(This little piece dates from 2010 but I could have written it yesterday, or tomorrow.)
The season is approaching when I will begin to visit a few classes here and there, and deliver a few lectures (or interactive discussions) about writing, so naturally, thoughts about the topic creep into my head as I procrastinate about doing what I actually should be doing, which is writing of a different type.
For decades, I’ve said the hardest thing about writing is getting started, and the second-hardest is keeping going.
But those involve tactics.
Actually, the hardest thing about writing for virtually any writer is believing you have something to say.
Notice that I said “something” to say, not “anything.” Of course, once you’re experienced, you can string words together in your sleep, with your eyes closed, and your hands tied behind your back -- not that I’ve tried that particular experiment, and in any event, I’d need a willing partner to do so, which I do not have at present.
“Something” is not necessarily easier to locate with age and experience, though young writers often have it without knowing it.
Self-confidence is, of course, the slender carpet all artists stand on. We stretch, place our feet firmly, look up and out and beyond...and hope.
At that moment, it’s time for those tactics to kick in.
Good read: “Can Artists Help Shape American Cities Again?” (NYT)
HEADLINES:
Trump administration says it is ending its immigration surge in Minnesota (NBC)
IRS improperly disclosed confidential immigrant tax data to DHS (WP)
Pam Bondi clashes with House Democrats over Epstein files at DOJ oversight hearing (NPR)
The Democrats Aren’t Built for This (Atlantic)
Gabbard’s 2020 Election Claims Put Her Back in Favor With Trump (NYT)
US reopens airspace over Texas border town after ‘cartel drone incursion’ (BBC)
Mad Emperor Trump declares war on the air (The Hill)
She bounced a $25 check in 2014. ICE tried to deport her. (WP)
Crimes by ICE personnel in recent years show patterns of abuse, corruption (AP)
A grand jury has reportedly delivered another major rebuke to the Trump administration’s efforts to target the president’s political opponents, declining to indict Democratic lawmakers who had made a video urging active duty troops to "refuse illegal orders." [HuffPost]
Gallup Will No Longer Track Presidential Approval Ratings (NYT)
EPA to repeal its own conclusion that greenhouse gases warm the planet and threaten health (NBC)
Trump’s Plan for an American Gulag Just Got a Major Boost in Court (Slate)
U.S. Hiring Starts the Year at a Strong Pace (NYT)
Heineken to cut up to 6,000 jobs. (Reuters)
‘Which Side Are You On?’: American protest songs have emboldened social movements for generations, from coal country to Minneapolis (The Conversation)
Can Artists Help Shape American Cities Again? (NYT)
Anthropic safety researcher quits, warning ‘world is in peril’ (Semafor)
AI’s threat to white-collar jobs just got more real (Vox)
The workplace is feeling the weight of AI (Business Insider)
The Prediction Singularity Is Upon Us (Atlantic)
A.I. Is Giving You a Personalized Internet, but You Have No Say in It (NYT)

