I'm Done Writing For Now. I Promise You This is Okay.
It's time to reclaim my time. It's time to reclaim myself.
It started—or maybe I should say ended—in early April. I'd wake up, stare at the manuscripts I'd been grinding on ever since completing a serviceable draft of Scambait, and nothing would happen.
By which I mean I couldn't make myself make anything happen.
This was quite unusual for me. Since 2016, I've risen most mornings (read: almost every morning) shortly after five a.m. to clack away at the keys until about seven. There have been short-lived stretches when I've taken time off to grant myself peace of mind, but this felt different from the start.
The problem wasn't that I needed to give myself space, it was that I didn't want to write.
That's what it seemed like, anyway.
After some reflection, I realized I did want to write, but I was (and am) so impossibly frustrated with the gobsmackingly harmful hustle culture that awaits on the far side of any manuscript's completion that I elected to say, "You know what? No. Not until I have a plan. Not until there's an alternative."
All Roads Lead to Ruin
This is the conclusion I reached, at least initially. I spiraled for a few weeks, unsure what it meant to see no way forward. My days—once filled with early morning drafting, the writing of blog posts, the social media planning—stretched before me, desolate.
One weekend, this desolation came to a head. Was I just done? What is done, and what would done mean for me, personally, as someone whose identity has been so tied up in authordom to say, "Yeah, I think we're moving on from that?"
These are not fun questions to confront on Saturday mornings.
Fortunately, after much lying on the floor and some helpful ushering from my wife, I realized there was a way forward if I was willing to look further down the road—and take a few risks while doing so.
I Am Become Hackerman
For years, I've been lowkey fascinated by computers, specifically the languages that underwrite their actions, if one can call them that. This shouldn't be surprising to anyone who's read Imminent Dawn or Mourning Dove, much of which centered around tightly guarded secrets related to the EMPATHY technology at the heart of the series.
Example: remember Expage? It was a website building tool that's so old it doesn't even have a Wikipedia page.
Wikipedia may not remember Expage, but I do; it was the first platform where, in elementary school, I first learned the ins and outs of basic HTML, the language that gives any site on the web its most basic structure.
Since then, I've made a lot of websites, and though I haven't coded all (most) of them from scratch, I've done a lot of tinkering with the HTML and CSS to make them look a wee bit prettier. Heck, I even started teaching myself JavaScript in 2014 for fun.
This, on top of my interest in human languages (I speak Spanish and Portuguese, and can get by in German and French), led me to a revelation that Saturday morning while I lied on the living room carpet—what if I wrote for computers instead of people?
Lacing Up the Boots
Knowing all questions need answers, I wound up enrolling in a 24-week web development bootcamp put on by my alma mater. Yup. It's time to go back to school, and not for my MFA.
Does this mean I am, in fact, done with writing fiction? No. Does this mean I'll be committing myself full-time to full-stack web development once I've completed this program? Yes, but also no.
Here's the thing: I wrote for years while working full-time, and I got just about as much writing done then as I did once I shifted to part-time work (to allegedly focus more on my writing). What happened instead is I opened up more time to hustle, which, wow. Horrible. Not healthy, and not the point of what I set out to do.
The New Plan
So, I'm setting aside my focus on fiction for now, yes. The next six months will be dedicated to becoming the best web developer I can become, after which I intend to 1) revisit my creative well to see how much it has or hasn't filled in that time, and 2) to return to full-time work outside of the home to ensure my writing is actually that: writing time.
In the meantime, I'll be around this website, social media, and my author newsletter. You might not hear from me as often, but I'll be around if you'd like to reach out.
And while I'm mostly away, write on (or don't) and be well (please do).
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