Thursday, February 6, 2014

Enough


Today begins the Olympics. I am the only one in my family who really cares about this, especially in winter, so I began my campaign for their enthusiasm (or, frankly, just a bit of tolerance for my own enthusiasm) by using our family movie night to introduce the kids to the movie Cool Runnings. They didn't remember what a bobled race was, or know who the Jamaican bobsled team was, and with both in the news recently, I figured it would be a fun and sneaky way to get them interested.

It worked. At least a little. They laughed. They oohed and ahh-ed and asked a lot of questions as they watched the real footage of the bobsleds hurtling down the tube of ice. We went on the internet and found out more about the original team, and about the team going this year. We looked up the bobsled schedule. They are intrigued.

But while the movie is funny and informative and inspiring, my favorite scene is a quiet one, the night before the big race, where the main character, a young man desperate for a win, confronts his coach who he just discovered had once been disgraced by cheating. "Why?" he asks. "You already had two gold medals." And the coach answers:

"I had to win. You see, I'd made winning my whole life. And when you make winning your whole life, you have to keep on winning... A gold medal is a wonderful thing, but if you're not enough without one, you'll never be enough with one."

That's resonated with me since the first time I watched the movie so many year ago. Not because I've been after gold medals or hoped for the Olympics or anything quite so literal, but because it's really a message for life - for anything we strive for.

Lately I've had a lot of people asking me what I'm working on now or when I'm going to be done with my current novel. A couple of times, when I've answered that I'm working on the same novel I went into my MFA with three years ago, they say, gaped mouth, "Still?" Yes. Still.

Let me be clear: I love these people. I absolutely love that they are asking. I know they are asking because they want to read my next book, because they liked my last one, because they want me to be successful. All of these things in their heart are good.

But I... I can't help but cringe when I hear them, when I have to say, "Yes, I am still writing the same book I was writing three years ago." Because saying that makes me feel like I've failed along the way. I can't deny it. I am a slow writer. I have rewritten this book over nine times because I want to get it just right, and I haven't felt good about that until now. I am distracted by my family, who will always take first place in my time. I have less time now that I am tutoring most days, all day. Even with my best intentions, sometimes at night when I carve a bit of time to work on it, my brain is mush and I just want to watch 30 minutes of TV and go to bed.

And in that late hour, when I stare at the screen, either pouring words onto it or struggling to find the words, I wonder, "Am I enough without this?"

Do I have to keep publishing, keep finishing books, win awards, to be enough?

And while there are times, especially when I am having to say, "Yes, the same book..." that I feel like I am not, most of the time, I am. Because being a writer doesn't make me worthwhile. Having a publishing credit, heck, even having a Pushcart Prize, wouldn't make me more than what I am right now. They are wonderful things, to be sure, but they are not my worth. I don't want to someday say:

"You see, I'd made publishing my whole life. And when you make publishing your whole life, you have to keep on publishing... Having your book published is a wonderful thing, but if you're not enough without it, you'll never be enough with it."

Fill that in with whatever it is that drives you each day.

I'll finish this book. I'll probably write another. And another, I hope. I don't know if anything I write will ever be published, but I'll keep writing, because I love it, because I want to, but not because it gives me any worth.
 
When I watch the Olympics, it is not the gold medals that most draw me. It's the stories. It's the people, their lives, what they've overcome to get there that grab my heart. It is often the underdogs I root for. And sometimes, the fact that the competitors even make it down the track or the hill in one piece, manage to finish a routine even if they fall, makes me tear up. I want each one of them to feel in awe that they are even there.

Sometimes when I'm writing, I feel like that. Without the publishing, without the awards, I'm just writing, and I feel pretty lucky to be doing it.

6 comments:

  1. I always enjoyed Cool Runnings. I just realized John Candy was the coach!

    I used to be really competitive about everything. And I mean everything. I was born with this in my gut. I'm sure of it.

    As I've gotten older, however, I've calmed myself down and can now enjoy the game or the process much more. I think it's because I realized that no matter how good I am at something, there is always somebody better. And that is OKAY!

    Anyway, great blog post and boo to all those nosy people. They have no idea what it's like in the writing trenches.

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    1. I think being competitive is good, but you're right that you also have to enjoy the process, too. It's great to have goals, and some days I definitely feel more focused on the need to publish. After all, I don't want to just write for me. But on the other hand, if I'd been a competitive swimmer, say, and couldn't win very often, I hope I'd still have a long life of just enjoying being able to swim.

      I love that people want to read my books. I'm probably more frustrated with me not churning out a bunch of books. But the looks when they say, "You're still working on the same book??" does make me want to say, "You have no idea..."

      Thanks for always stopping by, Paul. :)

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  2. (I tear up watching the Olympics too!)

    Yeah I've been working on the same book for almost three years. And you know how long I've poked away at a book, before that. I still want that end goal, I really do, but I have to accept that I only have control over the work I put in, the rest is out of my hands, and I'll keep writing no matter what.

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    1. Yeah. That is such a great point, Heidi! We really can only work hard on what we can control, and we have to let go of what we can't. I watched someone break a record in the Olympics - he was a shoo-in for the gold, beat his own record and the Olympic one - and then a few minutes later that time was shattered by someone else. That part was out of his hands.
      I hope you'll keep writing, if only because I love reading what you write. :)

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  3. Cool Runnings is a fabulous film. When my daughter was younger, she watched it over and over again.

    I have to ask myself that question, too: will I be enough without having my book published by one of the New York City publishers? It's a tough question to ask because that has been my dream since the 6th grade. But in my head, I know that I am. Now I just have to get my heart to believe it.

    Thanks for the thought-provoking post. I needed it. :)

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    1. The great thing about writing is that that possibility never goes away. You could be 86, and the possibility of still getting published by one of the big NY publishers is there. :) Certainly a reason to keep trying!

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