Dear journal,
Like
Sonia Sotomayer, I am not a natural writer. I hear people speaking about loving
to write; it’s freeing, expressive, and imaginative. I sadly disagree with all
of the adjectives. Writing is a burden and exhausting. Throughout the years, I
have found ways to cope and lessen this hatred.
When
pondering this paper itself, I procrastinated. “I’ll write it after church
tonight! No, I’ll stay home from church tonight to write it. Well maybe I could
get up earlier on Friday to write it? No, no. Bad idea I’ll oversleep and have
nothing to turn in”. I dread nothing more than this very first paragraph
deciding what to talk about. This assignment shouldn’t be so bad, I am just
reflecting on myself, right?
Papers and I are a
vicious cycle. Writing does not come easy to me, as I am not a woman of many
words. I have always been the shy, reserved girl and this is reflected in my
writing habits. When it comes to social interactions, I would much rather be a
listener, only contributing when necessary. Thoughts and ideas are forced onto
pages. While a paper would take just an hour or so for one person, it would
take multiple hours for me. I believe it is the combination of intimidation,
and biological reasons such as feeling a lack of need to express thoughts. As
usual, I tried starting out with a general outline of what I wanted to express
through this paper. I separate thoughts into three separate body paragraphs,
adding key details I am hitting on throughout. I then add in how I want to
begin and end the piece. This is about as wordy as I like to get; however, this
will not cut it for most college essays.
This writer’s block is certainly part of my personality,
but I believe there are other factors to be considered as well. My junior year
I had a teacher that I was not very fond of. I felt he didn’t use criticism
that helped me and in turn really just hurt how I felt about writing. It seemed
as though everything I wrote was dumb and useless. As if I already did not like
writing, this just made everything worse. Things changed with a new teacher and
a new year. My senior composition class was the best English class I could have
taken. I somehow was able to enjoy going to class every day. I remember her
explaining that writing can be a drag, but there are ways to learn to enjoy it.
Though I hate creative writing the most, she made it fun. I actually felt
successful as a writer! I believe that it was in this class that I found my
writer’s voice. Depending on the genre, this voice comes out in a different
way. Perhaps my favorite paper in the class was a persuasive piece about the
processed foods we put in our body. (Yes, it was somewhat of a dreaded research
piece). I have a passion for food and healthy ways of preparing it. When writing
about something I really care about, the fear and intimidation goes away.
Without this teacher, Mrs. Engelkes, I would not have realized this. The next
year, this fall semester in English 150, I had a fabulous teacher as well.
Sinem Sonsaat did a great job at working with me and giving constructive
feedback on my work. It was these two years that I believe my attitude towards
writing and communication began to improve.
That was the point at
which I realized that I don’t hate writing as much as it seems. I do not have a
strong personality or feelings about most things, but if I find that thing that
really strikes a nerve with me, I like
writing. Allegra Goodman writes in Calming
the Inner Critic and Getting to Work:
“Go back to your
library, your forest, your newspapers, your family, your day job, your photos,
your music, your maps and jottings of old dreams. All these are teeming with
life, and life is the stuff of fiction. There are no guarantees, but if you go
out where stories are congregate, it’s far more likely that characters will
come.” (Goodman 310).
All I need to do is
find the inspiration. Something that motivates me, and that is when the ideas
will flow. This, I believe is the best way to beat the writer-blues and become
a person that likes to write.
The second point of Goodman’s that I like is that “Past
masters are done. Their achievements are finite, known, measurable.” (Goodman
308). We don’t need to write to try to out-do or live up to those of the past.
The way I see this, is that you do not need to write for the approval of
others. Whether you live up to the level of those before you is irreverent. I
believe that you should write what is pleasing to you.
It is because all of
these things that I want to look at a writing in a different light this
semester. I was delighted to hear that we will be writing research papers that
have to do with our major. This is a positive twist on normally boring papers.
I believe this will really help me to be interested in the papers we will do
and not feel that it is a burden. It also will be useful for my other classes.
Learning to write well is a good thing, but learning to write well in the field
that we will be writing in the rest of our lives, is even better.
Throughout this semester, I want to improve my writing
skills and become more confident in my writing. I would like to be able to be a
more efficient writer and learn how to put my thoughts together quicker and
write more college (high level) papers. Lastly, I would like to get away from
the dislike I had previously developed for writing, and possibly even consider
it fun.
Ashley, I'm so glad that you had some good experiences, found your writing voice, and a way to work out a relationship with writing. It sounds like this is going well for you. I'm glad you had Sinem, too--she's a great teacher!
ReplyDeleteIt is difficult sometimes, to find a balance between the way we naturally are (shy, for instance, as you say), and the need to speak up, write, and make ourselves more known. I don't think there is ever one easy answer, but it's a journey and each instance is different. It's a different kind of difficult as an instructor too. Most teachers have a participation grade. But what does that mean? And is it fair to require students who are smart thinkers and who express well in writing to speak in class? I don't like to--and yet part of my job is to ask students to give presentations, to help prepare them to succeed in other classes. Complexity, I tell you! But I'm happy that you're here and that you don't hate writing as much as you used to! I also like writing about things I love, and It just makes sense that writers would. I hope we can use that to all of our benefit this semester.