The Muse - She Must Be Obeyed!
I can still remember it. The ideas for a story were churning through my mind. It was Saturday, a day off from the drudgery of high school. I had this plan to devote the entire evening (even if it meant staying home from the high school basketball game) to brainstorming my latest project. I couldn't wait.
But the moment had to be special. No chores looming in front of me, no homework, no family obligations. It would be me, a pen, a clean, fresh notebook, and my muse.
As I went through my day, ideas kept popping into my head. While I was doing the dishes. During my studying breaks. While I dusted the living room.
And you know what I did?
I ignored them. I pushed them away. Later! I said to myself. We'll have time for this later! Lots and lots of time, uninterrupted by chores and anything else, to brainstorm!
I bet you can guess what happened.
When that treasured moment came, when it was perfect, when I sat down to put pen to paper and write down all those wonderful ideas...
The ideas were gone. Vanished. Poof!
I had shut off my muse the entire day. During those mundane activities, when my brain had nothing better to do then to think of my writing, I shut it off. I wanted that perfect moment.
When that moment came, the muse refused to work with me. I had denied her.
(Well, I've always thought of my muse as a 'he' and he has morphed through the years from Harrison Ford to Johnny Depp (21 Jump Street days) to Armande Assante to Patrick Swayze to...ahhh....Christian Bale and Matthew McConaughey.)
I learned a very important lesson that day. Don't deny the muse. Ever. If she/he/it demands that you sit down now and write down an idea, obey. Don't fight it, don't rationalize that you have not a single second to put down the dishes or ignore the fighting kids or duck into the office bathroom. You do have that second.
And when you feel like writing, ignore the housework and the other responsibilities in life if you can. Within reason. Take five minutes. Take two. Here and there. Just don't ignore the need to write. That need is there for a reason. You need to listen to it, for your own sanity and happiness.
If you let that moment pass you by...you'll never know what could have been created. It might have been the idea for your next book...the plot twist that your story was missing...the perfect word to complete a description.
Listen to yourself. Ignore the inner editor. Ignore the inner conscious that says you must sacrifice your writing time for your family or your job or your spouse. You need to take that time - even if it's five minutes - to indulge yourself. If not, the muse will not come knocking nearly as often. If she's ignored too much...she starts to feel abandoned.
But it's your creative spirit that is being abandoned, the spirit that allows you to put those words on the paper.
Be good to yourself. Write!
But the moment had to be special. No chores looming in front of me, no homework, no family obligations. It would be me, a pen, a clean, fresh notebook, and my muse.
As I went through my day, ideas kept popping into my head. While I was doing the dishes. During my studying breaks. While I dusted the living room.
And you know what I did?
I ignored them. I pushed them away. Later! I said to myself. We'll have time for this later! Lots and lots of time, uninterrupted by chores and anything else, to brainstorm!
I bet you can guess what happened.
When that treasured moment came, when it was perfect, when I sat down to put pen to paper and write down all those wonderful ideas...
The ideas were gone. Vanished. Poof!
I had shut off my muse the entire day. During those mundane activities, when my brain had nothing better to do then to think of my writing, I shut it off. I wanted that perfect moment.
When that moment came, the muse refused to work with me. I had denied her.
(Well, I've always thought of my muse as a 'he' and he has morphed through the years from Harrison Ford to Johnny Depp (21 Jump Street days) to Armande Assante to Patrick Swayze to...ahhh....Christian Bale and Matthew McConaughey.)
I learned a very important lesson that day. Don't deny the muse. Ever. If she/he/it demands that you sit down now and write down an idea, obey. Don't fight it, don't rationalize that you have not a single second to put down the dishes or ignore the fighting kids or duck into the office bathroom. You do have that second.
And when you feel like writing, ignore the housework and the other responsibilities in life if you can. Within reason. Take five minutes. Take two. Here and there. Just don't ignore the need to write. That need is there for a reason. You need to listen to it, for your own sanity and happiness.
If you let that moment pass you by...you'll never know what could have been created. It might have been the idea for your next book...the plot twist that your story was missing...the perfect word to complete a description.
Listen to yourself. Ignore the inner editor. Ignore the inner conscious that says you must sacrifice your writing time for your family or your job or your spouse. You need to take that time - even if it's five minutes - to indulge yourself. If not, the muse will not come knocking nearly as often. If she's ignored too much...she starts to feel abandoned.
But it's your creative spirit that is being abandoned, the spirit that allows you to put those words on the paper.
Be good to yourself. Write!
5 Comments:
Hi, there! Found your blog from Rene's.
How true it is to not ignore your muse. I have done the same thing over and over and NEVER have I remembered what I so brilliantly come up with during that time of free thinking.
I have learned the hard way to now keep a notebook handy and just stop and write it down. Immediately.
Great blog!
Thank you!
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