The recurring topic of making a living as a writer has
bubbled up in several locations over the past couple of weeks, prompting
occasionally heated discussions in social media. Not that anyone cares what I
think—nor am I saying you should
care; this might all be a waste of valuable time you could have spent watching
the Reince Preibus viral porn video—but a thought came to mind, and what are
blogs for except as places for writers to vomit up thoughts?
The gist of these articles is that it’s hard to make a
decent living as a writer of any kind, and getting harder. To which I say: get
over it. That’s probably as it should be.
No one is owed a career in their chosen profession, be it
writing, music, dance, sports, database management, accounting, law, space
flight, or medicine. (Though it is sincerely to be hoped The Sole Heir’s
medical ambitions come to fruition, as I’m getting old and some free medical
advice will come in handy.) It’s a tough world, and jobs doing what people may consider
to be fun are even harder, because everyone who suspects they have an iota of
talent in that direction wants to do it.
The hard truth is, the world does not need more writers. If
authors stopped writing tomorrow, life would go on pretty much as it does now.
People who love to read would have no shortage of books to enjoy. More books
have already been published than humankind as a species will ever have time to
read. Readers will miss their preferred authors for a while, but they’ll find
someone else, and will always have the pleasure or re-reading favorites.
This is not to say new literature is not important; it is.
What it isn’t, is necessary. Air, water, food, and shelter are necessary;
everything else falls into the category of “nice to have.” The point is, more
people want to be writers than can be accommodated economically; this has
always been true. It’s funny how freshly-minted authors seem to have forgetten
the traditional notion of the starving writer working in an unheated garret.
No one makes us write. If the economic prospects seem overly
daunting to you, find another line of work and write in your spare time. What’s
that? Speak up. Oh. “I couldn’t not write. The desire consumes my soul and I
could never be happy doing anything that steals time from my Muse.” Then shut
the fuck up and write. Whining steals time from the Muse, as well.
There’s another thing to consider, the hoary axiom to “be
careful what you ask for.” Doing something you love for a living is not at all
the same as doing it for the love of it. I tried to build a career as a
musician into my mid-thirties before I accepted reality. I returned to play in
a community band about ten years later, and couldn’t remember the last time I’d
enjoyed playing so much, even though my skills had atrophied. Playing had been
satisfying, even rewarding at times, but not fun. It wears on one to be told
when to play, what to play, how to play it, what to wear, which door to use,
and to be a sideshow to the main event when you’ve dedicated your life to doing
it. Sucks the joy right out of it.
So here’s my advice if you know anyone who’s thinking of
becoming a writer, musician, dancer, athlete, or any number of other highly
competitive professions: talk them out of it. If you succeed, they had no
chance. If they do it anyway, they may likely still fall short, but they knew
the risks and gave it their best shot. Both your consciences will be clear.
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