Sunday, January 12, 2025

2025. Week III

Hello Internet,

 

It has been a while.  I have a vague idea of what I am doing with this thing this time, though vague is doing some heavy lifting.  2024 was an interesting year for my writing, and 2025 is looking to be just as interesting.  One of the things I’ve just realized about my non-fiction writing—and I mean just realized, as in this moment of typing—is that I treat my non-fiction writing as fundamentally different from my fiction writing, and I think I understand why.

 

See, I always treat my non-fiction writing as stream-of-consciousness because that seems more authentic to me.  It is meant to be non-fiction, and what is more real and non-fictious than writing whatever it is that I feel in that very specific moment, regardless of the quality of that writing or the coherency of that thought.

 

Fiction, for me at least, is fundamentally different.  Fiction is a time capsule.  I do not write as an escape but instead use fiction and fantasy to capture specific ideas and thoughts and feelings and try to explore and analyze them.  They are moments or ideas caught in amber, and that makes them not just easier to plan, execute, and revise, but it also makes them more real the more I work on them.

 

With nonfiction writing, however, I feel like the process of plotting and revising anything I write not only makes it less honest but also makes it fiction.  The process of outlining a piece and later revising it, even if that revision or editing is for clarification, makes it no longer my true opinion or feelings in that moment.  Instead, it is a piece of writing caught in amber.  My opinions, thoughts, and feelings—my entire being, really—are in a constant state of flux.  They are always growing, changing, and evolving moment from moment.  How I felt when writing one Sunday morning might change based upon any number of inputs or outputs when I return to it that Sunday night.

 

This makes it difficult to write nonfiction for me because I find myself viewing it as a fiction story.  In these moments, I feel both like I am losing something sincere but also that I am turning myself into a character within the story.  This, from a creative writing perspective, is fascinating but also feels like I am lying.  This is not the actual Jacob you’re reading but a carefully curated version of me less reflective of the true me but of the parts of me I want to reveal to you.

 

Remember when I said that I do not use fiction or fantasy stories to escape but instead to capture specific ideas and examine them more closely? That is because I believe fiction/fantasy are great magnifiers and mirrors.  That is to say, I think exploring ideas within the safe, controlled environment of a story are great because through them you can find a deeper, more honest truth about an idea or a fact in fiction than you sometimes can in nonfiction.  Which leads me to my problem.

 

If I am carefully curating your image of me, whether intentionally or unintentionally, I am thus not revealing a deeper truth.  Instead, it feels like obfuscation.  Lying.  And if you ask the people who know me well if  I am a liar, they would most earnestly say, “Not unless he’s making a joke.” Because I take my name seriously, and I am always willing to participate in a little careful dishonesty for the sake of a good-nature guffaw.

 

All of that said, I am going to endeavor to change that thinking.  In the same way that the fabrication of elaborate lies in fiction can sometimes reveal greater truths, perhaps I can convince myself that the fabrication of smaller lies through the process of journaling, blogging, and nonfiction writing can also reveal greater truths in turn.  At least, that is my hope, and as I am turning thirty-six this year, I find that may also be my current interest.

 

What I mean to say is this: for NaNoWriMo this year, I wrote my own take on a Mr. Morale, the album I used for my students for the first semester of the school year.  Mr. Morale is often called a therapy album.  I’VE called it a therapy album.  It is dark, introspective, and unflinchingly honest and raw.  My version of this was to go into my own inner world and to dismantle my world tree where all of my stories sprouted.  I faced past hurts, past failures, and ended the month by deleting everything: all of my lists, all of my stories, and everything of myself that came before.  In doing so, I unmade me and was left only with the most exposed, vulnerable parts of myself.

 

Now that I look back, December was spent in mourning. As previously stated, I was exposed, raw, and completely without my safety net of coping mechanisms which I had built over the past some thirty-five years for the first time in, well, thirty-five years.  I started numerous projects, restarting so many things, resurrected and killed old projects over and over again only to land somewhere else by the end of the month. 

 

January, fittingly, is named for Janus, the God of Doors, and it became just that for me.  In the month since the great purging of my old stories, I’ve come to realize that the process was not what I wanted in the sense that there was no immediate rebirth after a great flood, but it did allow me something I had been desperately needing: an image of myself, at that moment, that while not perfect or even accurate was more honest than anything that came before it.

 

All of this is a long-winded way to say that my journey of self-reflection made this sort of writing I am doing now not only easier for me but also more interesting, and I think that I will be pursuing it more often as a result.  The skill is still nascent, and I do feel like I am still taking my first toddling baby steps with each new piece sentence that I structure, but it is exciting for me.  I am exciting for writing for the first time in at least a year, if not more.

 

It has been a while, but I have a vague idea of what it is that I am doing here now and in the future, and that feels inadequate, but it feels good all the same.

 

Sincerely,

RWS