Archive for the ‘Arts’ Category
What is Success?
Over at her Year in America blog, my friend Fiona Leonard recently posed the question, “If you knew you could not fail, what would you do?”
I thought for quite a while about this before posting a comment, trying to identify how I define success and what anchors me in my undertakings. I came to the conclusion that it’s not the lure of success that motivates me, but my passion for the thing I’m doing.
I’ve had many interests over the course of my life: in fact, in a recent post over at my other blog I described myself as being “artistically promiscuous” as a girl, since I loved so many things. I studied piano, singing, speech and drama and several forms of dance as well as a full trencher of school subjects and all the peripherals that go with being a music student – theory, harmony, aural training, history and form of music…my days were full from wake-up time at 6.00am until I collapsed into bed at about 9.30pm. I loved all those activities (or at least most of them, most of the time!) and did not want to give any of them up.
Until, of course, they became too difficult. This happened first with piano. I was a student at Sydney Conservatorium, and I was well aware that although I had above average ability in music, I was never going to be much better at it than I was then. It had become a hard grind. I pushed myself through the required two hours of practice each day, but each session was a struggle. My teacher, Raymond Fischer, told me I was at least three years away from being ready to sit even the simplest diploma exam, and I realised I just didn’t have the enthusiasm to last the distance. Possibly, with a lot of effort, I could have done what my parents hoped and expected I would do – go on to Teachers’ College and become a specialist music teacher in a high school. But the prospect of having to face four or five classes a day for the rest of my life, trying to interest a mob of teenagers in a subject that had already lost its juice for me, was utterly unthinkable.
After a year of Arts at Sydney University, I took a year off study to work in the public service and make a rather unfortunate early marriage. It didn’t take long for me to realise that working in an office environment was not my thing, either, and in 1962 I entered the National Institute of Dramatic Art to try my hand at acting. However, during that year I had my first baby and in those days there were no creches at universities, and as I couldn’t find suitable child care, I had to give up my scholarship and quit the course. I was sad, but not devastated, because at heart I’d already realised that this was not my path, either. I loved Shakespeare, but opportunities for specialist Shakesperean actors in Australia were virtually nil at that time, and the thought of spending my time preparing for auditions for TV commercials didn’t exactly fill me with enthusiasm. Several of my fellow students did indeed become professional actors — two of them, John Bell and Anna Volska, even became specialist Shakespereans! — but many more became bartenders, teachers and insurance agents.
I continued to be involved in amateur theatre and to teach dance for another twenty years, while rearing my five children. Along the way I furthered an interest in astrology that had started in my teens, and tried my hand at farming, even gaining a Certificate in Rural Studies to give myself a theoretical base for milking cows, drenching sheep and mucking out pig pens. Actually this was one of the happiest times of my life in many ways, and not the least happy-making part was watching my children growing up close to nature, seeing first-hand the cycles of life that as urban dwellers we see only dimly, as when someone has a baby or an elderly relative dies. In farm animals these cycles play themselves out far more quickly.
Dance was the one thing that never lost its appeal for me, despite my short legs and hockey-player’s build that rendered me unsuited to classical ballet. In my forties I returned to study at the West Australian Academy of Performing Arts, where I completed an Associate Diploma in Performing Arts (Dance) with the intention of “updating my expertise” so that I could catch up with the latest doings in the dance world, especially in teaching. My forty-odd-year-old body complained terribly and it took three years for me to complete the two year course, but complete it I did, and I was quite proud when I walked across the platform to receive my scroll. Concurrently, I’d started a BA in Religious Studies, which I loved. I complemented it by converting my Associate Diploma to a Dance minor, and also started another BA in Languages. This was in those heady days of the 1980s when all tertiary education was free, so I was merrily undertaking units in French, Italian, English Literature, Linguistics, Psychology and Journalism. However, when I was part-way through this second BA, my second marrriage broke down and fees for university courses came back, so I could not afford to finish it, much less go on to do the masters in Religious Studies that I’d hoped to do. Of course, none of those transcripts actually qualified me to do anything, and I was getting older and becoming less and less employable in a country that has always valued youth above almost everything else. So I turned to my other interests to put bread on the table, and these are the things I still do today – writing, editing, astrology and meditation. And I still love all of them.
Writing fiction, however, is just as heartbreaking as music, dance and acting. The chances of any individual “succeeding” at it are very low indeed. For every thousand manuscripts that are started by hopeful would-be authors, only one or two, at best, will eventually be published by one of the major commercial publishing houses. I frequently become discouraged, and talking to my fellow writers, I realise most of them do, too.
Nevertheless, I will keep up the battle until writing loses its juice for me. And when might that be? If my past experience is any guide, it will be when I know that I’ve reached the limits of my ability, which to me isn’t failure; it’s just a fact of life. I have the good fortune to have better-than-average talents in a lot of directions, but I have never proved to be outstanding at any of them. 
But is this a bad thing?
I think not. If it were, I wouldn’t have had the chance to do so many wonderful things because I would have spent my life focussing on the prospect of success in just one of the things I love. I worship all the muses, and while, perhaps, none of them loves me quite as much as she loves her dedicated votaries who have just one talent in abundance, I can nonetheless bathe in all their sacred pools and come away refreshed. And that may be the best gift of all.
Reality Check – So you want to be a writer?
This meme was, I believe, originated by Charles Stross, who gave permission for it to be turned loose into the wild. My version is based on the one from Sharon Lee’s blog . Lee Battersby has a version and that’s where I first saw it. Some users have chucked the references to non-fiction publication, which is about all I can lay claim to, really. So I’ve put them back in.
* Age when I decided I wanted to be a writer: 8
* Age when I “wrote” my first story: 5 (A play ripped off from Oliver Twist, as I remember! I made my entire family take part, but reserved the lead for myself.)
* Age when I first had something published: 7 (A poem called “Dolly’s Lullaby” in what was then the Manchester Guardian.)
* Age when I next had something published: 11 (Numerous poems and descriptive pieces over two or three years in something called “Chucklers’ Weekly”. Yes, really! I got paid a pound a time!)
* Age when I got my hands on a typewriter: 21 (An Oliver, manual and sort-of portable. My daughter still has it!)
* Age when I landed a paid magazine column: 45 (In the now defunct “Music Maker”, later “ArtsWest”. I didn’t kill it: in fact, it died when I left. The editor said he was unable to find a decent dance columnist, despite trying out several. Then another writer also left and the mag folded. Sad.)
* Age when I wrote my first novel: 53. I’m a slow starter.
* Age when I wrote my first short story: 58. I don’t believe in rushing things.
* Age when I first submitted a short story for professional publication: 58
* Age when I sold my first short story: It depends what you mean by “sold” – so far, paying markets have seemed strangely resistant to my charisma. Non-paying ones seem slightly more appreciative.
* Thickness of file of rejection slips prior to first story sale: Unless you count FTL (for-the-love) pubs, that file’s still in the fattening pen.
* Age when I first came close to selling a novel: Close? Not within scent of it yet!
* Age when that first book deal imploded (prior to publication): Heaven forbid that it ever happen!
* Age when I killed my first market: 59 – I submitted my first novel to an e-publisher and they went broke the next week. I’ve never sent it out again for fear of destroying the entire industry.
* Age when I first sold a non-fiction book: I haven’t written any. (Addendum: I haven’t written any for sale to publishers. I have actually written several family histories, for my own family and for paying clients. Do they count as “sales”?)
* Age when I first wrote a saleable novel: HAH!
* Age when that novel was published: I’ll let you know…
* Age when the second saleable novel finally sold: Ditto
* Age when the second saleable novel came out: Hey, lemme get the first one out already!
* Age when the third saleable novel came out: Ditto
* Age when the fourth saleable novel came out: Give over, will you?
* Age when I first won an award: LOL
* Age when I finally shut down the day-job and became a full-time novelist: 59
* Age when the money coming in exceeded my previous salary: HEH!
* Age when I returned to the day-job because of publisher implosion: I’m too old for that to happen, goddess be thanked.
* Age now: 65
* Number of books/poems/articles sold: Not sure. No novels or paid shorts, but probably several hundred articles, a few poems and a smattering of family histories.
* Number of titles in print: 0
* Number of titles fallen out of print: 5 0r 6 – all family histories.
Hmm. Maybe I should take up golf.
The original author says: if you write professionally, feel free to post your own equivalent of this list. (Obviously you’ll need to customize it to track your career path — but you get the idea.)