I know I’ve sort of already talked about how the time for
writing shrivels up as soon as you sign a contract, so people stop writing on
their blogs, but life after contract can really mess with your ability to
produce words of all kinds.
And when the words don’t come, a writer doesn’t feel like a
writer. All over the internet—right now—there are memes that basically say you’re
only a writer if you write EVERY SINGLE DAY!!! I know, that’s sort of a gold
standard, but it’s also, for some of us, completely impossible. I simply cannot
write every single day. I work 10 hour shifts, ride herd on a child reluctant
to eat dinner/brush hair/teeth/do homework/clean her room, cook the foods, and
other wise do all the things that make a normal house a normal house.
So yeah, sometimes, I don’t have any words at the end of a
day—after all, I can only throw hot dogs at my daughter for dinner so many
nights in a row. It happens. But the world is busy stuffing this idea that only
true writers—writers who really deserve success—are even capable of writing
every day. It’s as if I’m only a really real writer if I punish myself by
toiling on my novel every single day. Now, not to put too fine a point on it,
but there’s a word for that—insane. Because that’s what I’ll be if I write at
the end of every day.
And this impossibility adds to the impostor syndrome many
writers are already feeling because not only is the editor “just being nice”
but now I can’t even manage to write every day? Total fake.
Oh, but there’s more (there’s always more). When I do have
time to write, instead of running off into the sunset capturing some new novel,
all that “free time” is now shoveled into editing that novel that just got the
contract.
And editing is something of a shock initially. Every comment
from the editor (you know, the one just being nice?) feels like a personal
attack. So not only are the words not coming, there’s independent confirmation
that all the words you ever made sucked. It all confirms the self fulfilling prophecy
of mediocrity.
This, to some extent happened to me to the point that I
haven’t finished a new novel in two and a half years. I’m hopeful to finish a
rough draft real soon, but this is a big reason why writers with newly minted
books seem to dry up and blow away with the dust.
In truth, like all things in publishing, it’s different for
everyone. Good luck, and keep your chin up (it’s easier to breathe when the
water is closing in over you if you keep your chin up).