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While attending a recent writers conference I overheard a woman say “That author's ego is really out of control.” The catty remark was aimed at an author who did seem pretty full of himself. But it got me to wondering: Is there room for humbleness when it comes to writing?


The dictionary definition of “humble” is “Not proud or haughty, not arrogant or assertive; offered in the spirit of deference or submission; ranking low in a hierarchy or scale; insignificant; lacking all the signs of pride.” Does this sound like the traits a successful writer?


The simple act of putting pen to paper or fingertips to keyboard announces to the world, “I have something to say. My thoughts are unique. My words are important!” That mindset is what drives writers, convinces them every day to sit in a chair and hope for the flow of ideas that will translate to the right words on the page. This is what deprives them of family time, TV time, sleep, and their favorite past time, reading. This is what makes them snap at people, growl at interruptions, overeat and add fat to their butt.


So, from where does this arrogance spring? I can only speak for myself: I'm inspired by the scribes before me. Shakespeare, Chaucer, Homer (not Simpson—Doh!). Their words lasted centuries—will mine do the same? In the lightening pace of today's plugged-in world, is it possible for my words to last longer than the next tweet?


Writers have to be overly proud of what we're doing—and yes, I'm in the non-humble crowd. We are out there trying for truth and recognizing it our fellow authors. Ego and believe in ourselves is what shores up our confidence when family members look skeptical at our efforts. Friends encourage us with pats on the back as if we've just escaped from a mental institution. Authors are other people, not people they know.


We struggle alone and wait for the spark, that “Aha!” moment when our consciousness takes a giant leap onto the page. That's the moment when the pleasure of writing is transformed to the power of writing. There's no turning back.


The next hurdle is ignoring the censor in your head that says “Can I write what I really feel and get away with it?” Don't look for the green light from family and friends. They're already worried you're going to spill the dirty laundry. You can't wait for Granny and her church friends to die.


On my list of the most daring, soul-barring authors I've come across are Philip Roth, who never let me look at liver the same way again. James Joyce, whose run-on sentences go on for pages. Joan Didion slouching toward Bethlehem. Erica Jong diminished my Fear of Flying. I never understood a word of Henry Miller's Cancers but am incensed that he was censored. Anais Nin who opened up her sexuality for public viewing. And my favorite author, Chuck Palahniuk, always makes me want to write brave, to bare my soul, not bar it.


I tell beginning writers that they must always stand by their words because critics are out there ready to tear them apart. Break new ground, break down barriers. Take old ideas and turn them around like a prism until they see light from another angle. Find their voice and use words that excite. What I don't tell them is in the process they're going to cut their emotional wrists and bleed all over the page. It's messy and some aren't going to survive.


I used the word audacity in the title of this piece. Definition: Bold. Disregard for normal restraints. Intrepidly daring. Marked by originality and verve. Exaggerating one's own worth or importance. And yes, arrogant. Writers should be all that. We cannot afford to be humble.


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Comment by G Thomas Gill on January 20, 2011 at 12:02pm

I agree that too much humility is a bad thing, just as too much arrogance.  If a person is the best there is at what he does and is recognized as such, then the right to be at least a little arrogant is earned.  But until the spurs are earned, it's best not to use them very often.

 

Tenacity is a different trait, and is greatly admired, at least by me.

Comment by Holli Castillo on November 7, 2010 at 9:16pm
Sunny, I like to call it tenacity, although I know other people have less romantic terminology for my personality type. I know that my type of tenacity turns some people off, so I think it's a matter of finding people you can mesh with, whether it's friends, a husband, or a publisher.
Comment by Sunny Frazier on November 7, 2010 at 8:42pm
Holli, the story I heard is that you would not take "NO" for an answer! Sometimes that kind of arrogance (determination, fortitude) is what casts the deciding vote for the publisher to take you on. You have a terrific book set in an area we are all focused on (New Orleans) and you haven't let what life throws at you (a terrible car crash) bring you down. That's audacity in the right form!
Comment by Holli Castillo on November 7, 2010 at 7:39pm
I don't think it's necessarily arrogant to have well-deserved confidence. I do think writers have to possess thick skin if they don't want to end up having a nervous breakdown or falling into depression. Getting published is not an easy venture, and you have to be able to stand a whole lot of rejection while continuing to believe that your work is good enough for someone to publish it. When you finally are published, you have to have quite a set of cojones to get the promotion and marketing done, asking strangers via email to read your work, standing at tables in bookstores where everyone wants the latest Grisham or Patterson, or worse, at craft fairs and local functions where people may know you but none of them may actually care to read. If you can overcome all of this, have even a modicum of success, and still remain a relatively normal and happy person, you deserve to be just a little big arrogant.

Holli Castillo
Gumbo Justice

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