Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Tomorrow is Another Day

Crap. Crap. Crap. I write crap. I write crap in the beginning and I write crap at the end and then I fill the middle with crap. There is crap in every moment of starring at the blank page and then pretending to have something to say. I don’t have anything to say. I don’t have any grace in saying nothing either. I don’t know my characters. Hello strangers. Crap to you. I don’t know my setting. Crappy rooms and crappy lawns and crappy car. I don’t have a story or themes. I have—yes you guessed it—crap

Some days are like this.

Some days are like a storm beating against your small and delicate craft. You are on a rough sea. Some would say, but not me because I am not so crude, that you are on a sea of rough crap. What can you do? Batten down the hatches, stay inside, and ride it out. In the immortal words of Scarlett O’Hara, a kiss-off to the rise and fall of civilization and the daily struggle, “Tomorrow is another day.”

6 comments:

Marie Devers said...

Wow, Brian.

Never has anyone so adequately stated how I feel about my writing on some, okay many, days. It's refreshing to know that real, live published writers feel this way too, and that they admit it.

Brian Yansky said...

Thanks, Marie. We agree on the crap factor in writing.

Taylor K. said...

The crap factor. You should copyright that. Defined as those days every writers has where they feel like every word they write is useless and will surely have to be edited away.

Brian Yansky said...

We could have crap factor days when writers across America join in a celebration of misery. It's a beautiful thought.

No(dot dot)el said...

thanks for putting a smile on my face. this really did give me a good chuckle. i think this crap factor is what keeps many "could be's" out of business. they just don't have the shovel they need to dig their way out of the crap!!

Brian Yansky said...

Just saw this. Thanks, Noel.