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Blog

About Writing I

 About Writing Series

Essays in this series:

  •  About Writing I

  •  About Writing II

  •  About Writing III

June 12, 2019

 

Writing is far more than typing the whims of the day. You do just that as an exercise you keep to yourself in preparation for the real story to tell. Good writers know that. In other words, writing is not there for you to vent your most vicious expletives in order to do harm.

Unfortunately, today we see too many examples of bad writing that conveys the worst ways to live and to relate. The writers and readers of today are the victims of a failed American educational system and parenting that have been in vogue the past forty years, whose main tenets have been the following:

1) Be yourself: Kids are in a constant development, telling them to be who they are is confusing and irresponsible. As a consequence, they grow up thinking that nobody matters but themselves. Besides, you don’t ask a prick to be himself, do you?

2) Anything you do must be accepted and praised—participant awards come to mind—and if that doesn’t happen, it’s everybody else’s fault.

3) You should do what you love, which translates into “I’m gonna do whatever I feel like.” By the way, “do what you love” have been manipulated by companies, so they don’t pay their employees what they should—having them as interns—or they pay them the minimum possible. After all, it does not look like work, because “they are doing what they love.”

4) And finally, are you feeling depressed? Aw! Take your pills! (Meaning: Stop bothering me.) Feeling sad or disappointed is part of life. Medication is only justified in case of serious mental illness. The problem is that the majority wants to solve their troubled relationships with pills, as an easy and immediate way out.

As a consequence, we are surrounded by young, not so young, and very old, sociopaths, who have been groomed to behave with entitlement by the book, literally.

When people are faced with the first few pages of certain publicly acclaimed books, they think that that must be literature, and that’s the way they should write to obtain similar success. If they realized they have been brain-washed to believe certain books are real literature and forgot everything they’ve learned, then they would be much better writers.

Good writers get lost in their stories. Who they are as authors and what they think don’t matter to them. The story, the plot, the characters, and the tension compel us to see who we are as human beings and what we are capable of as a whole.

It’s true that being a good writer doesn’t make you a good person. But sociopaths, or psychopaths, are necessarily manipulative, bad-intentioned writers and their work yields nothing but lack of empathy and emptiness. (The difference between a sociopath and a psychopath lies in that the latter has more education. Neither of them is more intelligent than the average population.)

When writing—assuming writers and their audiences are a group of individuals who use logic and empathy to connect with the real world and with other reasonable groups of individuals—writers should use their own head but always keeping their audiences in mind, because they all matter in equal proportion.

I have to recognize that the problem goes beyond writers and readers and what they are looking for. We are dealing with a troubled society lost in its own hedonism. The pursuit of pleasure and things is now, more than ever, the most important goal in everyone’s mind. Therefore, a book that strives for asceticism is not going to cut it in the book markets of today. Unless it’s a book about dieting, which ultimately leads to the pleasure of a supposedly more attractive body.

It’s very common to find that kind of artist in this country today. The ones so busy trying to attract attention to their work, and so caught up in themselves, that they even forget what they are talking about losing themselves in circular explanations of who they are and what they do. Their audience is of no importance to them; they want everybody’s attention, period. What matters is to cause an impact with no contemplation for its consequences. The most important thing is to strike gold. Nothing of extending the boundaries of human reasoning and empathy, which on their lips it’s just a pitch of empty words.

Real writing happens when the author captures human nature in a way that is compelling, interesting, and thoughtful. In a story that shows our struggles and our flaws, but also the way we choose to be happy. The pursuit of happiness is still valid because happiness and pleasure are two different things. We don’t find personal pleasure in somebody else’s talent, we feel happy for them, because, in a way, we see ourselves reflected in that talent. Real happiness is not given by sensual interactions or fabricated sensations. Real joy is in what we are able to accomplish as individuals and together as a team. Not in a false, cheesy rhetoric, but in a true connection that allows us to grow and expand our view of who we are and, most important, of who we can be.

My advice?

1) Be authentic, truthful, open, and kind. I know, in some circumstances it’s very hard, but you can do it. Trust yourself. If the situation is too awful—verbally, I mean—bite your tongue. Don’t add insult to injury.

2) Not everything you do needs to be considered a masterpiece honored per saecula saeculorum (forever and ever).

3) Do the right thing, choose something to do that goes along with your abilities and goals. Most importantly, you don’t need to be the center of attention all the time. If you do, you are a horrible human being. There is no hope for you.

4) Are you feeling depressed? Welcome to the world of the living. It sucks, but you can find in your brain ways to cope until you find a solution to your problem. In the meantime, do not inhale, swallow, or inject anything into your body for “recreational purposes”; it doesn’t help, and it makes it worse, because your body is not made of rubber; it’s a delicate work of art.

Whatever your problem is, please don’t vent. Write it down, and put it away. Talk to a love one about it if you want. You are going to see that when you calm down things are going to look different. Please, don’t “share” it with the public. Everybody else is dealing with their own problems, and not everyone listening has the best of intentions. I know, that’s something that has been instilled in your brain with all those “self-help” TV programs, where people go to whine, because it’s cheaper than therapy.

And finally, if you have a real mental health issue, please seek help, and do not stop until you find the right professional for you.

If you decide to become a good writer, I wish you my best. I hope you are one of those rare artists, who adds something positive to our world, because we need you now more than ever, and the more the merrier.

It’s not going to be easy, but nothing that you set up yourself to do with honesty and proficiency is. Patience, resilience, and empathy are your best allies.

  • Next:  Marie Colvin in a Private War

  • Previous:  Nureyev


Posts by date

 2025

Jan 23   The War of the Words V

 2024

Oct 09   Kamala and The Tree of Knowledge

Jul 11   About Writing III

Jul 11   Actresses 101

Mar 06   What Linklater Got Wrong

Feb 09   Techno-Heaven

 2023

Dec 25   Peter Panish

Sep 01   Pleasure or Paradise?

Aug 21   The War of the Words IV

Aug 16   Indicted

Mar 11   Witch Hunt

 2022

Sep 15   Optics II

Jul 16   The War of the Words III

Mar 26   Irrational Minds

Feb 05   Ursula's Path

Jan 16   Predicting the Future

 2021

Sep 11   Con-Science

May 26   The War of the Words II

May 26   Halston

Mar 19   The War of the Words I

Jan 12   January 6th, 2021

 2020

Nov 02   Separated

Aug 26   Optics I

Jul 27   Name Calling

Jul 13   About Writing II

Jul 04   Mr. Shallow

Jun 11   Hidden Figures

Jun 03   9 Minutes

Apr 21   Signaling

Feb 18   ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

Jan 16   ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

 2019

Dec 20   ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Nov 04   Mr. Power

Oct 10   Today Is a Good Day

Sep 05   Inspiration Point

Aug 08   The Ones Who Walk Away

Jul 25   On Feminism

Jun 16   Marie Colvin in a Private War

Jun 12   About Writing I

Jun 06   Nureyev

May 31   Nora and Her Neck

Apr 24   Home Less

Apr 11   The Passion Side of Love

Mar 25   Gloria Bell

Mar 03   Mary Shelley

Jan 12   Mr. Fart

 2018

Dec 15   My Orson

Dec 15   Ping-Pong

 2017

Dec 05   Breaking Away

Nov 30   Julieta and the Despair of Being a Woman

Oct 24   Stupro

Oct 04   The Painter

Aug 05   A Quiet Passion… No More

Jul 27   Worst-Case Scenario

Jun 15   Catfight 2016

May 17   From Girl to Woman Boss

Apr 17   South

Mar 29   The Forgotten

Mar 03   In

Feb 22   Lost

Feb 04   2017

 2016

Nov 10   Hillary Lost

Oct 10   Trump, Trumpettes, and the Politics of Hate

Sep 11   September 11th, Laura Rodríguez, and the Haunting Past

Aug 19   Hillary

Aug 13   Striking Gold

Jul 25   What Is in the Name

Jul 09   Free in Dallas

Jul 02   Carol and Orlando

May 31   Reality and Reality Perception

Apr 22   Il Sorpasso

Apr 19   Lena Dunham and Kitty Genovese

Feb 25   December in California

 2015

Dec 02   My Italian and I

Nov 29   Three Different Geographical Points; One Basic Premise

Nov 28   I’m a Woman

Nov 23   From My Childhood to Our Last Day

Nov 22   Paris

Nov 22   Films, Filmmakers, and Writers

Nov 18   I Live in Texas


Posts by series

 About Writing

Jun 12, 19  About Writing I

Jul 13, 20  About Writing II

Jul 11, 24  About Writing III

 Optics

Aug 26, 20  Optics I

Sep 15, 22  Optics II

 The War of the Words

Mar 19, 21  The War of the Words I

May 26, 21  The War of the Words II

Jul 16, 22  The War of the Words III

Aug 21, 23  The War of the Words IV

Jan 23, 25  The War of the Words V

 ToKyoTokyo

Dec 20, 19  ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Jan 16, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

Feb 18, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

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