The Seven Year Itch (PJ Sharon)
No worries, my husband and I are happily married and way past the seven-year mark, but creatively, I’ve found that I’m good for about seven years of dedicated effort to learning a new skill before my passion wanes, or I find another new endeavor that captures my attention, leaving me no choice but to move on or risk stagnation.
So far in my life, I've been a figure skater, martial artist, opera singer, Physical Therapist Assistant, massage therapist, personal trainer, yoga instructor, and author. And I've loved all of it! These diverse experiences have offered me endless opportunities for growth. I've met amazing people along the way, forging friendships that will last a lifetime. And challenging myself in new ways keeps life interesting.
Let me preface the rest of this post by saying I wasn’t one of those
writers who had no choice but to write. I had gone to a financial seminar when
I was about forty where the presenter spoke about creating passive streams of
income for retirement and suggested that writing books was a way to do that. You
write the book, put it out there, and collect the royalties in perpetuity.
Sounded simple enough. I was a decent writer, loved English class in school,
and figured I had enough drive and ambition to make it happen. After all, I had
twenty-five years until retirement, so I was sure I could make it work. My kids
were pretty much grown, I had moved to the Berkshires with the love of my life,
and was just starting my massage practice, so I had time and flexibility to start
a new project. Once I made the decision to try, ideas came flooding in.
Those early days were exciting. It seemed
I had endless story ideas and the focus and discipline to see my projects
through to the end. Writing made me happy. I couldn’t wait to get home every
day to dive in, sometimes staying up until the wee hours pouring my heart out
onto the page (I wrote my first draft of Savage Cinderella in ten
days while I was home sick with the flu). It was stimulating, cathartic, and
although there were plenty of hair-pulling moments, writing fed my soul.
I began writing young adult fiction for several reasons. Initially,
it was because I realized I didn’t want anyone I knew reading my steamy adult
romances, lol. Then, in my effort to learn to write in deeper POV through a first-person
narrative, I found my voice and style were most suited to the YA genre. But
mostly, I knew I had some important stories to share with teen readers. My own
young adulthood was mired in drama, conflict, and tragedy—the perfect recipe
for writing YA. It turned out my seventeen-year-old self was still working
through some old stuff and had a lot to say!
By the fifth year of my writing journey (around 2010), I had written four full-length novels, ~500,000 words, and had the requisite 10,000 hours of practice Malcolm Gladwell says in his book, Outliers, that it takes to become an "expert". After much consideration and research, I decided
self-publishing was the way to go. For me, autonomy, control over my creative process,
and the success I was seeing for other self-published authors in those early
days of the boon was appealing. It was a huge learning curve, and a lot of work, but I didn’t
let that stop me. I was determined to bring my stories to readers—and so I did.
What I didn’t count on for the next ten years was the demands of the profession or the endless minutia that goes
along with the job. I found the marketing, promoting, technical
challenges, and ever-changing world of publishing to be a soul-sucking part of
the process I had not anticipated. For many of us, the “business” of writing can
sap the joy and fun right out of the creative process.
So, what’s a writer to do?
I say, give in to the “itch” and try something new. For
some, that might mean switching genres or trying out a new medium like writing a
screen play or working with an artist to write graphic novels. I can totally
see my Chronicles of Lily Carmichael trilogy or Savage
Cinderella series in graphic novel form. But my pragmatic self understands
that no matter what I write, I still need to treat my writing as a business to
make it worth the time and effort. The mere thought of it makes me squidgy, so I’m going to see if trying something
completely unrelated to writing spurs my creative spark. I’ve been toying with
the idea of taking art classes, hoping to reclaim some of that joy and
excitement of learning a new skill. We’ll see where that leads me. Maybe I can
combine my efforts and those graphic novels will take shape!
I still have time before I retire.
Peace and blessings,
PJ
In addition to her contemporary YA lit, Ms. Sharon’s YA dystopian trilogy, The Chronicles of Lily Carmichael, which RT Book Reviews calls “An action-packed read with a strong female lead,” is a sci-fi/fantasy adventure inspired by her fascination with “prepping” and her passion for environmental causes, as much as by her love of romance and the unending “what-if’s” that haunt her imagination.
PJ has two grown sons and several adorable grandchildren, and lives with her brilliant engineer of a husband in the Berkshire Hills of Western MA where she writes, kayaks, and plays in the dirt as often as possible.
How do you keep your love and passion (for your art) alive?
ReplyDeleteOh, man, I second that giving in to the "itch"! It really does help to send the creative juices flowing in new directions...
ReplyDeleteLet's hope we're both right, lol.
ReplyDelete