Know Jack #2o7 God’s Calling
Writing is a calling, a beckon of the voice within to be
written.
Author Unknown
A friend and I were discussing the sometimes tragic lives of writers
or more properly the tragic end of life for writers. She was asking me why so
many succumbed to addictions or suicide.
I don’t think the act of writing is a formula for tragedy.
Writing doesn’t break people; broken people are drawn, almost compelled, to
write. Writers have voices whispering, shouting, and screaming inside their
head, and as the popular meme goes, sometimes they have some pretty good ideas.
The process of getting the voices to speak can be an
addiction all its own. I see it in me at times. Give me a glass or two of wine
and this quite man can become quite glib. The same thing happens with writing
so there has to be an internal policeman who says, “Stop!” When that voice is
silenced for the sake of all the others vying for attention…that is the prescription
for tragedy.
Many of my friends advise me to “let go” of things and emotions,
especially negative ones. I think that’s sound advise for most people. It is
creative death for writers. We must have those negative emotions, the
heartbreak, the tragedy, the pain on call for our characters to live.
I am writing a very evil character with, shall we say, some
very twisted, amoral practices. To write him, in a real, convincing fashion, I
must become him if only for a few hours. That’s easy for me to do… I have only
to draw on the innate, negative side of humanity. To undo it again is not always
easy.
Perhaps, someone might ask, “Why become a writer at all?” I’m
not sure writers always have a choice. How do you read the title of this post
with that apostrophe “S”? Is it the calling that belongs to God or is it God is
calling?
If it belongs to God and is shared with me, how shall I
maintain a peaceful relationship with God by ignoring the divine gift that I
have been given. On the other hand, if writing is God calling, the voices are
echoes of the divine and, like Jeremiah, attempting to hold them in is like a fire shut up in the bones… it really can’t be done for long.
Or as all my Facebook friends can attest, I cannot do that
for long. I do not envision a tragic end… but who does? As long as I have a
network of caring friends who do not tolerate extended silences in my writing,
I feel safe to practice my calling with passion.
Maranatha
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