Life is funny, isn't it?
Just a few hours ago, I was doing one hundred and fifty crunches, ranting about the perfect abs I'm going to have, and then ten minutes after that I was devouring an entire pie with a spoon. Sometimes I think I'll never get anything done, what with my constant seesawing between left and right.
Like writing. Oh how my soul has longed to write this week; but every time I sat down in front of my computer, an incredible laziness gripped me in this icy death-clench, and I always ended up leaving without even a single word on the page.
Even now, I am spouting nonsense. Why is it that I only think of profound and fascinating things to write about when I'm standing in a McDonald's bathroom with my hands under that stupid, germ-blowing, louder-than-a-broken-vacuum, hand dryer, and never when I actually have a pencil in my hand and paper available?
Even worse than that is the muse that is music. Music inspires me. It makes me want to write something that will inspire the same feelings in my reader as whatever song I'm listening to. But when I listen to music while I write, whatever I write, it always ends up sounding basically like the song. Then I end up feeling as if I've wasted a lot of time and creative energy on something that wasn't really original at all, but rather a bad rewrite of a good song.
Gah. This bothers me.
A lot of things bother me. Right now (and probably for the rest of my life) the most persistently bothersome quandary is that of whether or not I will succeed as a "real, actual writer." It recently occurred to me, perhaps after I realized that my tuition will cost thirty-five THOUSAND freakin' dollars every year, that I'm eventually going to have to get a job doing some actual thing. Not learning about the thing. Doing the thing. It is a truly terrifying thought, when you get right down to it.
I mean, my whole life I've been pretty great at learning about stuff. It's not that hard if you put your mind to it. Literally. That's all it takes: a brain, and a few ounces of dedication.
But this new venture is a different thing entirely. I'm actually going to need to have skills, persistence, commitment and courage in order to pursue what I love doing. If I fail, well then I'll have to settle for my fallback, and marry some really rich man who likes the beach and doesn't mind burned grilled cheese sandwiches.
Because other than writing, there's just really not much out there that I like. Writing is what I love (and hate and then love again.) If I can't be a writer, then I'll have to find some new identity, which at this point would feel like having my heart broken.
I'm lucky in many ways, but especially in that I've never had my heart broken, Not really. Not yet. Not by a person. It's been bruised and blistered, burnt and scarred perhaps, but never really broken.
The world is full of words.
They're everywhere you look. They hurt. They burn. They bruise and blister and scar and even break us. But words...they're hope.
In them life itself is written out. In them we are given a map to the truth. In them we find healing.
Through words, all broken hearts can find themselves repaired.
And that's what I want. I want to share that. I want to tell the world about Jesus, in a way that's beautiful and new, and different and astonishing. I want to deliver one of the oldest and most important messages and still be original. I want to do the impossible.
It feels impossible. And maybe it is. But maybe it isn't. Anyway, I'm going to try it. I may fail, but it would be worth it, I think, to fail knowing I had tried. Somehow that would be better than to give up before I even begin.