Posts tagged the plight of a writer
As Long as I Don't Think About Capitalism, I'm Fine: Life as A Writer Who Has Yet to “Make It”

When I spend a few hours writing, editing, formatting, and scheduling a blog post, I feel good and accomplished.

When I write and schedule the accompanying newsletter, I feel even better.

When I make a Pin in Canva and upload it to Pinterest and hit publish, I feel like a real business owner.

When I get in a high-energy and creative mood and make (“batch” as we in the content creation industry - whether we like it or not - call it) quippy social posts, I feel like a queen of social media strategy.

But, when the money or the “audience” doesn’t grow to match all the effort, my spark and pride for all my work feels a touch dimmer.

As long as I don’t think about Capitalism, I love being a writer.

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The Perfect Space to Write (Or: Once I Have Blank, I Can Blank)

Hasn’t every writer thought they could write more or write on a consistent schedule or write more interesting things if only they were seated at an antique desk in a one-room cabin, positioned perfectly in front of a picture window overlooking a lake?

Hasn’t anyone who’s ever tried to do anything, thought that the thing could be done better or more consistently if something? If something were different or better or freer? If only the rules of the universe didn’t apply? If only there were more hours in a day or more mental capacity with which to do the thing that needs doing?

I wonder if this longing for the perfect space, particularly in regards to writing, comes from procrastination or romanticization of the artist’s space, the solitude necessary to shove out all else and pull some wild thing from the depths of the creative mind that can’t do what it needs to when windowed envelopes clutter the kitchen counter and cords from the TV console spill out all over the place, pulling us out of our creative worlds and into this practical one that asks loudly for constant attention.

Maybe it’s both.

Maybe it’s neither.

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