing life
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