The Slow-Writing Revolt

The Slow-Writing Revolt





“Nice piece on that Huge Famous Blog, Allie,” you say to your friend, sincerely.

“Oh yeah, that thing. I just dashed that off, after two other pieces I wrote that day.” She tosses her perfect hair and regards her French nails.

“Really? How long did that piece take you?” you say, curious, but knowing you’re about to feel sick.

“Oh, about 37 minutes. Of course posting it all around the world took a bit longer. And then answering all the fan mail. That took about 3 days.”

“Yeah, I hate it when that happens.“ Weak smile trying to hide your nausea and the fact that it took you all day to write one short piece. You leave smiling, stomach roiling.

I confess: I have been Allie a time or three, but I’m mostly the other. Which is a problem. This week, for instance, I have four articles due in the next two days (Yes, this is one of them.) Not to mention a sermon to write, and three other presentations. It was the same last week. I’m not alone in this kettle of fish. A Facebook friend messaged me saying she couldn’t talk—she had three articles due that day. Others tell me the same.

So here we all are hunched over in emergency mode every day, madly chopping and grinding, tossing posts and articles and reviews out into the void. We’re generating twice as much content as we used to, in half the time.

What’s happening? We all have Facebook pages we’re trying to fill. Many have daily blogs they’re trying to fill. Surrendering that impossible task, now they’re filling them with other writers’ work. So now we’re all writing for our own blogs, plus our friends’ blogs, plus all those other publications we want to be in. And the book we’re writing? Oh yes, we’ll get to that, as soon as we finish this last little post. Behind all this is fear . . . a lot of fear. That we’ll disappear if we’re not on stage all the time. That we’ll be forgotten. That we’ll be invisible. That our platform won’t be big enough. That we won’t land another book contract.

Enough. I’m about to revolt.

Here’s what I’m preaching to you and me today. And I’m sorry I’m not saying it beautifully or lyrically with a grand metaphor that lights it all on fire. That’s what happens when you write too fast. Here’s the message: Slow down.  M a r i n a t e.    Wait.     Sometimes even—-stop. Sometimes even—-say No.

We’re losing our way when nothing matters but the deadline. We’re losing our way when nothing matters but the byline. We’re wasting words. Sometimes we’re writing junk we don’t mean. Sometimes we’re just writing junk. We need to quit saying yes to people just because we want to fling a new piece out into the world for its five minutes of fame, if we’re even that lucky. Write to raze hearts and inflame lives. Mean every word you say. Stake your life upon it. Make your words worth every minute of your reader’s time. Anything less is ashes you have no time for and the world has no need of.

Take this, for example. I needed to write this in an hour, with a dash and a pinch of salt over my shoulder. Instead, against all intentions, I have taken three times longer. Not for the craft of it (apologies), but for the heart of it, which did not find me until the second hour. When we don’t give ourselves time to wander and to wonder, we’ll lose the truer words that want to be found and must be said.

Someday soon I hope the conversation will go like this:

“That was an amazing piece you wrote, Allie. You really nailed that review. I’m going to buy the book.”

“Really? That’s great! Yeah, it took me a week to write that. I just had to marinate in it for awhile.” She pulls at her frizzy hair and nibbles on her nails.

“Wow, a whole week! Good for you!”

“Oh, I don’t mean to brag or anything.”

‘No, that’s okay. That’s really inspiring,” you say. You think a moment, then blurt out, “You know, I’m going to ask for an extension on my essay. I think I need a little more time on it.”

“Of course! They’ll give it to you. You’re one of the best writers I know. They don’t expect you to be fast!”

Will you join me in this revolt?

6 comments:

  1. Thanks for this, Leslie. Some calm in what can be the storm of performance. I also appreciated your thoughts on Noah; more common sense in an often nonsensical reaction of the Christ-ian subculture. My wife and I hope to see the movie soon ourselves -- likely when we're back in Canada in a couple of weeks. I did mention you and your new book in a recent Daily Dad blog. I hope you don't mind a bit of satire. It's posted here ... http://www.dailydad.net/2014/forgiving-our-fathers-and-mothers-what-a-load/ ... Do have your publisher send a copy to the address I left previously .. Best ... Thom

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  2. I've been blogging since February 2009 and I have seen this change. There is a tidal wave of words and it reminds me of the words of Sound of Silence: people talking without listening.
    I blog once a week. Twice, if I have something extra to share. I read a few blogs, but not that many and I don't play the "you stroke my blog, I'll stroke yours" game that many bloggers seem to play. I say what I need to say. If people listen, that's great but in some ways it's the saying of it that's vital to the process.

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    1. wow----honest words. I do the same, post once a week, occasionally twice. I feel a responsibility to steward words, to cultivate them carefully, not unlike the garden . .. Thanks for reading and responding! May we both grow words worth reading!

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  3. Brilliant - and just wanted I needed to hear today thank you. Struggling with the tension between what I feel I need to write (and finding my voice in that) and the discussions with publishers about platform. I totally understand where they are coming from - it is the world in which we live - but it can be so disheartening and us writers are sensitive souls! ;)

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    1. Claire, indeed, this is true. I try hard not to resent publishers and their need for platform---because they too must survive. But I am sorry for the ways it influences content. But--also very thankful for the indie presses, who publish more thoughtful stuff. My next memoir will likely be at a smaller house because of this. Carry on Claire. And write what only YOU can write! If it is not a burn-in-your-soul, you wont' be sustained for the length of time it takes to write it--or the years after as you speak and support the book. Blessings on your important work!!

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  4. Thank you for your post. I'm trying to develope my writing abilities, but it still doesn't work. Maybe I need to start with my imagination and creativity. Maybe in this case I won't be panic when I need to write an essay in one night.

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