I’ve been trying to write a book for 3 years now. I have no
shortage of ideas nor dearth of failed starts. I have an entire folder on my
computer which stores each of my attempts to write the Great American Novel. Some
are outlines – complete outlines – of
a story. Some of them are blank documents with just a title that I thought
sounded catchy. Most are just a few paragraphs or even a few pages of ideas haphazardly
typed (or handwritten and transcribed) onto the page. I think I’m doing this
all wrong.
What has kept me from soldiering on is a chorus of frightful
and frightening voices that overpower my own with their judge-y and dismissive
words that remind me I’m a fraud.
This
is going nowhere.
No
one will read this.
If
anyone reads this, they’ll know you’re not right in the head.
You
can’t do this.
Anne Lamott calls this radio station KFKD. It is the perfect description. When mine gets
switched on it’s incredibly startling – like when I turn on the car and someone
else has been driving it and suddenly Hosier is screaming through the speakers
about taking me to church. To illustrate, I recently had an idea for a book
about psychopaths and this is how it all went down.
The concept started with a Tweet and a link to an article “Occupations
for Psychopaths” and it proceeded to list the 10 professions with the most
psychopaths. That was interesting enough because I knew plenty of people in all
10 of the careers listed. What really caught my attention, though, was a
reference and link to a neuroscientist named James Fallon who, in the course of
his work, discovered that he was
actually a psychopath himself…sort of. I’ll let you Google him if you want more
on that. But it got me thinking about psychopathy and genetics and how external
factors determine whether a person with psychopathic tendencies becomes adept
with a scalpel in surgery or with a switchblade in an alley. I had an idea for
a book about twins with the “warrior gene” who were separated at birth and
lived completely different lives. But I had to do some research because I know
little about genetics and psychology. Well, that turned out to be a very deep
rabbit hole into which I unwittingly stumbled. I was actually enjoying my
freefall right up to the point when I was reading about genetics and variant alleles
on Wikipedia and that’s when someone switched on the radio.
You
took Biology for Dummies in college and you barely ever went.
Bless
your heart. Do you even remember what an allele is?
Someone
else would write this book better.
And in fact someone had.
As I learned a few days later while drinking wine with my next door
neighbors, someone has actually written my book (or something like it) and he
was a Distinguished Professor of Psychological and Genetic Brilliance at the
University of F***ing Geniuses. So in just a few months there will be published
evidence of my fraud. Five hundred eighty-eight pages of proof for the
entire chorus of skeptics in my head.
On the worst days, those voices are not attacking my attempts at writing,
they are attacking my character – like a right-wing radio personality who knows
my name and all my weaknesses.
What
makes you think you should be doing this instead of cleaning your house? Have
you SEEN the pile of dishes in the sink?
You
don’t love your dog because you’re writing instead of taking him on a walk. Bad
pet parent.
Why
haven’t you planned dinner yet? That grocery shopping isn’t going to do itself,
you know.
Your
kids’ friends’ parents all have real jobs, why don’t you?
These are the voices that stop me cold.
Recently, a confluence of events caused me to question my
sanity. First, among the voices of gloom that I regularly encounter there is also a
single soft voice repeating this single phrase:
The definition of insanity is
doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.
See, I’m insane. Clearly, I need to change what I’m doing. But
how? I once read about this guy who changed his life by changing the password
on his computer. The IT department where he worked required him to change his
password every 30 days for security. At first it annoyed him, but then he had
an idea. Instead of a word, he would make it an intention or a goal…something
he had to type often to remind him of what he was trying to add or subtract
from his life. So every 30 days he would make up a new password:
Save4trip@thailand
Quit@smoking4ever
Sleep@before12
Apparently this worked for him most of the time and I thought
it was a clever idea. For a couple of seconds. Then I forgot about it, because I
don’t work in an office, I work from home. I also furloughed my IT department (Geeksquad)
and, at the time, neither had a password on my computer nor knew how to set one.
A few weeks later, I was talking to a friend who had just
finished 30 days of yoga on YouTube. It changed her body and she had before/after
pics to prove it. Then I saw 3 or 4 people on Facebook who were doing 30-day
challenges of one kind or another and this 30-day idea just kept lying there
atop my brain, vibrating on the voices of fear and doubt. It wasn't new...Morgan Spurlock pretty much cornered the market on it. Nevertheless, it would not leave me.
Then this past weekend I went to a TEDx event in my city. I’m a TED junkie…which isn’t the worst kind of junkie, but
still it keeps me from living my life sometimes. Anyway, I was at this day-long
event in which speaker after speaker talked about building things and writing
songs and bringing communities together through dance and sending people to
college and developing children’s brains and giving people hope…all kinds of
big ideas that change people’s lives.
But I still just wanted to change my own, which is selfish
but absolutely true.
And then, in between speakers, on a huge projector screen
100x the size of my laptop, they played a TED talk from 2011 by Matt Cutts
called Try Something New for 30 Days. It was a 3 minutes and 27 second slow-motion A-HA moment for me. Somehow, hearing it in that room and thinking about it in the company of all those people crystallized its significance for me. Instead of hearing what they did, I finally heard how
they did it. They didn’t have fewer obstacles and they didn’t have more
passion they just had tenacity. And in that 3 minutes and 27 seconds, I
realized that I needed to strengthen my tenacity muscles…in 30-day increments. And
while I’m at it, I should blog about it because everyone knows that in 2015, no
one has really done anything unless they’ve blogged about it.
Just one
problem.
What will I do about those voices when they start asking the
questions? Especially the ones about people not liking what I write…or not reading
it at all. It was then that I remembered something about myself…something that
I haven’t mentioned yet.
Back when I was doing all that research on psychopaths, I
read about something called the Hare Psychopathy Checklist (PCL-R) which is a diagnostic
tool used by professionals to determine a person’s antisocial or psychopathic
tendencies. You can’t take this online…not really, but you can take a watered-down, Cosmo-quiz-style version of it. So I did.
And just as Buzzfeed helped me to discern which Friend I am (Phoebe) and which country I should live in (Finland),
I now know from a completely trustworthy source (the Interwebs) that I am
mildly psychopathic as well. Most psychopathic criminals score above 30, the
general population scores below 10. I scored an 18.
Now, I know you’re thinking that I shouldn’t put much stock
in this because the test wasn’t administered by a professional and it’s not
like there are brain scans to back it up. But I am Phoebe and I should
live in Finland so who am I not to embrace this bit of Internet-provided
self-discovery as well? There are downsides to it of course…psychopaths have
trouble really connecting with people and are often labeled as manipulative but
on the upside…psychopaths also don’t really care about either of those things.
That was just the permission I needed. To find out (after 42
years of caring so deeply what other people thought of me that I would change
my behavior and even chase dreams that weren’t my own) that I am actually a
Honey Badger and I really don’t give a shit.
So this blog will be dedicated to the stuff I do care about. Maybe
people will read it and maybe they won’t. Maybe people who do read it will like it and maybe they
won’t. And since I’m not a complete
psychopath, it might turn out that I care a little…but I doubt it will last
long.
First, I’m going to do twelve, 30-day challenges aimed at creating
new good habits or eliminating old bad ones. And I’ll write about them here. Here’s what I’ve come up with in no particular order (except
I am giving up sugar first):
- 30 days without sugar
- 30 days without TV
- 30 days of Yoga (at least 30 minutes per day)
- 30 days without Facebook
- 30 days of meditation (at least 10 minutes per day)
- 30 days of no speaking
- 30 days of reading (at least 1 hour per day)
- 30 days of no cussing
- 30 days of good sleep (at least 8 hours per night)
- 30 days of cleaning (at least one whole room per day)
- 30 days of running (at least 20 minutes per day)
- 30 days of writing on a single manuscript (at least 1 hour per day)
Today is day one with no sugar. I’ve done this before and in
my experience this makes me pretty unpleasant to the people around me. It also
gives me a headache. I’m fine now…it’s only been about 18 hours…but eventually
my unpleasantness will probably be reflected in these blog entries in ways that
you may interpret as angry or aggressive. You can share that in the comments if
you feel called to do so, but let me remind you that my mild psychopathic tendencies
will prevent me from caring.
Oh and a word about the title of this blog. It’s completely unrelated
to what I’m writing and its reference to newspapers will one day (too soon) become a historical reference to a dead form of media. Maybe I’ll talk about what it means later…much
later. For now, just know that it’s more
about you than it is about me.
Let’s do this.
keep writing.
ReplyDeleteYou go, Lisy!
ReplyDelete