Hello you,
I hope you’ve had a bit of sunshine on your face this week?
Today’s letter follows on from last week’s post.
This question, what are you postponing?, definitely struck a chord with lots of us.
Thank you so much for reading, sharing and commenting with your own responses to this prompt. I’ll be honest, I’m still getting used to real people actually reading my words! There have been mixed emotions for sure, but mainly joy, gratitude and some celebratory kitchen dancing.
Of course I’m going to mention Amie McNee again! (She is very present in my creative journey at the moment).
This week, with her encouragement, I dug a bit deeper into why I have been postponing finishing and sharing my novel. This is what arrived on my journal pages.
“The novel does not represent what I’m capable of now. I started it three years ago and my ideas and skills as a writer have evolved.
“I am better than this novel. I don’t want to put my name to something that doesn’t do justice to my capabilities.”
Oof! And breathe…
This perceived ‘gap’ between my actual work and the writer I believe I can be has caused a massive block.
Amie responded with something that, even though it’s sort of obvious, blew my mind.
“You are allowed to share art that isn’t your best.”
When I wrote this in my journal, my muscles relaxed a little.
“It doesn’t have to be your best to be worth sharing. Your creation could still move people, entertain people, change lives.
“It’s not for us (as the artists) to judge whether it will have an impact on someone or not.” - Amie McNee
Well, knock me down with a blooming feather.
This is the permission slip I didn’t know I’ve been waiting for.
I have been putting SO much pressure on this book to be the THING that represents me as an artist. My big debut.
It’s too much!
But, I can actually just put it out. Even if it’s not the absolute best possible book I’m capable of, I can still release it.
How…freeing!
I also realised that not finishing this book has been a huge barrier to me pursuing other ideas. I have lots! But they’ve been getting backed up.
It’s almost a form of punishment. I’m not allowing myself the space to play and develop other book ideas until this one is done. But I’ve not been doing it.
I’ve been looking at my book as an infinite list of problems to be fixed, rather than a flawed yet wonderful creation which deserves to be seen by someone else other than me.
To use another Amie-ism.
“Stop hoarding your art.”
These reflections have connected some more dots, too. This is why my writing practice on Substack has been so beneficial for me in overcoming this sneaky perfectionism.
My routine is to publish something Sunday at 8am. The truth is, these pieces are not the absolute best that I am capable of.
If I had weeks and months to expertly craft them, polish them and make them shine like gem stones, they could be better. But my weekly deadline compels me to press publish and put out flawed words. Typos, clunky sentences and all.
And do you know what? People still connect with what I’m writing. How awesome is that!? I am proud of my writing here.
Some people say my words have helped them. Some have pressed the heart button or shared something I’ve written with others.
Amie is right, we can put out something that is not ‘the best’ and it can still have an impact on someone else.
And this can be the same with my novel. I mean…wow.
“The route to creative success is to put out wrong art.” Amie McNee
This week I’ve been working on getting my manuscript into a good place to share with the editor I’ve booked.
I’ll admit I find this part so dull. Looking at grammar, spelling and ways to tighten up passive writing...the resistance is real. But I’m excited that this is part of the finishing process. I’ve never got as far as this before with a big writing project and it’s all a learning curve. And I do love learning!
Thanks for being here for the ride as a I have yet more realisations about creativity and blocks.
So, over to you. Do you have a piece of imperfect art that you have resisted sharing?
Is sneaky perfectionism showing up for you?
I invite you, creator, to do the generous, brave thing and share it anyway! I am cheering you on all the way.
Thanks so much for being here. Until next week,
Janelle x
Done is better than perfect ❤️ and after a while, done and “perfect” as you define it, line up in such a way that hitting publish feels wonderful.
Hey Janelle! Thanks for continuing such an important discussion. I also love the accountability (granted, self-imposed!) that regular posting on Substack brings. Yes, we could hold back, drafting and redrafting until the end of time but that wouldn't help our creative process. Deadlines help!
I also agree with you on the point you make about being a different writer now to the one you were when you started writing your novel. How interesting, though! When you get on to the next project, you'll have not just a novel but the beginnings of a body of work where you and your readers can chart the evolution of your craft, and I include your Substack in that!