Last month or so, I was reading a terrific book about the making of the classic movie “Chinatown” titled “The Big Goodbye: ‘Chinatown’ and the Last Years of Hollywood,” by Sam Wasson, and I had to grin at this quote from legendary screenwriter Robert Towne: “So much of writing is trying to avoid facing it.”
That’s hardly the most original thing uttered about the writer’s penchant for procrastination and craven dread of the blank page — Hemingway summed it up: “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.” — but it was a reassuring reminder that cooking up stuff for a readership, a nervously performative act, isn’t always a joyride, or particularly easy. It can be a grind. It can be depressing. It can sap the soul.
But it can also be exhilarating and, when things are flowing, a blast. Well, let’s not get carried away. How about … satisfying? Said great journalist Russell Baker: “I’ve always found that when writing is fun, it’s not very good. If you haven’t sweated over it, it’s probably not worth it.”
I don’t know how you reconcile that dichotomy, the yin and yang of good and rotten, delight and drudgery, but they seem to jibe. There’s a fruitful friction. Good days, bad days, middling days. (That last line? Lazy writing. Bad writing. I left it there as a specimen of what can go wrong.)
I always want to write, but once I sit down and face the empty page that sneers, “Go ahead, try and fill me,” I tend to constrict, choke, unless I’m especially inspired and know how I’ll begin and where I’m (generally) going. Those days are the exception. Right now, I’m winging it. I had that Robert Towne quote in my head and started riffing. (Help!)
There’s no map. There’s only this: Get it down. The prose may be raw and bloody — embarrassing, eye-sizzling — but the ideas matter and the words, those painstakingly chosen few, will be chiseled out of the viscous blob of verbiage. Editors are helpful at this stage, and I’ve worked with many who have saved my prolix ass. But here on this free-floating blog I’m on my own. I am judge, jury, executioner. And I probably should have executed that sentence.
Point is, writing, like any creative endeavor, is a messy enterprise, hard to do but at times truly rewarding (I have ten journalism awards that bear that out, he crowed). You have to dive in head first, and toil to make a splash. Taking pride in your work is mandatory — read tons, write multiple drafts, and use spell check for chrissakes — the only way you’ll do anything worth a damn.
First you must conquer that blank page, which requires actually facing the music, not dodging it, as Towne noted. I’m working on a writing project that I approach tentatively, with baby steps, not because I’m indolent but because I am, frankly, a little scared.
There’s a cure for that. It’s simple yet courageous: Sit down, stare at the page, and bleed.

Hear, hear, Chris. I’ve begun a rare writing project myself and every word of this blog rings true. Please plow ahead and I promise to try to avoid facing it less myself. Sending my best to you as always.
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So glad to hear you’re writing, especially after your last knockout book “Kiss and Tell.” The fingers must never stop! xo
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This was interesting to read. Agree, it is a process, and Inspiration is a funny thing — it can be a rush but then yes, you have to have that editing eye, the voice and structure. I’m not sure that always gets down in the first draft but also there is something in that rush you do not want to lose — cliche maybe but the spirit or the essence. My mom would get lost when painting not hear the phone, etc. And I was like that with writing, even in high school — I would go down this rabbit hole in AP English writing essays and Michael who sat behind me would (gently) tap me with a pen/pencil to let me know Mr. de was calling time, for us to finish up and pass our papers to him, etc.
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I blogged on the quote years ago. I think it’s even harder to write without the crutch of pain and drama.
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