I’ve seen much conflict over such seemingly simple writing
advice: that you should write what you know. As a fantasy, sci-fi, dystopian
girl (when I started writing), I worked mostly on things that I had made up
entirely in my head, so it didn’t seem to apply to me one way or the other.
However, as I’ve gotten older and I desire to do more than simply
write a story, but also to use such stories to explore larger topics and
themes, I’ve seen life throw me situations that make me wonder about this
advice. In my first WIP, Low Expectations, a major theme in the tipping
point is faith through impossible circumstances. These past few years, I (and
the rest of the world) have had to walk through a million different hurdles and
hurts that have strained my spirit and stretched my beliefs. The WIP I’m
outlining, The Second Prince, is going to be thick with grief. Before
starting this story, I hadn’t experienced much loss in my life; yet, suddenly,
I find myself grieving many things: long-held dreams and stolen chances, close
friends and beloved family, whether these people have actually died or only the
relationship has. In penning a story on a girl in her 20’s, seeking every
entrance to the brave new world of adulthood, I find myself being stretched—and
even sometimes desiring— to take on new responsibilities, switch up stale
schedules from previous seasons, and begin to step out of my comfort zone.
I’m not strictly happy about most of these circumstances,
and yet they play into my writing so clearly, that it is impossible to see them
as coincidences. As trying as it feels, as extended as this time seems, there’s
a strange comfort in it somewhere, None of this is by accident. All these
stories from my life will matter someday. In the small details and interwoven
themes, these experiences will enter the artwork I create, and the realness I impart
as a result of experiencing these emotions will be palpable. That authenticity will
resonate, and maybe, it will touch the heart of someone in a similar situation
who doesn’t have the words to speak of what they’re going through.
I found this quote once where a writer* encouraged with the
words, “Everything is material.” Meaning both that all things on Earth are material,
instead of eternal, and that everything you go through as a creator is
material for your creations. Now I don’t want to belittle anyone’s pain by relegating
it to, “Ooh! This can be inspiration later!” and I don’t want to ignore my own pain
by folding it away into a story instead of feeling it for myself. Yet a certain
hope does flow from that point of view: if everything is material, then
perhaps, one day, all of these pains can be used. I can use them. I will
use them. And if there comes a time later when I use these struggles, then “later”
does exist. This struggling season ends, and another one begins. Something
happens after all of this.
And then, also, if none of it is coincidence, then there’s
Someone up there composing all of it. And maybe, He really is working it for our
good.
Maybe that’s what they meant all along, by write what you
know. Write what you’ve learned, what you’ve experienced. Write what you’ve seen and heard and felt with your soul. Write your story,
simply, by any other name.
*Google says the quote is by Philip Roth, but I don’t fully know the context of the interview/book where he said it. So, I’m not certain if it’s the same one I heard. :)
Love this! <3
ReplyDeleteThank you! <3
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