Finished my third novel—after seven long years

I finished a complete draft of the novel I have been crafting on and off since 2016.

Though I met my goal to finish by 2024, the new year marks seven years and counting since I published my second novel, Goddess of the Night, in late 2016.

Fans of Californication could draw parallels between my situation and the lapse between Hank Moody’s third and fourth novels—a lapse humorously compared by Hank’s critics to the decade Guns N’ Roses spent producing Chinese Democracy.

For those who haven’t seen it, the Showtime drama revolves around Hank Moody’s writers block. In his writing, as in his life, he is his own worst enemy. He self-sabotages every break Hollywood gives him, every relationship he forms, every chance he has at forgiveness.

Hank Moody’s process differs from mine and that of many others. In the show, Hank will go months, if not years between writing stints until inspiration bursts violently from his consciousness like rain from cumulonimbus clouds. These drug- and alcohol-infused creative thunderstorms last a couple days and nights, culminating in a polished draft of a literary fiction bestseller.

Lessons from drugged-out literary luminaries

History is filled with rumors of authors similarly pulling substance-aided all-nighters. Using cocaine, Robert Louis Stevenson wrote 60,000 words in six days. Ayn Rand fueled her creative spurts with Benzedrine. Hunter S. Thompson used dextroamphetamine and, later in his career, cocaine.

Missing from these stories of drugged-out literary luminaries is the hard work involved behind the scenes. Take it from an ADHD writer—amphetamines are no substitute for routine.

Perspiration is more important than inspiration

Later in the Californication series, even freethinking, freewheeling Hank Moody tries to teach his daughter that libertine behavior does not make one a writer. He acknowledges the blood, sweat, and tears that stain every manuscript.

He tells her, “The only thing that makes you a writer is gluing your ass in a seat and getting what’s inside your head out on paper. Everything else is a pose.”

Bestselling author Gillian Flynn aptly echoes Hank’s sentiment, “There’s no muse that’s going to come down and bestow upon you the mood to write.”

Not even the psychedelic muses of the Beat Generation.

Putting in the time

With his novel stolen and his screenplay residuals spent, Hank takes a job at an all-girls private college. He tells his classroom of ingénues and aspiring authors that being a writer is like having homework every day for the rest of your life.

All novelists would agree.

In On Writing, Stephen King discusses sequestering himself in his office with the door closed. His instructions to himself and to his family are that unless the house is burning down, he is not to be bothered. King also writes every day of the year except Christmas. Then, he admits he is lying. He also writes on Christmas.

Overcoming self-imposed obstacles

To finish my latest novel, I had to invent my own writing routines—only to have them interrupted by life dozens of times. I had to work around day jobs and night jobs; depressive episodes, dermatomyositis, and multimillion-dollar proposal deadlines; dying friends and dying relationships; and worst of all, the pandemic—the antisocial shitstorm that made parasites of the masses and paralyzed my creativity for a year and a half.

After failing to reach my goal two years in a row, I partnered with my therapist to overcome my own specious barriers.

I bought a new (used) laptop and installed nothing on it but a Linux Mint instance and basic writing software. I adjusted my work schedule. I hunkered in my living room at dawn, before the world awoke to interrupt me. I found new coffee shops with better hours and policies that weren’t written by the Chinese Communist Party.

Most importantly, my therapist and I set a goal he held me accountable to—500 words per week.

After enough mornings, afternoons, evenings, and weekends, I finally hit my goal in December 2023. I finished my novel two weeks ahead of schedule.

Sunday struggles searching for unobtainable perfection

Today was supposed to be different. I planned to lift weights at the gym and then work on my novel at the coffee shop. I have not met either goal.

Instead, I procrastinated. I can’t even remember what I did this morning. Then I went grocery shopping, hoping to prepare healthy food for my girlfriend and I for most of the week.

Alas, my afternoon attempt at frying tofu cubes to a crisp for my vegetarian variation on kung pao chicken failed. The oil was not hot enough. What heat it did have dissipated quickly as soon as I dropped the half-centimeter cubes into the oil.

The last time I cooked this dish was in a commercial kitchen. I now realize frying tofu cubes at home is nowhere near as simple and perhaps even impossible without the right equipment.

I had to throw out the soggy mess.

Rationally, I know it’s just one meal, and I can always make the vegetables into something else. But I still hear the invisible parent within me shouting, wondering why I can’t make a dish I’ve made half a dozen times before, why I can’t motivate myself to don a pair of shorts and head to the gym, why I can’t drive to the coffee shop to escape the temptations of on-demand reruns, guitars, and Madden 21.

My girlfriend says I am too hard on myself. A previous psychologist would concur. I can hear him now, “Respect yourself.”

But my current psychologist and I made a pact. He and I agreed on four goals to work on over the last month, and I’ve barely met one.

I’m trying to be kind. I’m trying to remind myself I edited my novel for an hour yesterday. I opened my laptop qua 21st-century typewriter today. I’m writing now.

But impossible standards and unrealistic expectations are my curse. I could blame the Protestant work ethic of my parents. I could blame the all-or-nothing thinking that accompanies ADHD. Either way, they have become part of me, stations on my lifelong search for unobtainable perfection.

I smell the pork rubbed with brown sugar and freshly cracked Chinese five spices roasting in the oven. Perhaps we’ll have dinner after all.

Plus, there’s still time left to go to gym.

Writing pro tips: Eliminating distractions

Eliminating distractions is essential to becoming a good writer.

Stephen King, in his acclaimed memoir, On Writing, advises aspiring authors their writing space “really needs only one thing: a door which you are willing to shut.” He writes:

The closed door is your way of telling the world and yourself that you mean business; you have made a serious commitment to write and intend to walk the walk as well as talk the talk.

He cautions against libraries, park benches, and public spaces because he believes you need a room of your own, a place you feel truly inspiring, your own creative sanctuary. He recommends drawing the curtains so you cannot see the world outside. Such a place should have no television, no video games, no tools one can use to fritter away the time as though each of us will live forever.

Close your internet browser

Fine advice at the turn of the millennium, but King never anticipated the world twenty years later. How could he? Who, in 2000, would have known that the very tools we use to write are also portals to bookstores, clothing stores, stores for purchasing more distractions? What would King say now about television’s transformation from worn reruns filled with dull, low-budget commercials to high-definition, commercial-free content available on demand?

How would he advise we avoid YouTube? After all, its customized recommendations fill our days with endless streams ranging from pop-song videos to eighteenth-century Colonial American cooking. You can even watch videos on writing and interviews of King himself.

And what of Facebook and Twitter? Online social life has evolved from teenagers late-night chatting with friends they’ve actually met to near constant interfacing with acquaintances spread across time zones. Every year, people around the world devote more and more time to social media, from 90 minutes per day in 2012 to almost two-and-a-half hours in 2019.

Unfortunately, for the twenty-first-century writer, this and more is available at a mouse click. The keyboards we should hear clacking away on our latest novellas instead beat irregularly to the rhythm of our palpitating hearts. We read and worry about things we cannot control: coronavirus, presidential elections, our friends’ opinions of our lifestyle. We spend mere seconds working on things we can control, let alone a few minutes writing.

So how does the writer write? How does one get anything done at all?

Isolate yourself so you can focus

Per King’s advice, I write with my office door closed, in a space I decorated to trap myself with my adventurous, romantic spirit. No, I don’t mean the groomed aristocrats populating Tessa Dare’s historical chick porn. I mean the cynical idealist willing to sail the seven seas in search of his own soul. Picture Hemingway relaxing in a Cuban cigar lounge after returning from a safari only to discover the world as he knew it no longer exists.

For the less dramatic, I suggest isolating yourself from the online universe. Temporarily disconnect your WiFi or uninstall the time-sucking apps from your phone. If you need the internet for research, as I do, then turn off browser notifications and Windows 10 pop-ups. I use Linux because it doesn’t come prepackaged with programs incessantly reminding me about yesterday’s email, today’s news, and tomorrow’s dermatology appointment.

Another trick: Use Focus Writer or the Focus mode in Microsoft Word. These block the entire screen except for the page you’re writing on and foster concentration.

Get out of the house

Unlike King, I also suggest getting out of the house. Even science fiction and horror authors can learn from reality. Some of my best material, in fact, even some of my exact scenes, have been borrowed from interactions with and observations of the world and people around me.

Coffee shops are great, but make sure you visit one where you feel inspired and comfortable. Soccer moms sprinting through Starbucks is not conducive to concentration. Frequenting the same coffee shop quickly turns it into your second office. This is a good thing.

Establish a writing schedule and goals

Psychologist Paul Silva in How to Write a Lot prescribes schedules and recommends goals. He instructs writers to remove what he calls “specious barriers,” or excuses we make for not writing. If you truly have a barrier, remove it. If you see an obvious distraction, eliminate it.

Goals can be set and measured in time, word count, pages, or chapters. I go to my local coffee shop to write for at least one hour three times per week. If I write 500 words in that hour, great. If I struggle to hammer out 75, that’s okay, too, as long as I’m making progress.

Find your muse, embrace bursts of inspiration

Last, but not least, embrace bursts of inspiration when it arises. Channel your angst. Spill your sadness. Pour life’s greatest joys and disappointments onto your page.

A friend once told me, “Heartbreak is your muse.” Find your own muses. And when you do, never let the daughters of Zeus out of your sight.

Better yet, take them home. Close your door. And eliminate distractions.

Rough weeknights and coping with chronic fatigue

Chronic fatigue has made weeknights rough lately. Despite ritualistic adherence to my azathioprine and hydroxychloroquine, my autoimmune disease zaps my physical and mental strength before the day ends. The moment my right foot crosses the threshold into our condo, I want to collapse.

Eight-hour workdays leave me feeling like I spent them picking anthracite from the walls of an Appalachian coal mine. My muscles feel like they’re sagging—even though I have gained strength. I gulp ultra-caffeinated preworkout energy boosters to start and finish my days.

Sports injuries have forced me to cut back on gym sessions. Between plantar fasciitis in both feet and extensor tendonitis in my right foot, I’m surprised I can stand. And of course, my inflamed lower spine aches and causes me to slouch.

Admittedly, some of this will get better. Sports injuries can be avoided with proper stretching and icing. I have scheduled monthly massages to repair my muscles and soothe my spine. And I’m only three months into a new job—every day feels like a full load of college classes, everything a lesson.

But for those like me with an overactive immune system, feeling tired and stressed can easily escalate to feeling exhausted and overwhelmed. Since stopping steroids in August, I feel like I’m walking through life perpetually sick, minus the drippy nose and sore throat.

I sometimes feel demotivated and depressed despite being otherwise happy with myself and my life. I can’t concentrate enough to read. I don’t have much energy to write or play guitar. I’m embarrassed to admit it took two hours over two evenings to pen even this.

I finished the latest seasons of Netflix’s best shows (Lucifer, Sex Education, and Derry Girls) months ago. Amazon Originals have never held my interest. The NFL airs the least exciting games of the season on weeknights. I have no energy or focus to start my Disneyland-ride-long cue of Great Courses lectures.

Nonetheless, I’m trying to stay positive. I’m trying to meet my goals. I’m trying to reignite my passion to write. I don’t want to make life one long binge watch.

I recall all the great things that have happened since this disease began—a new condo, a new job, a new guitar, another year with my girlfriend. I even earned the next certification level for proposal management. Come to think of it, while these summer months have been a drag, I’ve actually accomplished a lot in the last 18 months. I just wonder, as I did months ago, how much of it was me, how much was the prednisone. Has chronic fatigue become my new normal?

Working at a university has made my vocabulary worse

Working at university has made my vocabulary worse. I now wage my own vendetta against jargon, gobbledygook, and sentence structures that would make my sixth-grade language arts teacher cry.

Sure, I could blame the pedantry of the ivory tower or the posturing of men and women trying to outdo each other with words rooted in Greek and Latin. They tie their identity to these flashy displays of learning: Their words and sentence structures are signals that after a decade in post-secondary schools, indeed, they belong.

To be an intellectual elite is to believe that out of seven billion humans, you alone own the infinitesimal fraction of knowledge that will save humanity from itself.

In academia, identity is attached to superiority. To be known is to be better than the rest, to have your papers more cited, more read. To be an intellectual elite is to believe that out of the seven billion humans on the planet, you and you alone own the infinitesimal fraction of knowledge that will save humanity from itself. And what better way to prove that than to hide your ideas beneath concepts and language so convoluted, so abstruse that you may be the only human being who truly understands what you mean?

Words Without Meaning, Without Truth

As Frederic Nietzsche points out, those who conceal their ideas behind jargon and gobbledygook often do so deliberately. Ever the linguistic magicians, they trade truth for illusion. He writes: “The essential element in the black art of obscurantism is not that it wants to darken individual understanding, but that it wants to blacken our picture of the world, and darken our idea of existence.”

Nietzsche wrote this in 1878. He was a hundred years ahead of his time, anticipating critical postmodernism before it became an academic rage. The postwar generation scribbled pages of unintelligible, useless prose that earned the ire of intellectuals ranging from far-Left linguist Noam Chomsky to conservative political theorists Michael Oakeshott and Leo Strauss.

Postmodernists deny reality and reject the possibility of reliable, objective knowledge. For them, there is no answer just as there is no spoon. Morals are relative. Existence is futile. Aesthetic standards for art and beauty are impossible. Everything is viewed with skepticism and irony. Nothing is what it appears—even language itself. Think Fight Club. Think Matrix. Darkened ideas of existence, indeed.

Postmodernism in three words: There is no spoon.
Postmodernism explained in three words: There is no spoon.

The Danish sociologist Jürgen Habermas observes the irony behind all this there-is-no-spoon nonsense: Anyone asserting language has no meaning must use language with meaning to defend their position. Habermas calls it a paradox. I call it dishonesty.

Bad Writing: A Simpler Explanation

During my graduate education, postmodernism and Marxism were easy targets to blame for bad writing. These approaches allowed professors to justify their hatred for capitalism and Western civilization while simultaneously collecting paychecks for teaching students to question all truth but their own.

Managing proposals for astrophysicists and virologists, I’ve had to re-evaluate my earlier position. As the medieval theologian William of Ockham reminds me, I need not come up with a complicated explanation for a phenomenon when a simple one will suffice. In other words, academics may simply be bad writers.

Researchers learn how to be a great researchers without learning how to explain their research to both academic and lay audiences. Quality writing is neither rewarded in peer-reviewed journals nor considered in the promotions and tenure process. After all, why waste time cogently articulating results and ideas when you can let your data and neologisms talk for you?

Those not taught how or encouraged to write well at the last minute string together convoluted passive sentences that recall the words of English novelist George Orwell: “The writer either has a meaning and cannot express it, or he inadvertently says something else, or he is almost indifferent as to whether his words mean anything or not.”

The Curse of Knowledge

Academics spend almost all of their time with their own ideas in their own disciplinary monocultures. To fit in, they use the same jargon and awkward sentence structures. They forget the rest of the world has no clue what their forced acronyms means or that words like parthenogenesis could easily be rewritten as virgin birth.

Academics simply cannot imagine what it is like to not know what they know.

Much like country clubbers disconnected from the other 95 percent of income earners, academics have an impossible time appreciating and communicating with outsiders. They simply cannot imagine what it is like to not know what they know. They suffer from what Steven Pinker terms “the curse of knowledge.”

Thanks to obscurantism, to postmodernism, to the curse of knowledge, over the past few years, my writing has become less florid, more direct, more plain. I write with clarity. I strive for brevity. To be read is to not to have eyes fixed on your work; to be read is to be understood.

To be read is to be understood.

Searching for motivation

Finding motivation to write the last month has been impossible.

At work, late May deadlines creep closer and closer. Days in the office lengthen. Stress increases. Dates on my Outlook calendar disappear. I pine for a vacation that seems to never come.

I want—no, I need—time to be alone, to think, to forget everyone else’s problems and focus on my own. I want to feel truly human, to remind myself life has to be more than just a series of succeeding weeks at a desk and weekends at a grocery store or a bar.

My suppressed immune system spent the past two weeks battling a virus. I had to down cocktails of cold medications to persevere through back-to-back meetings, only to come home and crash on the couch to reruns of House, MD and made-for-Netflix British teen dramas.

Motivation in pill and liquid form

Meanwhile, my body and brain are still learning what to do on less than 10 milligrams of prednisone. Systemic corticosteroids make me feel elated, energetic, invincible. For almost a year, I have depended on them, in part, to counteract the fatigue caused by an overactive immune system. As my doctors continue to taper me off, I wonder if I have even been myself the past year. Were the steroids the only reason I was able to maintain a job, a side gig, a new novel, a workout regime, and a blog?

This returning fatigue has left me reaching for lattes, London Fogs, and liquid energizers as I hope that maybe, just maybe I’ll find an evening or a lunch break to pound out a paragraph or three. Hell, this lame Saturday afternoon keyboard confessional was brought to you by Monster Energy Ultra Violet.

Writer’s block: a psychologist’s view

When I work with university faculty, I preach against procrastination and what psychologist Paul Silva in How to Write a Lot calls “specious barriers,” the excuses we make for ourselves for not writing: I need more time. I need to do more research. I need a new computer. I need inspiration.

Paul Silva's "How to Write a Lot" is for anyone making excuses for themselves on why they can't find the time or motivation to write.
Paul Silva’s How to Write a Lot is for anyone making excuses for themselves on why they can’t find the time or motivation to write. He prescribes schedules, recommends goals, and helps writers remove what he calls “specious barriers,” or excuses we make for not writing.

Silva’s solutions are simple: Schedule the time. Do the research. Buy a new computer.

He forgives the novelists and poets among us—our penchant for plumbing the depths of the human soul, our unspoken goal “to move readers to tears.” He is even so kind as to compare us to “landscape artists and portrait painters.”

I have never been that kind to myself. Writer’s block may be the curse of all who seek to win with words, but I’ve never believed in curses.

Lacking inspiration? Find it, I say.

Need motivation? Brew a cup of afternoon joe.

But then again, maybe I am too hard on myself. Cannot inspiration be found in salacious British high-school scandals?

Reflections on four months of blogging

Tonight, my girlfriend and I watched Julie & Julia. The movie is based on Julie Powell’s year blogging and cooking her way through Julia Child’s cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking. At the beginning of the film, Powell’s blog is slow. Her mother is her only commentator and reader. Worse, her mother discourages her.

I reflect on my own blog: seventeen weeks, twenty posts, 339 views, two comments from friends. Unlike Powell, my parents have encouraged. (My mom actually recommended I watch the film and got me Julia Child’s autobiography for Christmas last year.) Like Powell, so too has my girlfriend and my good friends.

All the same, running a blog is tough. Updating it is tedious and time consuming—especially when I, like Powell, have a day job. Readers are scarce. Rewards are few.

Is there anybody out there?

I often feel like Powell, asking myself, is it worth it? Will I ever catch a break, develop a regular enough readership? My words enter the digital black hole we call cyberspace, where little is truly seen but every thought, every letter, every phrase, every photo, for better or worse, becomes immortal. I, like Roger Waters, ask, “Is There Anybody Out There?”

I remind myself why I write this: Blogging, for me, is as much about expressing my ideas and promoting my novels as it is a series of therapeutic exercises for accepting my life as an autoimmune patient and a political iconoclast.

Blogging in the Age of Information Overload

Today marks exactly four months since I started this blog. I’m nowhere near ready to give up.

But times have changed since Powell blogged in 2002. People have never been so connected and consumed so much information. Americans alone digest 33 gigabytes of media every day. One cannot be just another Information Age culinary dropout or just another Web 2.0 desk-chair pundit.

What, then, must a man to do stand out in an age of narcissism? What can he do to bring order when so much of the world and so many people’s lives (including his own) seem to be chaos?

Writing and the injustices of rejection

Rejection sucks. Being rejected to your face hurts. Being rejected by judges and publishers you never met in favor of less talented authors frustrates and feels unjust.

Last May, I entered my novella, Goddess of the Night, into the industry-led American Book Fest American Fiction Awards. I didn’t expect to win. I wanted to win—even if it was ninth-place runner-up in the literary fiction category. I hoped some publisher would read my book and enjoy it. I prayed they would help me market it. At the very least, I expected an email notifying me I lost.

None of those things happened.

If I lost to Ernest Hemingway—or some other author I respected—I would graciously accept defeat. If I lost to someone more popular, someone more widely read, someone whose books sell, I would understand. But this year’s American Fiction Award for literary fiction went to Ted Morrissey’s Crowsong for the Stricken.

Apparently, Morrissey has a PhD and is a stalwart of the Midwestern Gothic genre (whatever that is). Editors compare him to horror authors Ray Bradbury (Fahrenheit 451) and Shirley Jackson (The Haunting of Hill House, from which Netflix’s acclaimed show is derived).

I read the first few pages of Crowsong for the Stricken. Morrissey’s prose is disorienting and verbose. Like some freshman creative writing major, he clogs his story with details that don’t advance the plot, with stale adjectives, and with cliched descriptions, such as: “It was a crisp October wind and orange embers bright in the starless night fell upon the Harper’s roof like God’s wrath become visible.”

Really? He couldn’t think of a better metaphor than hellfire? Or a less laundered adjective than “crisp”?

Creative writing PhDs can write. One of my favorite authors, TC Boyle, was an English professor at the University of Southern California. Perhaps even Morrissey can. But the prose in the Amazon preview of Crowsong was hardly award worthy.

A political thriller awarded by the American Book Fest is equally appalling. In his best impression of Victor Hugo’s worst Notre-Dame de Paris chapters, Alan Thompson drones on about the architectural history of Washington, DC, for the first several pages of his novel, Juvenal’s Lament. In fact, his history takes up the entire Amazon’s preview of his novel. All I can expect beyond page 6 is more failure.

All rejection sucks. But when you are ignored for inferior writers whose stories and words are so flawed they wouldn’t pass high-school English, when you know you penned a better-written, more coherent tale that unveils more about human nature in 187 pages than these novelists squeeze into tomes three times as long, rejection is more than an act or a feeling—it’s personal, it’s unjust.

Finding beauty and inspiration in feeling overwhelmed

Today was tough. I felt overwhelmed. I’m trying to manage an autoimmune disease and four proposals at once. I itched more than usual this week. My hair has started to quickly thin. My rashes flared up. To top it off, dumbass drivers clogged Phoenix roads with accidents, turning a 20-minute drive into a 45-minute commute.

Caspar David Friedrich - Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog
Caspar David Friedrich’s “Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog” depicts man above the choppy seas, as though to say, “I can and will conquer whatever chaos may come.”

For the first time since being diagnosed, I wanted to give up. I didn’t want my life to be going from doctor to doctor, lab to lab, spending every penny I have on increasing insurance copays only for doctors to basically say the same thing week after week until the medications show results.

I’m collecting specialists like preteens collect Pokemon. At first, I thought this could be fun. Like a grueling sports practice, fun has turned into work.

In the past three weeks, I saw a dermatologist, two rheumatologists, and a psychologist. A radiologist reviewed my CT scan. Pathologists analyzed my blood. Thursday, I see my psychiatrist for my ADHD medications. I made an appointment with an ophthalmologist to monitor my retinas because of known side effects from hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil). Next week, I have an electromyograph (EMG) with a neurologist at Mayo Clinic.

I’m collecting medical specialists like preteens collect Pokemon. At first, I thought this could be fun. Like a grueling sports practice, fun has turned into work.

Turning despair into inspiration

I want more from life. I want friends and strangers to see me not as some guy who battles an incurable illness, but as me—a writer, a thinker, a proposal specialist, an amateur saucier, a wine connoisseur.

I try not to focus on the difficult parts of my life. I try to borrow strength from overcoming my past.

This evening, I channeled my negativity and hammered out almost a thousand words in my new novel, even if they were about my character’s obsessions with Russian vodka and marijuana politics, about him being stood up by a strip-club cocktail waitress.

Writers and artists teach us how to make things beautiful, attractive, and desirable even when they are not.

Writing is what I do. For over fifteen years, it’s what I’ve done when the future seems grim, especially when I feel down. Besides, inspiration has to come from somewhere.

As the philosopher Frederich Nietzsche comments in The Gay Science, art and artists, including writing and writers, teach us “how to make things beautiful, attractive, and desirable for ourselves [even] when they are not.”