Why do you write?
by Joanna @ Confident Writing
Apparently more people in Britain dream of being a writer than any other job. Unless they’re also people who want to be broke there must be something else that lies behind this yearning, this desire to write. Because most of us aren’t writing for a living – but we are writing as part of the way that we live. Writing to help us define and create the way that we want things to be.
All of which got me thinking about what it is that we get from writing – what drives us, what motivates us to write. I’ve been learning about what it means for some of you already.
Maybe it means writing not to hear yourself talk – but to hear yourself think (Robert from Middle Zone Musings)
Perhaps, like Jon at Levite Chronicles it’s part of how you come to know, how you figure out what is going on.
For Jean, the Cheerful Monk (I paraphrase slightly): it’s writing from the heart, writing that moves you, writing to connect with kindred spirits, writing to contribute, and being changed as a result of your writing.
Or maybe like Karen at The Clearing Place it’s those moments when we find the words, the courage to spill our spirits and make a connection: when writing “allows our spirits to grow and learn and connect”
For me, it’s something to do with the power of connection: the connections we can make with other people, the connections we develop between our own ideas, making sense of our experience, pulling together spaghetti strands of random thoughts and creating something new, connecting back to our roots and our selves and coming out with a stronger sense of who we are.
But then again maybe it’s that thing I call realising: the sweet, slow dawning of realisation. Recognising the things that you always knew to be true. Recognising – with a jolt – your self in your words. Realising the power of your words, and taking responsibility for their power and impact: on yourself, on other people, on the world. Grounding yourself with the specificity of words. Validating your experience with words which are not real – but can make us feel that our experiences are. Allowing ourselves to be changed by the words that we write. Watching how:
- the more you write a sense of place, the more you feel it
- the more you write with all your senses, the more you are fully alive
- the more you write with clarity, the clearer things start to become
- the more you write to establish connection, the more connected you feel
- the more you write from your own power source, the more powerful (deep, calm, peaceful power) you will feel
I can’t argue with the practical advice from the Guardian:
So, by all means, write, if you enjoy it. But, if you value your sanity – and that of any readers – keep it to yourself. Keep the dream; just don’t give up the day job.
But in a sense, they’re missing the point. If we’re to keep going with the day job perhaps we need more than ever to have the outlets for learning, for sharing, for connecting, for creating a different sort of reality.
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