Writers and illustrators: Resist constantly comparing yourself to others. Instead, focus on appreciating and enjoying your OWN journey.
(I've been gradually working my way through the panels in my own career, so figured it was about time I repost this comic :-))
Constantly comparing yourself to others can suck joy out of creating. Find your own pace and savor the journey.
Envy can hold us back. I don't believe in "sin" per se, so I'll call it a gift. If we are willing to look at these feelings that plague us and get in the way of our progress on the road to getting what we want in life, then they can be gifts, even envy.
The other day I met up with Ivy* a long-time friend whom I've only ever known online, until now. She and I have many friends in common. Several of them live in my home city. She started our conversation by exclaiming "Glinda* is magnificent, isn't she?" *names are changed to protect me and them from embarrassment.
I said that Glinda and I had gotten off to a bad start. Ivy encouraged me to "let it fly" or words to that effect, but I said that's not who I am. I really don't have anything bad to say about Glinda.
I could have recounted the way in which Glinda and I got off to a bad start TEN YEARS AGO, but what would be the point of that? If we haven't resolved or forgotten that by now, we never will. The truth is, and now that I've been made uncomfortable by meeting up with Ivy face to face and finding out she likes Glinda AT LEAST as much as she likes me (maybe more!), I have to examine what it is that keeps me from actually liking Glinda.
I could -- and have -- fall back on the fact that many of my local playwright friends don't hang out with her, don't like her, supposedly because when she first started writing plays she padded her resume. Lied about her productions. Maybe she did. The truth is, she sure doesn't have to pad anything any longer. She has productions -- real ones, not just readings, like most of us get or hope to get these days. And she has them frequently, and everywhere. She is well-loved (see above example of Ivy) and well-respected by people from other cities, as well as from my own. Clearly other playwrights and other theatre folks in my city do love and respect Glinda, and if they ever had a problem with her, they've moved on.
As for me, I've been wallowing around in ENVY. Feeling that it is unfair that Glinda should be getting productions, getting respect for her work, getting readings in far-flung corners of the earth, winning awards and grants, having actors clamoring to read her scripts, directors asking to read her new works, producers wondering when she'll have something just right for their theatre companies. Unfair that SHE has it, and I don't.
Ironic because when anyone else ever said anything remotely like that to me about her, I said "No, it's great that she's being produced! Any time any woman is produced makes it more likely that another woman will be produced." What's more, I believe that. But somewhere inside, I wasn't believing it about myself.
It's a new day. I do deserve it. I have a reading coming up next Friday in New York City. I have a new play that will have a reading in Fertile Ground in January. I'm writing a new short play right now. My work will be seen. I will receive useful feedback that I will incorporate to make even better work. And I am finished with Envy of Glinda! Thank you Ivy for showing it to me and helping me clear that up!
Readers, are any of the deadly gifts getting in the way of your progress to your better life? Do you feel like sharing? Please, do tell!
Several posts back, I mentioned reading Jeff Vandermeer's BOOKLIFE: STRATEGIES AND SURVIVAL TIPS FOR THE 21ST-CENTURY WRITER. This book is excellent for a number of reasons. The thing I most appreciated, though, was his intentional division of a writer's public and private booklife. In the Private Booklife section, he's devoted a whole chapter to envy.
It is easy to be envious in all professions, but I think there's a special envy reserved just for the arts. When what you create is the thing ultimately received or rejected by others, it is often difficult to keep ourselves separate from our work, and it's easy to grow bitter when others' work is received differently than our own.
Here's what Vandermeer has to say:
"...Envy expresses a perverse feeling of helplessness: an acknowledgement of our inability to control what we could never control anyway. The only true balm is to tend to our own work, our own business, and to be as sound and honest in it as we can be -- and as for others, to treat them with love and affection, recognizing that what we may see of them in our eye, they too may see of us in theirs. Recognizing that the fortunes of our fellow travelers rise and fall as do our own -- knowing that we are bound in a brotherhood and sisterhood of envy -- may remove the sting of the sliver when it enters, and when it exits."
How do you deal with envy?
Green Girl tagged me with this sinful post:
"Sometimes you can learn more about a person by what they don’t tell you. Sometimes you can learn a lot from the things they just make up. If you are tagged with this Meme, lie to me. Then tag 7 other folks (one for each deadly sin) and hope they can lie."
Whew. The pressure is on. Good lying. Here goes:
Pride
What is your biggest contribution to the world?
Gosh, what a tough question. It's a real toss up between those highly acclaimed academic tomes on the principles of cold fusion and my spicy spaghetti recipe.
Envy
What do your coworkers have that you wish was yours?
Anonymity. I get hounded all the time by eager tweens begging me to please, please, please write a sequel to Dragon Wishes.
Gluttony
What did you eat last night?
Monte Cristo sandwich, fries, and baked fudge with ice cream and whipped cream. It's a real tragedy to have one of those metabolisms that just won't let you put on any weight. What's a girl to do but eat?
Lust
What really lights your fire?
Apathy. I'm so tired of men who know what they want. Couldn't they be wishy washy for a change? Not know what they want? Take years to propose? Why do they have to hurry us so?
Anger
What is the last thing that really pissed you off?
The recent election demonstrations in Iran. How dare those forward thinkers try and bring about democracy, or even fairness in election voting returns. What do they think this is, the 21st century?
Greed
Name something you hoard and keep from others:
Manuscripts. Move over Emily Dickinson. Just wait till I die. Oh, the treasures the world will find.
Sloth
What’s the laziest thing you ever did?
Gave one word answers to open-ended questions.
Disclaimer: I may be an author, but I'm not sure I'm the wittiest one when it comes to answering questions like these. It's all that Catholic upbringing. I can feel the weight of Purgatory bearing upon me as I fudge the truth. I swear! May these writers be more unencumbered in their yarn spinning :-)
ROOTS IN MYTH
Gutsy Writer
Hello Ello
Keri Mikulski
Lilly's Life
Rena Jones
Writing it Out
afraid i don't deal with it very well sometimes.. but most often, I just try to avoid it at all costs. that seems to work best (when it's working).
Envy seems to be a normal part of writing life, or like you said, the arts. I get discouraged for a bit, then ignore it, then use it to as inspiration to write and create.
I agree that envy seems to be built in to the process of writing. It can be disheartening, but ultimately it makes me work that much harder.
Envy, while detrimental at times, often just fuels me to strive harder to be better. As long as I channel it, envy benefits me :)
Don't let envy gain an upper hand. Envy is wanting what someone else has and since this usually means a friend (envying Stephenie Meyers or JK Rowling is like spitting into the wind), it's important to keep your priorities straight. Celebrate the successes of those you know and love. If you could, would you really rip success from their hands? Not me. As Melissa says, turn that negative energy into something positive. Work harder!
I try to swallow it down and think positive. Envy is a powerful beast, both as a negative force and as a powerful motivator. I try to focus on the motivation. :-)
I find that envy only snatches me when I'm down about other things (usually not writing related... though the envy ends up being writing related). So, when it comes, I get to moving forward in other aspects of my life and that seems to smother it nicely.
Caroline, I love this book too. Definitely one to revisit again and again.
For me, envy is an indicator that I need to be focusing more on my own writing. I try to remember that readers can read and love more than one book, and that I should be trying to make my own work the best it can be.
Easier said than done sometimes! :)
There will always be someone who I think does it better. BUT there's also always someone looking at me thinking I'm doing better than they are. It's a vicious cycle. I can only try to get better as I go along and to improve on myself.
Coming for a performance background, I used to struggle with this a lot. A lot, a lot.
After I grew up a little, I have found sincerely taking joy in the success of others makes for a lot less anxiety. Recognize that their success is not your failure and with hard work and faith your day will come too.
Oh, it's so hard to not covet someone else's success! I try and focus on positive things, and improve myself until I get to where I want to be. After all, this is my journey, and it's not going to be the same as someone else's. So long as I'm taking steps in the right direction, I can be hopeful that I'll get there eventually!
It depends on who the person is. So bad right? If it's a good friend, who I love and I know deserves it, I can be a little envious for a minute and then be excited for them. If it's someone that hasn't been very nice, or seems undeserving it's hard to fight the envy and be happy for them, but I try.
Envy is crazy in this business, isn't it. I deal with it by employing tons of positive self-talk, reminding myself I would never want to switch lives with ANYONE, and a glass of red wine.
Good question. Envy eats at your soul and your joy. I try not to let it in :)
I try to keep that old grade-school mantra in mind--eyes on your own paper! Refocusing on what I'm doing helps me avoid comparing myself to others and subsequently getting jealous.
I've given you an award!!! Check it out here!!