Last April I mentioned that I wanted to spend more time writing fiction. Since then, I’ve spent almost every day working on my novel. I’m now at over 10,000 words into it, which makes me proud. It’s not novel length yet, but it’s my longest work of fiction so far.
Ever since this started, though, I noticed that I haven’t been on Twitter much, and I haven’t written about how productive I’ve become (except this one I suppose). Maybe because I’ve actually been doing things rather than just talking about them. From one of my recent tweets:

This, my friends, is a great thing to realize. But the strangest thing about this realization is what actually caused it - fear.
Fear of the Undone
Here’s what was scary to me: the idea that everyone has a novel inside them. While this adage is used to motivate (or mislead) aspiring writers, the more you think about it, the more depressing it seems because it implies the following:
- You have roughly six billion competitors.
- There are much, much fewer novelists than that. This means that not everyone actually wants to write a novel. Those who want it don’t always get around to doing it. And out of those who eventually finish a novel, even fewer have it published.
- I just want to reiterate the sentence “Those who want it don’t always get around to doing it”.
In other words, by merely wanting to write a novel, I run the risk of becoming one of those people who always talks about her novel but never actually gets down to writing it. I want to be a real novelist, dammit! Not some person at a party going on about how I’m gonna-maybe-someday write a novel about everything and it’s gonna be the best thing ever. Even if I don’t have any of my final drafts published, I’ll still have more practical experience than that guy.
Come to think of it, I never discussed my novel with anyone except my partner. Even then, the only thing she knew was the fact that I’m working on it. When friends or family would call and ask what I was working on, I’d say “stuff” and move on to the next topic. I couldn’t risk discussing my work or even my methods. I felt like I was saving all that enthusiasm for my writing sessions. I couldn’t risk letting any of that leak out just by talking about my work. Subconsciously, I knew that everything I had — and I had very little — must be channeled to the act of writing itself. That was my priority.
With that in mind, this is the part where I shut up and go back to work.
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on Aug 19th, 2009 at 3:32 am
I felt a bit guilty when leaving the blogging & tweeting xp for a while. The reasons were the same, communicating about your work consumes a lot of the time you need to get things done, or even started.
So, we find ourselves on the edge of future work, where we see ourselves create, think and produce in an virtually open space. We replaced the bricks with glass, letting the world outside know what we’re up too. But now we must concentrate on actually producing the things we had in mind. People walk by, waving, smiling, barking dogs and funny faces. They want to know what you’re doing. If you’re ok. If you have seen the vid, or posted a reply. And you just want to get things done. It is a bit ironic, don’t you think?
on Aug 20th, 2009 at 9:55 pm
I did check up on you a couple of times, I think, to ask how you were. Then I figured you were probably busy making things. Glad I was right.
I don’t really Tweet all that much, either.
Love your analogy of replacing the bricks with glass. Can I put it in my mental “swipe file” and quote you in an upcoming post? But judging from how often I post here, I think it’s going to be a while before anyone sees it.
on Aug 20th, 2009 at 11:07 pm
Somehow I feel flattered you missed me ;-), but yeah, I had a lot of things on my mind that weren’t going anywhere if I didn’t pull the plug. And then there is social life, meaning supporting my girl in bad times (all OK now).
I understand, you are trying to finish your novel. How’s that going? Is the topic secret?
Well, you have my mail, if you like to talk about it. No offence if not. It’s hard work, I know.
Sure, you may always use whatever I blurt out. Lifetime permission so to say
Hey Celine, it’s nice to hear from you, and next time I’ll give you a decent notice when I have to pull the plug again, okay? LOL. Cya
on Nov 19th, 2009 at 3:58 am
[...] today I ran across a blog post describing how productive people spend time producing rather than talking about producing. After years of hearing how our society [...]