Why You Should Create Crap

in #writing7 years ago (edited)

Lately the universe seems to be telling me I should write more, and so I'm listening. Not that it's a new message. Hemingway famously said, "The first draft of everything is shit." That truth has made itself apparent to me time and time again. But that truth also implies another truth: that since first drafts are shit, and second drafts are slightly less shit, and so on, you have to write and keep writing.

Traditional Social Media Drains Your Creative Mojo

When I first joined Steemit I wanted to write. I'd experimented with Wordpress, Blogger, Medium, and Facebook over the years, but none of them fed my creative energies. It was more like they bled my creative energy dry. I never consciously considered it, but it now seems obvious that the reason for this is because they really are bleeding you. They are extracting content from your brain and using it to generate revenue for themselves and their shareholders. They are extracting value from us without giving us anything in return and we sense it.

Steemit was different. By returning value to me when I created something the crowd liked I became motivated to create more and more. It fed my creative energies, seemingly turbocharged them, it didn't sap them. Somewhat early on I made a commitment to, "listen to what the crowd was telling me." That didn't mean slavishly trying to "give the people what they wanted," but merely entertaining the idea that the crowd might know what it was talking about when it didn't give me rewards and I should adjust my content accordingly. I made a commitment to only make content that I wanted to make, but within that category I would use the crowd's guidance to make better choices. I think it is quite fascinating how this gradually guided me not toward writing at all, but making videos.

The Same Applies For Video

I found that when making videos, the same principle applied. First drafts of scripts were always crap. I was fortunate enough to have some early success with improvised videos, but even when I look back at those, I would rehearse what I was going to talk about while I made breakfast. Yup, often out loud. And the first few things I would say in these rehearsals ... were crap. It was only by developing and refining those concepts that the script would become something I could be proud of and sufficiently fuel the content of the video.

Content Creation as an Act of Faith

What I came to realize was that creating content took an act of faith. I had to have faith that even though I did not have the ability to generate a first draft that didn't suck, I did have the ability to make a 5th draft that wasn't terrible. In addition, I realized that the more videos I put out, the better I got at both developing the content that would be in them, as well as video production. This also solved another problem: no matter what you do some of your content is still going to suck even when you're done with it. As David Mamet says in the following Masterclass commercial (every time I see one of these I want to buy one of their classes): "You cannot learn how to write drama without writing plays, putting it on in front of an audience and getting humiliated. Hemingway said, 'Writing is easy, all you have to do is sit down at the typewriter and bleed.'"

The Value of Volume

Volume helps solve this problem not just because it increases the odds you will create something good, but it also provides you with opportunities to learn and improve. Arguably failure is more informative than success. Most entrepreneurs know that 9 out of 10 ventures they pursue will fail. It's not because they're not trying hard or because the idea is inherently bad. That's just the way of the world. Most successful entrepreneurs solve this problem with volume. They keep trying until they meet with success.

Yesterday I was watching the author and cartoonist Scott Adams' YouTube video, "The Day You Became a Better Writer." In it he too talked about the importance of writing regularly, every day in fact. That's why he maintains his blog even though he doesn't make any money off of it (wouldn't it be great if came to Steemit so that he could make money off of it?). He claims that writing every day is necessary for becoming a better writer.

Steemit Team Member: My New Reality

As many of you know, and more will discover, on steemit.com things tend to change fast. Now I'm the Community Liaison for Steemit Inc. and videos take a long time to produce. Even if I only spend an hour shooting a video and work hyper-efficiently, it still takes at least the rest of the day to edit the footage into something watchable. That's time I no longer have. That being said, I think it is now more important than ever to share my thoughts with the community, not just because I want to be the best content creator I can be, but because as a member of the team you all deserve to know what's going on in my mind. What kind of person I am. What I value.

Bearing all of that in mind, I now plan on returning to writing and doing so on a more regular basis. I once heard Jordan Peterson (I think it was him at least, I absolutely devour the lectures he posts to YouTube) say something like, "You don't know what you believe until you say it." Or maybe it was "write it down." Both I think are true. At any given moment we have countless and often contradictory ideas swirling around our heads. That's why people can seemingly hold completely contradictory beliefs. We are all a "riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma," and it seems to be the case that even we don't know ourselves until we somehow externalize those thoughts.

My Plan: Write More

I will try to write more and I will do so in the hopes that it will improve my creative abilities, give me a better sense of myself, and give you a better sense of who I am as a member of the Steemit Team. It won't always be great, that seems inevitable, but I believe it will help me become a better content creator and a better member of the Steemit Team.

Thank you for reading.

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Excellent article. Crap. Is. Critical. When Mike, Eric, Jeremy and I moved to Berlin we literally brought just a handful of pens, pencils and sketchbooks. The goal being - in essence - to "bleed on the typewriter." There was an inside joke that hither yon would say "yes" to everything. (I mean, our first gig was as extras in a bizarre contemporary dance performance, yikes.) Every project whisper, rumor or design competition we could get our hands on helped us build a better sense of the foreign place we sought to discover. As a collective, we tried our best to live by that philosophy, believing fiercely that volume would enable us to discover better.

I honestly haven't felt that same level of foreign excitement / anxiety until I stumbled into Steemit last July. It has been like discovering "Berlin" all over again. Anyway, looking forward to more of your writing. 2017 will be a monumentally crappy year in the most fantastic way possible.

I love this so much. The only mistake is being afraid to share the crap to get to the gold buried within!

It is try and it is a bit scary to writer here, because every crap you write at the beginning is stored forever ))) Nevertheless, practice makes perfect, so I also intend to write more. And I can see that every time I write there is an improvement. Thank you for the inspiring post @andrarchy!

Uhh this statement is definitely not crap:

At any given moment we have countless and often contradictory ideas swirling around our heads. That's why people can seemingly hold completely contradictory beliefs. We are all a "riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma,"

Nice thought that you just conveyed. Wow!! :)

Thanks so much!

all first draft are shit - but they are way better than the drafts that never get written.

Write for the fun of it - I'm writing about the adventures of me and my dad as we struggle to stay alive in @papa-pepper's steem-pocalypes game.

My posts are usually written late at night after a long day's work. No time for editing or re-working. So it goes down on paper pretty much as it comes out of my head.

These are not literary works. but they are fun to write.
And writing like this makes my writing better, so when I get some time to write something a bit more serious, my skills will be better.

Start with fun, and the rest will follow.

Sounds awesome! I'll check it out. I keep hearing about this game!

Right on and well put. Thanks for making it public how much bloody time it takes to put out a good video. While it may seem like videos are super easy to just make well, it seems like a 1::50 ratio between finished product and the time it takes to actually get it shot, edited, up, and visible on the net. Keep at it mate, we totally get what it takes to bring great things into the world. Linked to this post as an Iceberg Story Charge!

Thanks for the thoughtful comment! You had me at "paleo treats." That tells me everything I need to know. Now if you can make paleo treats that are also keto treats, that would be killer! Good to see you on the platform and keep posting those videos!

Right on! Keto is def on our radar, just can't swallow (ha ha) using the alternate sweeteners. Stevia, erythritol, even monkfruit all leave a bad taste in my mouth. Ah, onward! More to explore for sure!

"I am good and want to become better"

If by crap you mean this, I'm all in! Your title definitely caught my attention but the article was totally on point. I've been on steemit for a total of 72ish hours and I already find myself inspired to write, particularly when I come across great writing. Thanks for posting!

Awesome! Glad to hear

This definitely applies to artists too. SO many times I see "Artists" say that they are artists but are too scared to do the work or show the work. Just get it done and out there... you'll be surprised by the feedback if people see your potential. Sure a lot of it will be crap (in your mind) to start... but you get better over time. Glad to of found this place. Cheers and much LUV, HR

Going from crap to less crap and finally to excellence is what life is!

I joined Steemit in February and since then I've found myself looking for reasons to create things instead of reasons to procrastinate until I can make something flawless. We make things out of ourselves and our experiences. They're not always beautiful and they're probably never perfect but each attempt can take us further in the right direction.

Very well said.

Yeah, I think people undervalue what a big deal that slight difference makes. I truly believe Steemit encourages people to create more and that improves their lives. Thanks for the comment!

True, marginal gains are only impressive when you add them all up and look at them after some time has passed. And you're welcome/no problem!

Great point

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