From
March 2004 UPDATE
Banishing
Your Wolf of Self-Doubt by Maggie Toussaint
Archived Articles
Banishing
Your Wolf of Self-Doubt
by Maggie Toussaint
My
wolf of self-doubt is back. He prowls around the edges of my mind,
occasionally gnawing on my confidence. His sharp teeth make quick
work of my vulnerabilities.
He
howls gleefully when those
SASEs
in
my handwriting come in the return mail. Like a silvery shadow,
he ebbs in and out of my consciousness, striking when I am weak.
When
I am between projects, my wolf of self-doubt is at his most bold.
His snickering voice tells me that there couldn’t possibly be
a marketable story in this disorganized chaos I call a brain.
He sniffs disdainfully at the lists I make, the things I want
to write about.
He
bounds across the snowy white computer screen, the one that is
barren except for the mocking slash of the blinking cursor. In
my midnight hour, I take a stand against my self-doubt. I reach
deep inside and believe that the next story will come.
Just
as characters have arcs, so do writers. It isn’t easy to change
and grow; it takes a giant leap of faith to abandon the safe world
of your last story and people a barren universe with new characters.
Here’s how I face this challenge.
I
cast out my wolf of self-doubt with determination. I scan headlines
and watch movies and listen to conversations everywhere I go,
absorbing, assimilating, what-iffing. With each new idea, creativity
sparkles and story possibilities glimmer. I boost my imagination
by exploring other artistic pursuits: music, arts and crafts,
sewing, gardening. I recharge until I reach a critical juncture,
one in which ideas saturate my thoughts.
This
primordial broth is flavored by my past experiences, my unconscious
themes, and my level of expertise at crafting stories. In the
steamy mist of prewriting, I envision a spunky heroine, a capable
but flawed alpha hero, and an emotional conflict that puts this
man and this woman on a collision course. From my imagination
I pull a series of character-driven events that propel these people
towards a problem they can’t overcome without character growth.
Tending
to my bodily comfort frees my mind for the magic of creation.
I hone my concentration by making the area immediately around
my computer writer-friendly. I listen to upbeat guitar instrumentals,
I post emotion evoking pictures in my work space, I cover my lap
with a heated throw to keep my arthritic joints limber, I turn
on the ceiling fan to deal with those pesky hot flashes, and I
use chocolate to fix everything else.
When
the story flows, I don’t sense my wolf at all. He can’t tolerate
the bright campfire of a fresh plot and three dimensional characters.
There is no room in my head for doubt when words blaze across
my computer screen.
Why
can’t I banish my wolf of self-doubt forever? Because doubting
is as much a part of my writing process as the flash and burn.
Without extending myself past my comfort zone, I wouldn’t continue
to grow as a writer.
Maybe
your wolf goes by another name, but he’s there, lurking in the
shadows, waiting for your personal dark moment. You want to beat
your wolf of self-doubt? Stare him dead in the eye and banish
him with the most powerful affirmation in your vocabulary: I am
a writer. Now, get to work!
--
Maggie
Toussaint is a member of Washington Romance Writers. She writes
contemporary romance and mystery.