Setting Boundaries is the First Step to Becoming a “Real Writer”
I wanted to be a writer, and I thought my work-life balance was the price I had to pay. I couldn’t have been more wrong.
So many newsrooms and writing opportunities remain predominantly white, upholding systemic racism that makes it so there are stark disparities in pay, and who has the opportunity to pitch writing and get it published in the first place, including whose perspective gets viewed as interesting or valuable to begin with. Unpaid internships remain a norm, editor email addresses are often challenging to find, contacts hard to establish, and for individuals navigating caregiving, parenting, other jobs, school, and more, the barriers to entry remain too high. The labor structure of writing is so fundamentally flawed, sometimes it feels like it barely has one at all.
The tidy version of untying toxic gratitude from work ends with me quitting a job, or establishing a schedule that wasn’t “Well, I’ll figure it out,” and returning, triumphant and confident, to a classroom Zoom, eager to share the secrets of balance I’d unlocked through the grief of falling out with myself. I’d pass them along in concise soundbites, the same way I encourage young writers to avoid outlets that want to exploit their personal trauma via essay for too few dollars or too little support, or commiserate about a million and one job rejections.
The real version is much less neat. The first few times I passed on pieces—because I feasibly couldn’t write them, or simply wasn’t the right writer for them—or let my document of pitch ideas go untouched, the back of my throat clenched like the potential for exhale had gotten stuck, convinced that, because I’d been bold enough to say no, I was ungrateful, and the universe would make note of that. When you never thought you’d get to do something in the first place, how do you let yourself decide to stop doing it?
You stop—I stopped—because taking an hour out of the day to talk to a friend about their life made me feel like I was doing something more meaningful than staring at a laptop screen. That going for a walk, or shoving frustration up and down on the pedals of my bike, led to a level of clearheadedness that pondering and toiling and analyzing over how to create balance simply didn’t. That, if what I loved most about writing was getting to listen to other people, maybe I should try out listening to myself now and again. That, if I didn’t figure out how to find meaning in writing without it running me, I might be a writer, but I’d be a lesser friend, daughter, sister, learner, and listener—things I consider pretty important to writing, anyway. And more so: things important to life.
Maybe I’d never have a single job, maybe I’d never write full-time, maybe I’d never have the schedule of designated writing hours and a certain mug and a desk with afternoon light pouring in, lighting me up. I just cared about the writing. The listening. The thinking. The chance to step out of my life and into someone else’s—to hear their story, a privilege I still can’t comprehend. That distinction mattered: Focusing less on what the identifier of “writer” held meant I could say no when I needed to, because being a person who writes meant I’d just keep writing.
Maybe a writer would’ve established a plan for work-life balance. But I’m not interested in being a writer anymore. I’m just doing my best as a person who writes.
Rainesford Stauffer is a freelance writer and Kentuckian. She is the author ofAn Ordinary Age (Harper Perennial, 2021) and All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive (forthcoming from Hachette Books, May 2023).