I always wanted to be a writer.
Communicating with people through the written word is so powerful. In my business, I tend to think that the emotional connection that the audience has with their favorite radio host is among the most powerful bond in media. But a great writer has a similar bond with the audience. The power to make someone laugh, to make them think, to make them understand something, or just to entertain. I’m not the first person to write about writing, but it is something that’s important to me, so I guess that’s what this blog is all about. (In fact, this blog is named after a piece of dialogue that one of my favorite writers often used in his books, “Be Fools Not To.”)
In hanging around radio and TV studios for the past 6 years, I’ve had the opportunity to meet many celebrities, and many “celebrities.” In most cases, I’ve turned down those opportunities. However, the list of people that I actually have gone out of my way to meet is an interesting one. I flew across the country on the hopes of meeting Aaron Sorkin. (I did.) I waited in quite a long line to meet Michael Lewis. I interrupted David Baldacci at a cocktail party for the opportunity to tell him what a big fan I am. I never got to meet Robert B. Parker before he died, but I did try on several occasions to get up to Boston for one of his very rare public appearances.
Being a writer seemed like a dream career for me. The romanticism of spending my days at a little coffee shop by the fire, churning out great words. The freedom…no bosses, no Outlook email, just me and a blank Word document.
But I rarely wrote anything. Once in a while I contributed something to our magazine. Very rarely. But most days, I didn’t write anything. I have a very good excuse for not writing: I have a full time job. That job doesn’t allow me to spend my days at coffee shops dreaming of movie scripts or plots for fiction novels, or even blog post ideas.
Someday, I thought. I won’t have hundreds of emails to return or calls to make, and I’ll be able to really focus on writing.
I went out for a drink with my friend John Bobey a few years back, himself a writer with a long resume. John will appreciate it if I say that his advice is often dubious, so listening to John on all things is not necessarily a smart life choice. However, on this occasion, he said something profound.
“Writers Write.”
We were talking about my love for writing, or more accurately my love for talking about writing. John reminded me that the real life of a writer is nowhere near as I imagine it to be. Everyone, even full time writers, have constant pressures and obligations, phone calls, emails, and deadlines. Aaron Sorkin doesn’t sit in a cafe all day drinking lattes and brainstorming movie ideas. And successful writers these days are also marketers, business people, etc. For successful writers, writing is only a small piece of what they do. The difference between “writers” and “wanna-be writers” is simple: writers write.
I have tremendous admiration for those mentioned above, as well as newspaper and magazine writers who push themselves to write every single day.
When I started this blog a few weeks ago, I committed to writing. And so far i’d give myself a D. There’s more than one entry, but there’s less than there should be. But for now I’ll keep at it, find the time where I can to put some thoughts down on “paper” and hope that this writing becomes a habit.
And keep dreaming of the day that will never come, with no phone calls, no emails, and a coffee shop with a fireplace and a comfy couch.
I guess it’s hard to sit down and write something. My ideas to write about come about at the worst times! I don’t know if you are the same way. If so, I can imagine you listening to Glenn talk about trying to fill up a huge stadium (or something else huge) with people, and you come up with something great to write about! My best ideas come up when I’m in the middle of something else.
Great writing so far!
Nice one, man. We all feel the so close, so far; work vs. pleasure vs. pleasure work pleasure.
Thanks
Charles
I feel for you, Chris. Just to make it worse, E. L. Doctorow once said “Planning to write is not writing. Outlining, researching, talking to people about what you’re doing, none of that is writing. Writing is writing.” After many published books, I’m afraid I’ve found he’s right. Or as I shorten it, “Butt in the chair, words on the page.”
Then again, Doctorow also said “Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia.” Not sure that needs a short version. 😉
You are a very good writer. I am particularly fond of your tweets. And the live blog that you did from your movie night at Union Station was hysterical! Keep writing! There will always be people reading you.