Learning From What We Already Know
One of the biggest differences between the established writers I know and many of the writers I teach or work with as clients is that the established writers don’t worry that much about what they don’t yet know. The beginning writers, meanwhile, worry constantly about what they don’t know, believing it’s symptomatic of some shortcoming. A better writer, a smarter writer, a more talented writer, would not be so hamstrung by this swarm of unanswered questions that are keeping the new writers up at night.
In these writers’ defense, there’s an awful lot you start out not knowing, whether you’re writing a book, selling a book, or marketing a book you’ve sold. Books themselves begin as the simplest of ideas: A lonely guy spots a young woman at a coffee shop; a serial killer visits a shopping mall; a girl pirate. From these small but fertile seeds grow the tree that is a complete story, full of characters, settings, plots and subplots, none of which the author knew when the idea first arrived. All the author knew was that she wanted to tell this story.
And yet that seed of an idea was enough. Now the author has a book. But how will she sell it? She doesn’t know which agent wants it, or which publisher, or which readers. Where to go next? I’ve learned that the answer to every such question always resides in exactly the same place. Without exception, what I already know teaches me what I need to know.
If I know I want to write about a girl pirate, then that knowledge – which I also call interest or excitement – will teach me, show me, guide me to what I need to know. It will teach me how to write it and how to sell it and how to market it. My job is always to focus on why I know the story is worth telling and worth sharing and from there discover the next step.
But if I move my attention to what I don’t yet know, if I dwell on the ending I haven’t found, or the agent I don’t have, I will feel as lost as a student arriving to class without having read the previous day’s assignment. It’s the very embodiment of insecurity, believing I am required to know what I don’t. It’s like trying to build a house without hammer or nails.
This insecurity is a failing only of trust, not intelligence or ability. It’s hard to believe sometimes that from something so small as an interesting idea can grow something so big as a book or a career. Yet it can. What’s more, on a good day I remember how lucky I am not to know something I would like to know. All these questions I haven’t answered become exciting excuses to return to what I know interests me, to what I know I want to spend more time thinking, writing, and talking about. What I don’t know sends me back to the source, and the tree keeps growing and growing.
If you like the ideas and perspectives expressed here, feel free to contact me about individual coaching and group workshops.
Everyone Has What It Takes: A Writer’s Guide to the End of Self-Doubt
You can find William at: williamkenower.com