Quiet Please. Woman at Work.
Word count: 345 Reading time: 2-3 mins
The noise is killing me! I’m not talking about auditory noise, I’m talking about psychological noise that can paralyze a writer. I’ve got books, magazines, and audio files on how to write. I’ve taken courses online and in the flesh. Whenever I sit down to the keyboard I can channel a dozen voices on how to proceed. All of them contradict each other.
A deafening maelstrom was already brewing when I went to a seminar held by The Writers’ Union of Canada called Secure Footing in a Changing Literary Landscape. Presenter Ross Laird said that the internet is the single biggest change in publishing since the invention of the Gutenberg Press. Writers need a platform he insisted. I answered his challenge; I reserved my own domain name.
Eventually I even launched this website which increased the level of noise around me. Then I had to find readers for it. Answer: Twitter. These two steps turned up the volume even louder.
Twitter, at any given second, has people offering topnotch advice and links to highly relevant blogs. It is such an irresistible force that I have to discipline myself to look at it no more than once a day. Otherwise the voices I want to hear – those of my characters – are drowned.
In the Writer’s Digest magazine, Writing for Kids & YA, Sherman Alexie offered this advice “Every word on your blog is a word not in your book.” There’s a voice I need to listen to! I’m going to stop this right now, right here. It’s time to get back to writing. Until the next time I hear the sirens call.
Can you hear through all the noise around you? What voices are you listening to?
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With a special thank you to Jessica Klassen for the January 26th tweet that inspired this blog.
PS As if to prove my point, when I tried to post this blog 6 hours ago, the webhost's software kept locking me out. But what's half a day lost in the great time drain of the internet?
Photos by: (above) picstudio (left) drbimages
Reader Comments (3)
So true!
I need to lock myself in a soundproof room with no internet and nothing to look at other than my computer screen (and maybe a bottle of wine)...then maybe I can settle my mind enough to write. I'm thinking of signing up for a session on TM, transcendental meditation. People swear by it, claim it helps tap into the creative side of your mind.
It's unlikely you'd ever find me sitting by the gas fire in a trendy coffee shop, working away on a laptop. Well, unless I was transcribing all the conversations around me for future reference....
Maggie