As a professional – one important lesson to start internalizing is the need to balance being passionate about what you do and maintaining an emotional distance from it at the same time.
Hostile Terrain
Most of you have never heard of my first self published book, an unabashed DIY effort called Hostile Terrain. It featured poetry, some plays, essays and other works. Truth be told, about 30% still holds up as writing that I’d be willing to show to other people.
Hostile Terrain came out of a process of years of journaling. I wrote everything down as an outlet. I was depressed and desperate and it took a long time to realize that journaling just fed right into that.
I didn’t realize at the time that writing wasn’t getting bad things out of my system, but instead, it was just making me sicker. I was breathing in the same stagnant air and thinking that I found something invigorating and relavatory because I was equating output with discovery.
In the next stage of this process, I was living with a person in a completely isolated situation and had hit emotional rock bottom because I had to confront things that intellect alone couldn’t solve and that I simply didn’t have the emotional maturity to deal with.
In the middle of this terrible living situation, a freak accident happened where the room I was living in flooded. I lost 10 years of writing and journals.
I was devastated. It was thousands of hours of work down the drain (or so I thought).
So being emotionally crushed, I went back to what I knew. I went back to writing and eventually I wrote some more and then put out Hostile Terrain. I sent it out to friends and to a few publishing houses I was into, and while I got a few “attaboys” I got no interest from anyone for anything resembling publishing.
Bedtime Stories For Mutant Children
In the meantime, I decided to move away from poetry and into short stories. I was really influenced by Tomas Bernhardt’s The Voice Imitator and decided to write a series of short stories that focused on dark stories for adults told in a children’s storybook style. This was about 1996 or so. The Tim Burton book, The Melancholy Death Of Oyster Boy, came out mid project and even though I was jealous he beat me to the punch – my stories were much darker and I thought I might be able to get some publishing interest for a character I developed while on a grim tour of Germany (Kommandant Kumar) and for the overall book concept, Bedtime Stories For Mutant Children.
I had all the stories online so I could get feedback from my friends. I didn’t have a computer at the time so I was working on my friend’s work computer. I did this off and on for about a year.
Then something happened.
Within a 24-hour period the web server went out of business AND the hard drive that I had all of the files on seized.
I lost 30 short stories. Gone. Casper.
I hit my frustration limit and I stopped writing. I abandoned the screenplay I wrote. I stopped all of the other writing I was doing and I worked on other things.
Eventually, I started seeing things differently, and I came to a realization.
It’s Not All Gold
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There is no scarcity of ideas.
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Not every idea has value
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Important ideas will return
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Sometimes it’s the process and not the product
There is no scarcity of ideas.
This was the biggest obstacle that I had to overcome in my own thinking and it’s one I still wrestle with.
There’s a fine line between being attached to an idea and being chained to it.
The difference is whether the idea you’re working with serves your larger goals, or if it’s only serving its own completion.
You don’t have to hold onto every idea like it’s a precious nugget. There are more of them out there.
Not every idea has value equal to the amount of work needed to put it into action.
Again, it’s easy to get emotionally attached to the work put into an idea and equate work with value but that’s not always a direct relationship. If you ever watch an episode of Shark Tank, you’ll likely see businesses where people have invested hundreds of thousands of dollars into a product that has generated no revenue after several years in place. This is what I’m talking about.
Cultivating the mindset to distance yourself emotionally from what you’re doing is a difficult process to develop and maintain but it’s an extremely valuable one.
Important ideas will return
I like documenting things because sometime I find things worth exploring but, in retrospect, every really good idea I couldn’t remember came back to me or presented itself in a different form.
Sometimes it’s the process and not the product
For me, this is the most important lesson in this piece.
Earlier, in regards to losing all of my writing, I said that:
“It was thousands of hours of work down the drain (or so I thought).”
That work wasn’t down the drain at all. The work I put into that sharpened my writing and really honed my ability to focus.
That emphasis made huge differences in my practicing and ultimately affected other areas of my life in a much more positive way than the actual writing ever did.
When I work on projects now, I assess the value of the outcome and the value of the experience and if either one makes sense for me to do, then I’ll take it on.
Don’t get hung up on old ideas at the expense of new ones. Implement, assess and then continue or abandon as need be.
I hope this helps and as always, thanks for reading!
-SC