I've read - a lot- in my years on this blue glowing marble we call Earth. I often find myself reading two or three books at once. This is probably not the best idea for absorbing long term information, but I often feel driven to constantly learn or explore new ideas and concepts. This is an amazing blessing and at the same time, can often impede progress. I often wrestle with trying to reach for something unique or different without being cheesy or ill-conceived. These inner demons are vicious and unrelenting. They're like lead weights within the gut seeping out poison that eats away at every creative thought or motivation.
What has been will be again,
what has been done will be done again;
there is nothing new under the sun.- The Bible- Ecclesiastes 1:9
That's when I remember the last line above, "there is nothing new under the sun." These tales we tell have been retold like echoes over and over again. Perhaps a better example is that each tale is told and retold and with each retelling, it changes and becomes something new, like a game of telephone. It's in the re imagining that we come upon that glimmer of something new and special. The more I read, the more I know this is true. It is rare that I'm caught off-guard by stories whether in a book or movie or TV show. It's not that I'm smarter than anyone else, I've just been exposed to more stories. When I am caught unaware, it's either due to a very clever writer, or a writer who has left out the most pertinent clues. But, I digress. I am not saying I enjoy these stories any less. I have instead, learned to enjoy them for what they are-- someone's labor of love.
So, here I am talking about a problem that I'm sure I'm not alone with. There is something that you learn though as you wrestle with these thoughts and that is that sometimes you just have to let it go. Much like perfectionism, sometimes you have to learn when good enough is simply good enough. Let the chips fall where they may and see what shakes out in the end.
So why this topic today? There's no time like the present they say. We all know they know everything so we should listen - right?
I've had a book concept for many years now and have done a decent amount of world building so that when I write, I understand the world I'm creating and that my characters live within. I've even started writing bits of it. But still, I wrestle with pulling it all together. I fight bits of doubt. I fight time. I fight the, "but will it work?" questions that come to me as I think of the concepts that enfold the story and make it breathe. I'm fighting myself more than any other person I could ever fight with. I am relentless on myself. And then, I read something that smells vaguely like what I'm writing and I worry that it's too close. Others will notice the cracks in the façade. "Pay no attention to the (wo)man behind that curtain!" I'll exclaim to readers.
“Begin at the beginning," the King said, very gravely, "and go on till you come to the end: then stop.”Sound advice there. Any writer or artist should pay heed of such wise council. And so, I will close doors inside my mind to stave off the demons that whisper doubt, and leave you with this video from one of my all time favorite bands:
― Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland