Posts Tagged ‘writer’

BOOK REVIEW: More, Now, Again by Elizabeth Wurtzel (London: Virago, 2002).

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Lizzy, Lizzy, Lizzy!  Those of us who would classify ourselves as fans of the inimitable (would you imitate her?  Why?) Ms Wurtzel, may well approach a new release by her with some trepidation.  Oh, Lizzy – what are you up to now?  And yet, that’s where the fun of it is – like the schadenfreude of hearing all about a friend’s disastrous professional and amatory adventures, reading a wurtzel
memoir provides vicarious kicks aplenty, while causing us to bless ourselves and mutter, “There but for the grace of God …”.

For those who haven’t yet sampled it, this book moves on from the depression-and-how-I-survived-it saga of Prozac Nation, to detail Wurtzel’s subsequent professional success, alienation, drug addiction , disastrous romantic life and final clean-up via twelve-stepping and a serious therapy habit.

Irritation is  a reasonable reaction to many aspects of and incidents in, the book.  So you’re newly rich, famous and successful?  What do you do?  Simple, get drug-addicted!  You’re romantically involved with a  wonderful guy who’s cleaned up with you, adores you and drives you all the way home from your rehab and recovery centre?  Fantastic!  Now take drugs immediately and become so clingy, dependent and supinely submissive that he becomes bored and irritable enough to go right off you.  Smart moves!

But she does make a crazy, fun read out of her character flaws and bad decisions.  Perhaps her most annoying trait is portraying significant people in her life as more interesting, heroic and fascinating than they can actually be.  Every therapist, in particular, is wise, sophisticated, intuitive and brilliant.  That’s even when they’re clearly not, and probably just dying for the fifty minutes to be up so they can send in their bill and go home.  But she transforms, through her own interpretation, their gnomic (sometimes moronic) pronouncements into fascinating coherent narratives of her own neuroses.  Perhaps she should act as her own shrink and bill herself.  Whatever, her hero-making is probably part of her problem.

Anyhow,

Picture credit: Thoric/Wikimedia Commons under licence: see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/

Picture credit: Thoric/Wikimedia Commons under licence: see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/

psychotherapist might be a better career choice for her than lawyer.  Her colourful neuroses could fit in better, less of a loss from the literary world than to the grey file-shuffling of the practice of law.

Still, Wurtzel has not finished with writing – her recent nutty political pronouncements are evidence of that.  Maybe the writing world will still get the benefit of all the nuttiness that has to be repressed out of the eight till eight lawyerly grind.  We can only hope – and fear.

PERMISSION TO BULLSHIT SERGEANT MAJOR SIR!

Monday, April 27th, 2009
A sold item from BetaBitch at Etsy

A sold item from BetaBitch at Etsy

Since I’m planning to inflict some examples of my creative writing on you in the due course of time,  I’ve been thinking about creativity lately.  Here are my opinions on the subject, boiled down to their essence but not etched on tablets of stone.  (Though if you want to get chipping away, that’s okay with me).

So, what is creativity?  Is it some divine fire that scorches some souls but not others?  Without it, are you doomed to a plodding life of mediocrity and bean-counting?

Is it a case of, you’ve either got, or you haven’t got, creativity?

Well, when this issue comes up, I dispute it with people I know who agree with the above statements.  I think everyone is born potentially creative.  If you’re a non-creative adult (in your own eyes) then either a) that natural propensity has just been squashed out of you by your environment, interpersonal interactions and upbringing, or b) that’s just what you choose to believe about yourself.

Now, I think option a) is entirely possible and does happen.  But I would bet my boots(1) that for every person fitting into category a), there are ten folks out there who sincerely believe that they ‘just aren’t creative’, ‘can’t write’, ‘don’t have any ideas’, and numerous other idiocies of that nature.

What does creativity consist of?  Do you want to hear my ideas on the subject?  (Which are of course indisputable and inspirational, both).

Creativity is half your own notion of yourself, i.e. what you think is your essential nature, and half just pure courage.  So, if you don’t think you’re creative, then in fact, you’re not.  Because you won’t even try in the first place, so you’ve just fulfilled your own prophecy.  Neat!

On the other hand, if you think of yourself as a limitless font of potentially awesome ideas – and potentially crap ones, too, but who cares about that – then there’s nothing to stop you busting loose with a million ideas a minute, like an oil well that just got struck.  I think of it as giving yourself permission: permission to try things out, to go crazy, to speculate and be nuts and be wrong and be right and not make sense and not worry.  Human beings have ideas running through their heads all the time..  They’re called ‘thoughts’.  If you also call it creativity, then the job’s half-done.

Viewing yourself as creative doesn’t mean viewing yourself as some kind of genius.  You only have to see yourself as someone who can make connections, who can manipulate internal concepts and your external environment – and no-one can stop you.  It’s okay, and no-one can stop it.  But you can ask for permission if you really, really want to – you can ask permission from your internal sergeant major.  (This is how I do it).  ‘Permission to bullshit, Sergeant Major, SAH!’  (Sarge always gives permission.  I’m also the Colonel, and I had a word in his pearly shell-like).

Bullshitting fertilises creativity.  However much rampant, undiluted crap you produce, just know it’s all increasing the likelihood of nourishing your next raging, brilliant idea.  Both statistically, and because ideas breed more ideas, rather like rabbits.

And the other half of creativity – the courage?  Well, I will bet my socks (to follow my boots) that what stops you from seeing yourself as a font of limitless creativity – or, as I prefer, giving yourself permission to bullshit - is fear.  What if you say something stupid.  Oh my God, the world would end!  What would people think?  Your sister-in-law would laugh and even say she was right about you all along!  To your mother!

OMG OMG OMG.  Breathe deep.  I think you can survive this.  You know the tools you need now: permission to bullshit ( which you provide for yourself) and the capacity not to care what anybody thinks about the results.

So why are you still waiting here?  Do you want the Sergeant to start shouting, asking why you’re not rampantly and randomly bullshitting yet and saying things like ‘Get down and gimme five’?  You wouldn’t like him when he’s angry.  Go.  Do it.

1.  Hosford, Jessie.  ‘You Bet Your Boots I Can’.  Thomas Nelson, January 1994. This expression made me think of this particular wondrous example of creativity, a children’s book that is greater than many that are better known.  And hey, I’m not even an Amazon affiliate (yet) – this is a pure and sincere recommendation.