Why Bother Writing? Reasons to Write in a Multimedia World

by Ken on August 6, 2009

writinghandGiven all the other things you could be doing, why would you ever bother to sit down and write? I mean, after all, you live in a digital age. The written word, you’re told, is falling out of fashion. It’s the age of multi-media, baby. Audio and video. Text is just an afterthought.

Pretty soon everyone will be wearing virtual reality helmets and they won’t even have to talk to one another. You’ll be able to spend your days among the beautiful people, computer generated of course, and join them in magnificent adventures you could never find while sitting at a desk with a pen in your hand or a keyboard beneath your fingertips.

Isn’t it obvious? If you decide to write, you could be wasting your time. No one reads anymore. Haven’t you heard? They don’t have time. They’re all online. Sure, you could write for the web, just as I’m now doing, but no one here really reads either. They scan and they skim, but they don’t read. You’ll be lucky if they finish reading one of your headings, let alone one of your paragraphs.

So, you might ask, what the hell are we writing for?

Well, if you’re anything like me, you’re writing because you have to, because you need to, and yes, just because you want to.

Writing’s a thing I tried to put away. I thought I needed to be practical, responsible, and respectable and I decided writing was none of those things, but the itch wouldn’t go away. I don’t know if that makes me a writer. I may just be a guy who happens to write, but I know it’s something I have to do to feel whole.

John Dufresne says it best in his book, The Lie that Tells the Truth. Dufresne writes, “Wanting to write but not writing means, of course, that you’re not writing. And wanting to write but not writing will lead to frustration, guilt, and regret. And regret eats the soul.” The only thing I can add to that is, “Amen.”

So, maybe you write simply because you must. You bother because you’re the only one who will ever bother to tell your story. You bother because you just might be the only one to tell a story that someone needs to hear in the only voice he or she can listen to.

And besides, people still read. They may read less often and in fewer numbers, but they read. I know people who can count on their hands the number of novels they’ve read, but they still talk about those novels. Maybe your novel will be the one they list as they touch their third left finger.

Maybe your screenplay will be the one movie they see this year with their spouse (or secret lover). Maybe your play will be the thing they see when they finally, after years of saving, take that dream vacation to New York City and see a real, live, Broadway production, the one they drive their friends crazy talking about. Maybe your tiny little article will be the thing that inspires them to pursue, at long last, their life’s desire. Or, maybe your journal will be the one thing YOU can read in order to make sense of where you’ve been and where you’re going in your life.

Maybe you write because you have to know. You have to know what you think, what you want, who you are, and what you’re capable of creating, and writing helps you discover all those things.

So, put away that virtual reality helmet, take up your pen, and write. I promise you it’s worth the bother.

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{ 11 comments… read them below or add one }

mzzlee August 5, 2009 at 11:04 pm

thank you ken. this is gorgeous. so inspiring. so true. many rich deep reminders and tucked in here. i thank you for that. hmmm….

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Joanna Maxwell August 6, 2009 at 7:55 am

This blog is a new find for me, but I love the quiet wisdom and gentle inspirations it contains. Thank you.

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Ken Robert August 6, 2009 at 12:36 pm

Thanks for finding me!

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becky nielsen August 6, 2009 at 11:41 am

You’re right. Great post. I’ll pass it along to my husband – he had a novel published a number of years ago – had hoped it would take off, and in spite of some good reviews, it didn’t. He continued to write, nothing else sold, he just got tired of working at a computer all day at work and then coming home and working at his desk – says when he retires he may get back into it. But I think he’s still making lots of notes and will be more fulfilled when he really commits himself again.

Even almost 20 years later he still occasionally hears from someone out of the blue who was moved by something in the book.

So I really like your point that your story and voice might be just the thing for one person out there.

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Ken Robert August 6, 2009 at 12:35 pm

Never discount the importance of your unique point of view on an old subject. I’ve read books by various authors on the exact same topic, but there always seems to be one author in particular who says things in a way that really speak to me.

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Mo August 6, 2009 at 1:24 pm

Yes Ken! Please keep on writing!!

I’ve always preferred the written over videos and other media when online. That way I can go at my pace which sometimes is faster than a video and at other times slower. I seem to take in more when I read too.

But books are my favorite! I work on a computer all day so reading from a book is a nice change. Plus I am one of those book sniffer types LOL I love the smell of a new book. I have 2 on the go right now actually!

Thanks,
Mo

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Ken Robert August 6, 2009 at 1:37 pm

I love the multimedia world I live in, but writing takes me deeper than anything else I know.

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Linnea aka cafemercury August 10, 2009 at 3:41 pm

Thank you for writing this. A writer friend of mine wrote on this very subject today and asked the question. You gave the answer. Synchronicity. I love it.

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Brenda August 11, 2009 at 3:38 am

I love this — you are so right.

Some years ago, must have been in the early 1990s while I was in London, I ordered a tape-course from Nightingale Conant on using words powerfully. When I received it, I found it was all about speaking, giving presentations — they were actually pooh-poohing writing. I was furious .

I write because I have to, it’s what I was trained for, and it’s a kind of compulsion anyway. But these days I do quite a lot of speaking as well, and I understand now what Nightingale Conant meant. I get far more response and feedback when I speak, and I feel I’m really communicating with the audience, that I’m being effective. But I’m happy now to have the two strings to my bow, as I feel this doubles my potential.

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Kathleen Stamer October 13, 2010 at 2:04 am

Hi Ken,

I smiled when I read the part about having a tiny little article that inspired someone. The first tiny little article that I wrote was about my dream of hanging up my career hat and becoming a homemaker. It was accepted for publication the next day (e-mail submissions are great), and since then I’ve written mostly small tiny articles. Seeing your words was like being given affirmation. Those words will weigh more heavily in my mind the next time a person snickers about my small accomplishments.

Thank you Ken.

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Mnémosyne76 January 9, 2012 at 9:30 pm

Thank you ! It’s so inspiring and uplifting ! I wish you a wonderful year 2012 and more !

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