December 5, 2014

10 Reasons Writing For a Living Kicks Ass

 

...or maybe you'd rather be in a cubicle...

…or maybe you’d rather be in a cubicle…

 

As we close our first year of operation and look forward to 2015, we have to say it’s been a bumpy road. A lot of things went wrong. More things went right. In most ways, it’s been just like our careers as writers: tough, but worth it. Coming to the end of your writing year, you might be tempted to look at the “Con” column and think about giving it up. Here are ten reasons not to.

 

  1. There Has Never Been a Better Time to Be a Writer

Forget what some doomsayers like Scott Turow might tell you – the Internet has democratized distribution, simplified publicity and created massive demand. These changes might make Stephen Kings and J.K. Rowlings a bit less common, but it’s easier than ever to make your living just from your words.

  1. You Can Do It From Anywhere

Writing is location-independent, which makes your morning commute a breeze. If you want to get more exotic, it’s just as easy to write from a Hammock in Hawaii as from your home office. I’m spending this year in Malaysia because of this factor. Where would you spend a year if you could?

  1. The Voices in Your Head Get Respect

No other career lets you tell other people what the voices in your head and your imaginary friends have to say…well, not without risk of heavy medication. Writing lets you get those ideas, images, voices and characters out into the world where they get to meet other people.

  1. You Get to Tell People You’re a Writer

Admit it, you love doing this. Even when that person spends the next hour telling you all about the book he’s always wanted to write, but never got around to. Someday, we’ll all be risen enough individuals that our egos don’t get a kick out of this. Today is not that day.

  1. (Good) Fiction Endures

How many books did you love that got written by somebody long dead who you’ve never met? A well-written story that touches people at a personal, emotional level extends beyond the boundaries of your location and lifespan. It’s a kind of immortality.

  1. You Can Do it Any Time

Don’t kid yourself: writing is time-consuming and difficult. But you can make that difficult time happen around the other things that are important to you. Writing for your living means no more asking for time off to catch your kid’s ball game, or missing a travel opportunity because you’re out of vacation time.

  1. It Beats Working for a Living

How many hours do you spend at your regular job wishing you were writing? Although it’s scary, frustrating and harder than it looks to anybody who doesn’t write, it’s still more fun than any other career.

  1. Writers are Fun

Go to a writers’ conference, or critique meet-up. Writers are interesting people, and most are a little bit starved for conversation. Being a writer means you’re part of a really cool industry full of interesting, interested people.

  1. You Get to Be Your Own Boss

Yes, you’ll have clients. Yes you’ll still have to do things you’d rather not, and be nicer to people than you’d like to. But at the end of the day you’ll be making your own decisions to move yourself toward goals you set, and reaping all the rewards of meeting those goals.

      10. It’s Not Like You Have a Choice

You’re not going to stop writing. It’s an addiction, an internal itch that can only be scratched by dancing with the written word. If you could have stopped writing, you would have years ago. So why not go ahead and make it part of who you are and how you make a living?  The only thing stopping you is…you.

 

Got anything to add to the list? Put it in the comments below.  Let’s keep this conversation going so we can remind ourselves throughout 2015 of the awesomeness that is writing.

~ Jason

 

1 comment
  • I had to grin when I read #10. So true. It’s an inner voice. You can ignore it, but you’ll pay if you do. Besides, if you succumb to it, you’ll learn there is a #11: there is no such thing as writer’s block.

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