Boredom is the birthplace.
Last week, I spoke for career day at my son’s intermediate school, telling about the life of a working writer. About fifty kids from the school had signed up to hear me. They were so bright, so attentive, their eyes wide, their brains bubbling.
I told them that to succeed, a writer needs three things:
- Passion—the love of writing and the burning desire to say something
- Precision—the love of language and the care to get it right
- Paycheck—the steady money that comes from some other job
I told them that writing was the easiest profession to start. To be a writer, all you had to do was write. Once you were writing, you were a writer. I asked how many of them were writers. Forty hands shot up.
Then I asked them what they were writing. A dozen or so told about their stories—real life stories of poor children struggling and rich children struggling, fanciful stories of mythological detectives and wars at the dawn of time. I asked them how they came up with their ideas.
“I was sitting at home, staring out the window, tapping my pencil.”
“I don’t know. There was nothing to do, so I just came up with it.”
“I was bored.”
And I smiled. I hadn’t realized kids nowadays still had the opportunity to be bored. With packed school days and tae kwon do and plays and MP3 players and game stations and YouTube and cable TV, the war on boredom has many formidable weapons. But boredom isn’t dead, a fact that makes me glad.
Boredom is the birthplace of the writer.
My sixth-grade teacher once looked out at our class and said, “None of you ever have a right to be bored. All of you have these big, brilliant brains. If you ever find yourself being bored, stop looking for something outside to entertain you. Start looking inside. You have worlds upon worlds in there.”
How right he was. In my own brain, I’ve found twenty worlds and counting—the number of published books I have. And it’s because I routinely get bored and have to create my way out of it.
So, a writer needs more than passion, precision, and a paycheck. A writer also needs the time and space to get bored…and be born out of it again, and again, and again.
—Rob

May 12th, 2009 at 3:58 pm
Your brilliance, and style of writing is the ruler in which I use to measure the development of the worlds I create, which is only one, so far,
and it is deformed and underdeveloped in comparison. However, there is this light that flickers ever so often; it appears to correct wrongs, reshape landscapes, and regenerate lost limbs which displace phantom fingers that scratch at the surface of a perfect world, so I just stand
there pressing my face against the glass of your
world, and just smile.
Ok, enough of that. You are my favorite writer and
it is getting harder to find your work. Will you be becoming out with more books? I also want to know where do you get your inspiration?
June 8th, 2009 at 2:52 am
I also thought this story was fantastically interesting. I am not a very greatly talented writer, but i highly appreciate those who are and share their secrets. Even if it’s as simple as you explain it.