Having changed the baby’s variously-stained clothes for the
umpteenth time today only to observe the heartening sight of her instantly
vomiting again down the clean ones, I sat down to finish my blog post on Patricia
Leitch. The thought process went a little like this:
Patricia Leitch.
Wine.
Patricia Leitch.
Wine.
Patricia Leitch and wine.
Wine.
I mean no slur on Patricia Leitch – she’s one of my
favourite ever authors, and I’ll finish my tribute to her in January. But, the
temporary relief of wine aside, a far more pressing topic for me this month has
been: why is it so difficult to take a proper rest from writing? Is this a
problem common to all writers, or do the experienced ones actually learn how
long they need after finishing a manuscript before they start a new one? And
what on earth can I do to convince myself that sometimes you have to let go of the
handle on the crankshaft of creativity and watch it happily slow to a halt?
It’s been a month since I submitted my last manuscript to my
editor. During that month, instead of having a nice rest, doing some long-overdue
admin and accepting it as an important part of my work, I seem to have built
myself up into a whirling fever of guilt. Guilt that I didn’t write my last
book well enough. Guilt that I’m not working every single available hour
building my writing ‘business’- planning workshops, organising events,
considering exactly what the Message in My Books is, and how I can convey it to
a wider audience through hilarious slapstick comedy, hypnotically entertaining
talks and quirky slide-shows. Guilt that I’m not writing a new book, that I’m
only thinking about writing a new
book, and I’m not even sure if it’s the new book that I want to write. Guilt,
in short, that I’m Not Doing Enough.
I talked to another author recently who said that she’d
submitted her last book 3 months ago and hadn’t written a word since. Writing
the book had exhausted her, and she needed to get over her exhaustion before
writing another book. I listened in awe at her confidence. I went home, certain
that I could find that confidence myself, that I could say, it’s fine not to
write for a while.
I went home and tried to stop.
I had a meltdown.
It wasn’t possible. I couldn’t tell myself that it was ok
not to be writing. I still can’t say it. I know that it’s ludicrous and
completely counter-productive to try and keep forcing stories out of my pen
when my imagination contains nothing but a few bleached bones and a dry desert
wind. But the dilemma that I face – and I assume many other people trying to
write for a living – is that there really always is something more I might be
writing. My bookshelves are stuffed with dozens upon dozens of books by Agatha
Christie, Dick Francis, Georgette Heyer – they kept them flying out, year after
year. Surely they never took a break?
But logic tells me they must have – that’s how they kept it
up for so long.
How did they do it?
So when I sat down to talk about Patricia Leitch this
evening, I realised I was still trying to write, and still too mentally
exhausted to write anything resembling a nice coherent post with a central point
and a conclusion. And I thought, instead of providing an answer, can’t I use
this blog to ask a question instead?
What do writers do when they need to stop writing?
What do any of you
do?!
6 comments:
I once heard Terry Pratchett say, in a talk, that he had finished a manuscript. "And then," he said,"for about half an hour I was a man who wasn't writing a book."
Be glad you always have something to write. For most people, the problem is the opposite. And when they do finish writing something try need to find a market. So - be glad. Have a glass of wine and think about Patricia Leitch. ;-)
Such a thoughtful and honest post, Ruth, and leads beautifully into what I'm going to post tomorrow!
No answers - sorry - would a companionable hug do instead?
Ask Jenny Alexander! She's written a book about it: "When a writer isn't writing".
Don't be so hard on yourself, Ruth - you've just had a baby, for goodness sake! And I agree with Katherine: read Jen Alexander's book - it's exactly what you need at this moment. Good luck!
You've had a baby! Congratulations! I'm surprised you can write anything frankly
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