I often think to myself, “what inspires me as a writer?”
I lie in bed and stare out the bedroom window at my neighbor’s trees. I wait for inspiration to arrive, perhaps at my doorstep on the back of a bird or the wings of the yellowjackets buzzing around my window. I sit at my computer, pull up Google docs, and wait patiently for nearly an hour. I have typed nothing.
I blame it on “Writer’s Block.” Or on fatigue, then I stroll to my kitchen and grab myself a Dr Pepper (I don’t drink coffee). I return to my computer, half-hoping that my next great short story or novel was written by magical elves or fairies (or orcs) in my absence. My much anticipated burst of inspiration never arrives, and as a result, I don’t write much or nothing at all.
Big mistake. As a writer, one thing every other writer tells you to do is to write everyday. It doesn’t really matter what you write, as long as you write. You could type an entry into a daily journal, or put work in a story on a daily basis. Or you could blog. Writers have plenty of options and opportunities to write everyday.
Writing everyday is not just a slogan tattooed in the minds of writers. It is something writers must do. It’s in the job description. At first glance, writing daily appears to be an exercise meant to improve your writing skills (it does, but it is only one of its many purposes). It also allows to writer to express him-or-herself creatively. Writers write to make progress on their works as well.
But the most important reason writers write everyday is that it instills discipline in the writer. Discipline in any field is important for success.
I think the real reason older, more experienced writers tell emerging ones to write everyday is because they have learned that one cannot, and must not, rely on bursts of inspiration to work. Do things happen to the writer that inspires them to write a full story? Sure. I was inspired to write “Four Firewoods” after hearing a pecan fall in a mound of leaves outside my window. But that sudden onset of inspiration does not come all that often. One cannot waste time waiting for inspiration to come along. So I, like many other writers before me, learned that the hard way.
Discipline is more reliable than inspiration.