I originally composed this entry while sat in a coffee shop just off Piccadilly Circus one rainy Monday evening. Yes, I wrote it with a purple fineliner, by hand, in a ringbound shorthand notebook. What can I say, it satisfies my inner Luddite. The purple ink was for my inner drag queen.
Anyway, I follow a very useful blog named Procrastinating Writers, designed to help writers overcome their inherent procrastination, and the whole thing got me thinking about how much I indulge in this particular artist’s malady – and, more importantly, why.
I always told myself that I didn’t write as often as I may have wished to because I didn’t have enough time. I reasoned that if I had more time, I’d write all the time. Nonsense. It would have been incredibly easy to have simply spent less time messing about on Twitter, and used that time for writing instead. Now I actually have more time than I know what to do with and still I don’t write.
I can only say it’s because of two reasons. First, there is the matter of technique. I have the idea, but I’m unsure how to begin. Afraid of not doing justice to the idea, I then don’t even try, and the idea scuttles off to hibernate in some dark, cobwebby recess of my imagination. Second, I just don’t write in case anything I do write doesn’t meet the ridiculously high standards that I set for myself.
I suppose it all comes down to fear, which is completely irrational since I’m fearless in so many other aspects of my life. Yet it is fear all the same, and it is this fear which I must conquer if I’m to progress down the writer’s road further than the Inn of Indecision.
It’s a few weeks early for resolutions, but now seems as good a time as any to start. I intend to stop being so afraid and simply get on with the thing I enjoy most – writing. And if it’s not good enough? Well, that’s what second drafts are for!
Who’s with me?
EstelDreaming says
Wonderful resolution! And a lack of time is hardly ever the problem, although a good excuse. I just lack the inspiration, the idea is there but the knowledge of what to do with it isn’t.
Icy says
It doesn’t help when you work in a dull office environment. There’s rarely inspiration to be found there!