You could be Joel, even if your name is Jenny. Or Julie, Jillian, Jim, Jane, Joe. You are working on a first draft and small wonder you're unhappy. If you lack confidence in setting one word after another and sense that you are stuck in a place from which you will never be set free, if you feel sure that you will never make it and were not cut out to do this, if your prose seems stillborn and you completely lack confidence, you must be a writer. If you say you see things differently and describe your efforts positively, if you tell people that you "just love to write," you may be delusional.
Thus writes John McPhee in the April 29th issue of The New Yorker, in a short piece entitled "Draft No. 4," second paragraph. If you perchance fit into the demographic described in this entry title, you should beg, borrow, or purloin a copy of this issue. The article does more than a little justice to the experience of someone who mangles words about, either to earn a dollar, or just takes on the challenge as a diversion of life. Or wants an unnecessary midlife crisis. Go get a copy; I double-dog-dare-ya'.
3 Comments
5/4/2013 10:27:57 am
I'm really going to get started this time. Wikinuts seems easy and I will start with something easy and that I know well; p.e. how to center one's work on an irregular log round...without the math. I'll let you know when I have finally finished something and you can take a look and leave some constructive criticism.
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Bill Casey
5/5/2016 04:52:46 pm
I found your website after searching you name after my dad came across it on ancestry.com. I think we might be related. My dad is Tom Casey.
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AuthorMorrissey is a retired school superintendent who is now content to scribble, swim laps, make wine, and do genealogy. His wife calls it chasing dead people...he can almost keep up with them. Archives
November 2019
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