Today is the ORIGINS blogfest -- where everyone who has
signed up gives the story of their origin as a writer. This is mine...
In preparation for this blog post, I spent a huge chunk of
time Saturday and Sunday looking for something that I wanted to scan in and
include in this post. However, after
searching all the likely locations, and many of the unlikely ones, I did not
find it. It was frustrating too, because
I had just run across it not that long ago.
It was an old wrinkled two-page story, typed on a manual
typewriter in early 1972, with the less-than-entirely-original title, "The
Beast from 20,000 Fathoms." It was
the first real "story" I ever wrote, and I thought showing it -- with
the misspellings and x'd out sections and misunderstanding of geography (the
deepest point in the oceans is the Marianas Trench at actually just under 6,000
fathoms) of the 11-year-old boy who wrote it -- would be a great way to present
my writing origin.
Instead -- because I could not find it -- you just get me telling you about it. Not quite as fun, but the point is the
same:
My writing "origin" goes
back a long way.
I've always loved reading, and as an only child, I developed an imagination and the ability to make up my own fun, and so story-telling
became a natural outlet. There is no
clear point where I suddenly turned into someone who wanted to write, but the
process started a long time ago, and I think culminated in that first typewritten "real" story.
Probably my biggest regret is that I didn't stick with writing
more as I grew older. In my early teens, I started
drawing, and that took away from my writing
Then I started playing guitar, and that pretty much swallowed everything
else and became my major creative outlet. I
played for hours and hours a day -- hunkered in my room, practicing scales,
studying books, and playing along with records.
Then I joined some bands and spent most of my early twenties playing my
guitar. I still read, and I still
imagined stories I might like to create, but playing music was the focus.
I took some creative writing courses during my early college
years and really enjoyed them -- and I did the writing needed for that. But again -- music and guitar pretty much swallowed up
everything else.
Then in my later twenties I went back to school and got my
engineering degree, and worked, and got swept up in life and relationships and
career.
It wasn't until 2008 that life settled down enough for an idea to
pop up: "I want to write a
novel." And since that time, I've
on-and-off been developing as a writer.
I shelved my first early novel attempt and have been working on another
since 2010, and it's gone through several revisions. But since 2008,
"being a writer" has been a central goal. So, in many ways, my Origin story really
begins just a few short years ago.
But truthfully, it began in 1972, with an eleven-year-old
boy clinking away on the old typewriter his grandfather had given him, creating
a story of how a deep-sea monster destroyed a town.
21 comments:
Those childhood dreams never disappear entirely; they just lose top billing when other things and interests get in the way. But they never die. I'm glad you've found your way back to writing again. Count me in as your newest follower. (Fun blogfest, isn't it?)
Thank you Susan -- I appreciate your kind words!
Very cool, Chris! I started out on a manual typewriter, too, back when I was 12, and my own journey to subbing/publication didn't begin until around '09. Life has a way of getting in the way sometimes, but it sure does provide us with plenty of material.
Thanks, Milo!
You're right -- life is what happens while we're busy making other plans....
But this time I'm sticking with it. And I really love your work and glad you came back to it, too!
very cool story. I remember my grandmother had an old typewriter, and I loved typing on it. I don't think I wrote any stories worth keeping, but it was fun hearing the clack clack clack of that thing. ;p
I admire your determination. I've been so fortunate to be able to work part time and actually *have* time to write. It's even more impressive to me the people who really don't have time to write and still do. Keep swimming! :o) <3
Thanks Leigh!
Chris,
Real writers bang it out on a manual typewriter and haul out the correction tape every time they make a mistake!
Okay, not anymore, but it's nice to know someone who remembers those days!
Yeah, I'm a little "chronologically enhanced" -- I remember manual typewriters and rotary-dial phones... ;)
Thanks for commenting!
For this Blogfest I love reading the different stories between the people who view writing as race toward publication and others who see it more as a marathon--where finishing is really what counts.
Thanks for sharing your story.
You have a great Origins story! I can't imagine using a typewriter, and I'm not exactly young either. You know, the one thing almost every Origins post has had in common is this one line: "I've always loved to read..." I think that says it all when speaking of our writer origins!
It's nice to meet you. I'm a new follower via the Origins bloghop.
@K. Turley: Thank you for visiting! It was a fun blogfest, wasn't it?
@Nancy: It's very nice to meet you also! I agree -- to be a writer, you have to start with a love of reading, I think. Thank you for the visit, comment, and follow!
Hi Chris. I'm just stopping by as one of the blogfest co-hosts, and am now your newest follower. Nice to meet you!
Thank you for the visit, Matthew -- it was a great blogfest. I've met a lot of interesting fellow writers and have enjoyed reading the origins stories.
Monster stories were the best as kids! Although I never wrote any, me and our friends acted out our own scripts. LOST IN SPACE was particularly featured!
Great ORIGIN story! Loved finding out more about your past. :)
@DL: LOL -- flashback time! I can remember some Lost In Space fun too. Although, as "the smart kid," I always got stuck playing Dr. Smith. But under my control, he'd have a change of heart, stop being a sniveling sneak, and turn into a good guy fighting the aliens alongside the rest of the crew.
;)
Thanks for the visit and comment, Don! Great blogfest!
I loved reading your story! :)
A lot of writers seem to have started with a typewriter. Makes me wish they were easier to come by nowadays . . .
Thanks, Eagle! I appreciate the visit and the comment!
I'm glad my aunt kept her 70's typewriter and I could use it in the 90's. We're among the few who actually started typing our stories on typewriters.
Great to meet you on this blogfest.
your newest follower,
Nutschell
www.thewritingnut.com
Thank you very much, Nutschell -- I appreciate the visit, comment, and follow. It's great to meet you too!
I remember manual typewriters and rotary-dial phones... ;) Thank for sharing your ORIGIN!
@Jeremy: And it don't seem all that long ago, either does it? LOL!
Thanks for the visit and the comment!
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