“For me, getting better as a writer is learning how to get to the essence of things and boil down all of that exposition and backstory.”
The Secret Lives of Church LadiesThe Secret Lives of Church Ladie
Sari Botton: So tell me what’s going on with you and your work.
SB: Where are you moving from and to?
SB: So you’re writing a new book. That’s exciting. How’s the writing going? And has it been maybe a little easier now than it might have been in the depths of, say, pre-vaccination Covid-19 times?
SB: You’ve also got a new podcast, Ursa Story, with author Dawnie Walton and Longreads founder Mark Armstrong, focused on short fiction and amplifying underrepresented writers. You are doing a lot! Is this new for you, this whack-a-mole approach, or is it part of how you’ve always worked?
SB: I sort of work that way too. I call it “cheating.” I often need to toggle between at least two projects. When I’m stuck on my primary project, I need to be able to cheat on it with another one. And then when I get too stuck on the other one, I need to cheat on it with the primary project.
I’ve got to bang this outI’m gonna spend a week finishing up the short story that I’ve been working on. And then I’ll spend three weeks working on the novel.Excuse me, the story took as much time as it needed to take.
SB: Are you struggling with the novel?
Church LadiesChurch LadiesI understand now why I got stuck on the novel. Now I’m gonna pour myself into the novel.Church LadiesI’m not gonna write about this
SB: Sometimes I think you have to be open to what wants to be written when. If you don’t surrender to that, you can really get your mind jammed up. Did you figure out what was jamming you up about the novel, or was it just not the time for it? Did the other things need to be written first?
I should be writing my book right now
Now
SB: So you’re now working on this novel again?
SB: So “character is plot,” as one of the Greeks said, I think.
DP: Yeah, exactly. I don’t outline my short stories, but for this novel I’ve kind of mapped things out.
SB: Are there ways in which you get in your own way as you’re writing? I know that often I have to trick myself into getting started, especially when I have multiple deadlines. I have to promise myself a cookie if I work for an hour. Or I have to Pomodoro my way through it: Let’s just set the timer for twenty-five minutes. Do you ever get so stuck that you have to, like, make bargains with yourself about how to get going?
DP: I think I—what did you call it? Cheating. I cheat when I get stuck. So I’m rarely just stuck across the board. When I’m stuck on my girlfriend story, I know that it’s time for me to go home to my husband story. And then when I get stuck again, I go back to my girlfriend. Other times, if someone asks me, “What are you working on?” and I have to be succinct—I can be very long-winded—in just describing what I’m working on to another person, I can have a little breakthrough. Like, oh, that’s what this is.
SB: Yeah. I think talking is really good, especially with other writers.
DP: Sometimes it’s just time away from the writing—leave it, come back. I’ll see things that I didn’t before.
SB: That is such an important thing for me also; I need to put writing away for a bit, especially if it’s giving me a hard time or even if I think it’s amazing, I need to put it away and come back to it a week, two weeks later. The mind just does its own thing. Too often I think writers get caught up in “I’m not writing enough. I’m not producing enough words. I’m not sitting long enough for long-enough periods.” I feel like the breaks are almost as important as the periods when you’re throwing yourself in there and writing.
DP: I think it’s also knowing yourself and the difference between this is the kind of break that leads to a breakthrough and this is just me avoiding and playing on Twitter. Although, sometimes playing on Twitter can lead to the breakthrough, you know? But we know ourselves. It’s good to know when we need to rein ourselves in and when it’s like, no, this is good. This break is writing, this time away is writing. This is part of the larger process of writing.
SB: There’s some anonymous Twitter account where it’s just all the non-writing things that qualify as writing. Like walking your dog is writing, cooking dinner is writing. It’s kind of true. Sometimes you need to do the Zen thing of another activity. You’re always writing, even when you’re not sitting at your computer or at your desk writing longhand, however you write.
DP: We hopefully know the difference between that and, say, avoiding it, because of what people typically call writer’s block or imposter syndrome. I am not a licensed therapist, but I really think that it’s something else. We’re worried about what somebody’s going to say, or there’s too much pressure to perform. Or we don’t think we have a right to write the thing we’re writing about. Or we’re already worried about marketing. Rather than face those things, sometimes we go, “Oh, it’s imposter syndrome. Oh, I have a writer’s block.” Because if we interrogate what’s really going on, we’ve got to do something about it.
SB: Pressure is a huge obstacle. I’m always trying to find ways to lower the stakes for myself. Shitty first draft. Pomodoro for twenty-five minutes. Kill the perfectionist.
DP: Yeah, silence that voice. What does Anne Lamott call it? KFKD, the radio station that’s playing in your head. “You can’t do this,” or “How dare you,” or whatever unhelpful thing is being broadcast about you and your work.
SB: Earlier you referred to yourself as long-winded, but I think of you as such an economical writer. You achieve so much in such a spare way.
DP: That’s come with time, because when I first started writing twenty years ago, I was explaining everything. Exposition was everything. And really, unless you’re Toni Morrison, you really can’t get away with that. That’s not to say all she writes is exposition—it’s just that she writes it so well. At the outset, my exposition was a couple of things happening. One, it was me telling myself the story, which is how a lot of us write drafts. Over time I’ve gotten more economical about that. For me, getting better as a writer is learning how to get to the essence of things and boil down all of that exposition and backstory.
The second reason is that I was in a place where I felt like I had to explain myself all the time. I didn’t trust myself as a writer. I didn’t trust the reader to get it. And that had everything to do with feeling misunderstood and unheard in my personal life. The first time I tried to write about my father it was like twenty pages. Like a deposition, an indictment, everything he had ever done wrong. And it just poured out. I had two writing mentors at the time, and I asked them, “So tell me, where should I submit this?” And they both said, “Nowhere. This is a journal entry.”
DP: Thank you. One of my mentors said, “All emotional expression is not artistic expression,” which is a nicer way of saying, “Keep that in your journal.” Over the years, I’ve learned how things move from your journal to a literary journal. The next time I wrote about my dad was like fifteen years later. I think the essay is under five hundred words. That’s all I felt like I needed to say because I was in a different place by then. I didn’t have that same little-girl need. I could approach it as someone who had started to heal from some of those things. After I wrote that essay, I was like, That’s it, I’m not writing about him again. And then Pipe Wrench magazine, here they come. The way Pipe Wrench works is like a literary dinner party. They give you an essay that several writers are all responding to, and you can write whatever you want. The main piece for that issue was an essay about generations of black men in Los Angeles who tend to pigeons and train them to compete in flying competitions. I immediately started thinking about my father, not because he’d ever done that, but I immediately thought, Well, if my dad had done something like this, maybe he would’ve been a better person. And then I went, Oh, I can’t write that. And then, I guess I’m gonna write that.
SB: Okay, one last question. I know that for me, the judicial coup the right-wing majority of the Supreme Court is in the midst of—including the overturning of Roe v. Wade, which forecasts the destruction of more basic rights and bodily autonomy—has greatly affected my brain. It has ratcheted up my own sense of terror, and burying myself in work until I can’t think straight seems to be the only antidote. Well, that and donating to abortion funds, et cetera. Is it having a similar effect on you? Does it infringe on your ability to get work done?
DP: As a Black woman and mother in this country, I’ve had to learn to focus and write in the midst of endless terror. For centuries, we’ve had a scream and a song coexisting in our throats. Our stories are our balm and testimony.
Sari Botton is the author of the memoir in essays, And You May Find Yourself...Confessions of a Late-Blooming Gen-X Weirdo. She is a contributing editor at Catapult, and the former Essays Editor for Longreads. She edited the bestselling anthologies Goodbye to All That: Writers on Loving and Leaving NewYork and Never Can Say Goodbye: Writers on Their Unshakable Love for New York. She teaches creative nonfiction at Catapult, Bay Path University and Kingston Writers' Studio. She publishes Oldster Magazine, Memoir Monday, and Adventures in Journalism.