20 February 2011

Writing

The ability to write is not a genetic trait, nor is it something that just anyone can pick up.  That leaves it in a class all it's own. Who can write? And what does it mean to write something effectively?

Writing is something that comes deep from within the wrinkles and crevices of our brains.  Writing comes from the valves pumping blood through our hearts.  Writing comes from the acids in our stomachs and intestines.  Writing comes from within a person.  Writing comes from us physically and mentally.  There are synapses that are fired while writing, as there are synapses that are fired during every second of every day.  Why are the synapses from writing different?

For some people it's a feeling of euphoria, for others it's a feeling of despair.  For me, writing is almost second-nature.  Does that mean it's easy? Absolutely not.  There are times that I write and delete, rewrite and then redelete.  Other times I can sit down and just let my fingers type magical things into the computer's text box.  The most revealing pieces of writing are those that don't use the backspace key.  The stream of consciousness that forms on the paper (or in this case on the screen) can reveal some crazy things that exists between our ears.

How does one become an effective writer? Well, some say to read and read a lot.  "The more you read, the more good writing you'll read and the more you'll want to emulate that," some say.  I don't know how accurate that really is.  Sometimes it depends on how well formed your brain is, and how good of a grasp on the language you're writing in you have.  For example, if I wrote in Spanish (algo que puedo hacer), the stream would flow much differently than when I write in English.  The more immersed in a language you are, the more mastery of it you will acquire.

If in middle school someone had told me that I would eventually begin to enjoy writing, no, that I would begin to love writing, I would have told them that they were insane.  I'd have directed them to the nearest mental institution because they needed to check themselves in.  Here I am, more than six years after leaving middle school, loving writing.  I don't know what I would do if I couldn't write out my thoughts.  I may not have gotten involved with the newspaper.  I may not have decided to minor in journalism.  I might not have become a news junkie.  This isn't a case of the what-ifs.  This is self-reflection and thanking.  I am extremely thankful for every opportunity I have been given.  Some opportunities I found for myself; some were given to me on a silver platter.  I am thankful for all of them.  Most of the opportunities have been extremely rewarding opportunities.

Writing well means to write deep from within. I just let the words come out of my fingertips onto the page.  I'll reread them a few times, but usually -- when it comes to a blog -- I just let them sit as they've come out.

1 comment:

  1. For me writing is kinda like eating healthily. If I pig out on junk food all the time, it's all I want. I feel like shit, but I don't want anything else.

    But once I introduce aspects of healthy food (or for the sake of our argument, I start writing) I start craving it more and more. The more I write, the more I need to write. But if I stop writing I fall back into my junk food funk.

    That's really the main reason I started my blog. I don't care if anyone reads it, I just need to force myself to write, so I will continue to write.

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