Why do you write?

Other people’s words about … writing and joy

Still, Connell went home that night and read over some notes he had been making for a new story [that he was writing], and he felt the old beat of pleasure inside his body, like watching a perfect goal, like the rustling movement of light through leaves, a phrase of music from the window of a passing car. Life offers up these moments of joy despite everything.

From ‘Normal People
by Sally Rooney

I have a friend, whom I very much respect, who has been writing fiction for as long as I’ve known her, without any desire to seek either publication or readership. It seems to me that she writes purely for the pleasure of the process itself, and for what that process brings her; it seems to me that writing, for her, is an entirely internal process of discovery and exploration, requiring no further justification, either to herself or to others.

Light through leaves (1)

Since my own decision to stop writing a while back, I’ve gone on thinking about writing and the role that it plays, or has played, in my life. And I’ve come to find my friend’s concept — whereby writing is a private act, an act for no-one other than herself, with no thought to the future or to the past — consoling and inspiring in equal measures. I like the honesty of her act. I like the wonder in it. I like the courage. Sometimes, it takes courage to do things just because.

Light through leaves (2)

So I hope that my friend experiences, when she writes, those brief, flickering, sun-dappled moments of joy Rooney describes so beautifully in the passage above. I hope she feels the old beat of pleasure inside [her] body.

And I’m sure that she does.

2 thoughts on “Why do you write?

  1. Unfettered writing (or any other endeavor for that matter) sounds very connected to me. Just you and your muse, no critics to please, flowing freely. Jumping through hoops to get published always has seemed untrue to one’s soul. I guess that is why self-publishing is flourishing. 🙂

    1. Thank you for your thoughtful comment, Eliza. I must say, I didn’t have to jump through hoops to get my first two novels published. I truly wrote exactly what I wanted to and what I believed in, and I have no regrets about that whatsoever. But I think the publishing world is growing more and more complex, and the idea of writing purely for myself, without exposure or criticism or expectation, is very appealing at the moment :).

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