Monday, May 5, 2008

Writing, like reading, is an anti-social activity

I write alone, in my room, with the door closed. I focus completely on the monitor like a flashlight in a dark room, there are rings of awareness within that focus, but outside my periferal vision, the world fades to black. I am so intensely concentrated on the cursor, I might as well be that blinking little vertical that words trail after appearing as it moves across the page. I am the same when I read. The world falls away and I am lost in the story, the poem, the page. I can be interrupted, ripped from my trance, taken away by reality, but that is never my choice. I would choose to stay until sleep or hunger or love, in other words something my mind sees as more important than the moment.

Now, I find a hornet's nest of activity circling the web known by many names but which I will refer to as social networking. People gather around common interests and exchange information, comment, gossip, pass judgement, share sh*t, connect. I read that in Japan, the majority of best sellers are written for the cell phone. My mind warps into where this is all leading, how art and self-expression and society are transforming. I have always been an experimenter, a post modern, jazz-oriented, improvisational creature. The future is pulling me in new directions.

2 comments:

John Guzlowski said...

Hi, Phil, one of the ways that writing has changed for me is that it seems more a social act than it was before.

When I first started writing, my heroes were the lonely writers--Jack London, Faulkner, Kerouac, Heinlein. They were all writers who had removed themselves from a place and function in society.

They wrote the way I wanted to write: alone, focussed on my writing, dedicated to doing what I had to do with a pen and some paper.

At least this is the way I saw their writing.

What I now see is that if you want to share your writing with other people you become involved in so many layers of social activity that sometimes I wonder where I'm going to find time to write.

Writing is the essential act but then there's all the other stuff that seems to rise around it like smoke: sending manuscripts to editors, being in a writers' group, discussing page proof, going to poetry readings, shmoozing with everybody, thinking about going to writers' conferences. I even have business cards! And I hand them out!

When I first started to write seriously, all of my time went to writing. It was pretty much all I did. Now I find myself spending about half my writing time figuring out how to calculate postage for a manuscript I'm sending out.

HID Kit said...

Excellent post.Writing is the essential act but then there's all the other stuff that seems to rise around it like smoke: sending manuscripts to editors, being in a writers' group, discussing page proof, going to poetry readings, shmoozing with everybody, thinking about going to writers' conferences.