Monday, October 15, 2018
A real anything
This has been my view for the last three days. I'm here at my annual writers retreat in the beautiful Northwest.
The ocean, the people, the creativity. . . they are the balm for my soul and the sugar for my muse.
The great and wonderful Kaylee Baldwin was the special guest. She is kind and witty and wise. She was also my roommate. And I have to tell you, she is authentic--the same person when she is "on" in front of a crowd as she is in her pajamas at midnight chatting away.
Kaylee gave three presentations for our lucky group. The first was a brilliant class on editing. Seriously. I will never edit the same. Her second presentation, which she called "Writing for Such a Time as This" not only changed my writing but how I see myself. Her last presentation was on hope--which we all need--and how it begins in the darkness.
She is a lovely person and a fantastic writer. You should go by her books now. Like, right now. HERE.
In her presentation last night she talked about something that resonated with me, not just as a writer, but as a person.
She talked about the word "real'. Especially when we attach it to our worth.
She said, "I wish we'd all stop using the phrase 'real writers.' It has too much baggage. It doesn't matter if you have a dozen published novels or write poetry no one will see beyond yourself. Real writers write. It doesn't matter how much or when. If you write, put words on a paper or screen, you are a writer."
I stopped and thought about how often I have used that phrase myself. I wanted to be a "real writer". And I never felt like I was.
In my true spirit of self-analysis (flirting with a healthy dose of borderline neuroses), I tried to figure out why, why didn't I feel like a real writer and would I ever be a real writer.
At this time, I had been writing blogs and books for a while. I had "proof" I was a writer, but I still didn't feel like it. Why?
Kaylee's words last night echoed and confirmed my conclusion.
The problem wasn't in my goal or desire of being a real writer, but it was my definition of what a real writer was.
I took the beautiful word "writer", opened it, and packed it with all my own things: my interpretations, my definitions, my perceptions. My baggage.
And that baggage changed as changed. It got heavier as I achieved more.
In the beginning, I had decided being a "real writer" meant to have people read my words.
When people began to read my words, the definition changed to putting my words into a book.
When I put my words into a book, the meaning changed to publishing a book.
When I published a book, the definition changed again to publish multiple books.
And when I published multiple books, it changed again.
Being a "real" writer became a goal I feared was unreachable.
What I couldn't see was why it was unreachable. I couldn't see that I was one the who was pushing it back farther and farther. I was the one who kept opening the words "real writer" and packing it with more and heavier expectations.
I was the antagonist in my own story.
It was a shocking realization. But empowering.
I put the baggage there, and I had the power to unpack the word.
I pulled out my expectations--which many were false--and changed the definitions. Until all that was left were seven words: "I am a real writer because I am." No qualifiers. No goals. No benchmarks.
It wasn't about what I did, but who I was.
Who I am.
Most of you reading this aren't writers. But many of you struggle with being a "real" something.
A real:
mother
friend
artist
woman
daughter of God
ministering sister
baker
wife
person
________ (Insert your "real_____" here)
I am guilty of having packed doubt and fear and false expectations of perfection and success into a lot of these words on a time or two or hundred. It never works out well. The only "real" thing I feel like is a failure.
How sad I am what this happens.
I also know it affects the people around me. And I'm pretty sure it makes Heavenly Father sad. He celebrates with us when we celebrate, and He mourns with us when we mourn. Even if it's mourning our perceived failures. But, I believe He mourns not because we've failed, but because we are causing ourselves so much pain.
Women are that they might have joy. But ladies, we often don't allow us to have joy. It's almost as though when euphoria and success permeate our lives, we must irradicate them, like pest exterminators, with lethal--but almost imperceptible--spray of doubt, fear, guilt, new definitions, harder goals, and unhealthy expectations.
You are real.
Let me repeat. YOU ARE REAL.
If you breathe, you are automatically a real person, a valid person--a daughter of God who is deserving of ALL of His love. All of it. No qualifiers.
You have many roles who play. Some are similar to mine and some are different. I hope you can look at each of these roles through God's eyes, packing the word "real" with His definitions and expectations.
I hope you and I can strengthen our ability to allow ourselves to feel good about who we are and what we do. Imperfection is our expected mortal state. Growth is our goal.
Our job isn't to reach perfection here. If that's what we are striving for, we are missing the mark.
Our job is to trade our will for His and love others. It's a simple as that.
That included loving ourselves, and trading our definition of success, "real" anything, achievement, and expectations for His.
If we do this, I think we will find that we are more real than we ever knew. And then we need to allow ourselves to claim that. To feel joy in that. Yes- WE CAN FEEL JOY IN WHO WE ARE AND WHAT WE DO.
Seeing ourselves through His perspective, coupled with our determination to learn grown and our efforts to seek His will and trade it for ours will lead to greater peace in our lives, a more accurate understanding of ourselves and God, and joy in our imperfect state.
This applies to any role in our lives.
For me, this weekend, it applied to me being a "real" writer.
I've allowed publishers to tell me I am the next big thing and believe them.
I've allowed publishers to tell me I'm gimmicky and believe them.
I've allowed the success of other writers to define my success.
I've allowed my definition of what God's expectations were for me to feed my sense of failure.
I've allowed so many things to be packed into that "real" word that there was no possible way to ever be a real writer.
But I am.
I write words. I am a writer.
And God doesn't expect me to get published. Not even once. He gave me a gift and He wants me to find joy in it. That's it.
And if I take this gift of a love of words coupled with righteous effort and healthy goals and expectations, topped with gratitude, I know I can have joy in saying "I am a real writer" now and always.
Thank you, Kaylee, for the real reminder.
Now I'm going to go write some more words. Because I am a writer. :)
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