avatarDon Martin, real-life writer

Summary

The article discusses the challenging nature of writing, suggesting that only those with resilience and toughness, akin to pioneers and superheroes, are suited for the profession, implying that sensitive individuals may not be cut out for it.

Abstract

In the article titled "Can a Sensitive Guy Become a Good Writer?" the author reflects on the demanding aspects of writing, emphasizing that it requires more than just sensitivity. The profession is depicted as one that demands extensive research, sound judgment, a marvelous vocabulary, and a steadfast constitution. The author humorously suggests that individuals who are easily moved to tears by tough-guy movies might be better suited to less demanding jobs. Writing is portrayed as a solitary and underappreciated endeavor, with long hours and poor financial rewards, often leading to public and familial criticism. The article also includes a call to action for readers to subscribe to the author's stories and support his work.

Opinions

  • Writing is not a profession for the faint-hearted or those who are overly sensitive, as it requires emotional resilience and toughness.
  • The writing process involves meticulous research, excellent word choice, and the ability to endure criticism and poor remuneration.
  • The article humorously implies that those who cry during action movies might find the writing profession too challenging and should consider other careers, like postal work.
  • The author suggests that a writer must be self-reliant and independent, similar to pioneers, cowboys, and superheroes.
  • The article promotes the author's work and encourages readers to subscribe to his stories for full access and to support his writing.

Can a Sensitive Guy Become a Good Writer?

Obsessing on this subject for now…

Photo by Ryan Chen on Unsplash

It was Ernest Hemingway who used the writing instructions, “First let the dingos eat your darlin’s.”

It’s not always a pleasant profession, this writing stuff.

It takes extensive research, sound judgment, marvelous vocabulary, and occasionally nerves made of a material they make very hard things out of.

And you have to count your words almost constantly if your British-made Smythe-Corona does not have that function.

You must be a substantial person to withstand the long hours and poor remuneration involved. Further, there is frequent public and familial derision regarding the inability to secure gainful employment.

In short, writing is not for crybabies. It’s a place for pioneers, cowboys, hunters, fighters, and superheroes, not sensitive hallmark movie weepers.

If Dirty Harry and Fistful of Dollars give you the cinema sniffles, the post office is still hiring. The writing involved is more limited, you don’t really worry about how the story turns out, and you don’t have to go home at night and watch your stats page.

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A real estate broker for the last 38 years, Don’s a keen observer and prolific reporter of truth, common sense, humor, & life. He’s a WRITER|HUMORIST — Follow him at twitter.com/DonMartinBooks 1) Get ALL of Don’s stories right in your mailbox. (Often Medium notifies less than 1% of his followers about his new stories.) 2) Join Don’s “Back Pages,” a quick bit of weekly personal, insider-type thoughts.We have already made thousands smile, hundreds laugh out loud, and dozens unsubscribe!

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