No blogs please, we're writers - Nick Green
Writing as a writer (is there any other way?) I sometimes
feel an irksome dissatisfaction that I’m just not getting enough. Enough
exposure, if you know what I mean. I feel I should be, well, putting it out
there a bit more than I do.
I made the mistake of reading some statistics online.
Apparently, most people in my peer group are managing it around two to three
times a week. Some even more. A few energetic, dedicated souls are getting down
to it every single day, for far longer and with more satisfying results (you
can tell by the number of comments they get).
But I’m among the growing number who find that they’re just
too tired at the end of the day, or too busy, or just too disillusioned with the
working relationship, to bare our souls on the internet very often. No, once a
month is about as often as I can manage to write a blog post.
There you were talking about sex, I thought you were talking about holidays. WALKS! I mean walks. |
Blogging can be an uncomfortably intimate activity for a
writer, especially one who considers that some things are best kept private.
Writing fiction is a different matter – there you have some protection, an
impermeable layer (if you will) between you and the reader, a sort of membrane
of artificiality that means they can’t accidentally conceive the wrong ideas
about you. Of course I don’t condone dishonesty in writing, I just mean that
fiction is the safest way to do it.
The pressure of blogging can mean it’s sometimes hard to
rise to the occasion at all. I’ve tried to practise by writing a journal in my
notepad, but after a while that just felt self-indulgent (and also brings on
terrible cramp in my right hand). I’m not really much of a talker, you see – I just
finish my daily word count and then go straight to sleep.
And then there’s trying to limit my screen time to sensible
levels. I’ve read other cautionary tales – apparently Chaucer wrote so much
that he ended up going blind. Also, if I’m at a party and mention that I’m a
writer, it can cause pregnant silences and even embarrassment. Writing’s fine
and natural, we’re told, but maybe if we could find a quiet corner in which to
do it, then people wouldn’t be so uncomfortable. I think we can all agree that
there’s nothing worse than ostentatious writing.
So yes – even though we’re constantly being encouraged to keep
up with the Joneses, to do it more and more and sow our wild words as far and
wide as we can, if we’re ever to gain credibility in the writing world –
I think I’ll stick to my once-a-month blog. It’s not that I don’t have enough
ideas… it’s just that they don’t all come at once.
Comments
But if you've got something interesting to blog about, and enjoy it, go for it, it can be great writing. I've been keeping a blog for the past two months about my emigration from the UK to Canada. The feedback I've had is that it's the candidness that makes it compelling. Admittedly, that's the difficult bit to sustain without offending anyone, but for my part, I luckily have a high tolerance for shame.
Anyway, I'm hoping this truthfulness will somehow feed into my fiction work, since I think all creativity has to come from truth, no matter how fictional it is.
Good writers need first of all to be good readers.