jonrog1 said:
I understand your reaction, and that you were being rhetorical -- but papa_laz hit a nerve, so I was (and still am) being snappy. Please accept my responses with tongue planted firmly in cheek.
No problem.
I will qualify my statement with "In the creative fields, I believe there is no job harder than writing."
And if you don't believe that, then you haven't lived through a writer's strike.
Well, I would disagree there. From your point of view, writing seems to be the most difficult creative field to work in, but others would disagree. Some people would find art or writing music much harder than writing well, for example. It's all subjective, really.
I WAS going to leave it at that ...
This leads me into a combination mini-rant/inspirational speech. No offense intended, of course.
By an odd coincidence, whenever some writer friends and I get into a nasty situation in production, we look at each other and say, "We ain't moving boxes."
But we say that -- or at least I do, because I did that job. And bartended, and worked a gas pipeline digging ditches, etc., etc. And so I know the difference here.
Making a living writing is not easier. It's more pleasant once you're actually doing it, but not easier. Seemingly a fine distinction, but that's what life is, a series of fine distinctions.
Well, again it depends on your subjective experience in the matter. Some people would find writing much easier than digging ditches, and vice versa. But the majority of people would prefer to be writing, because, as you said, it's more pleasant.
Leading us to the second qualified statement: "Writing for a living is not the hardest job in the world -- but it is incredibly, stupefyingly, exponentially harder than pretty much anyone thinks it is."
You "live off" an inheritance. You "live off" a lottery win.
You don't "live off" your imagination and writing skills.
Another fine distinction? I could argue a ditch digger is "living off" of his physical fitness and endurance. I understand what you're saying, here, of course, and believe me, I know writing isn't easy and you don't get a free ride off of doing it.
If you have imagination and writing skills, you have the barest, barest tools necessary to pay your bills with them. Now learn to harness that imagination with narrative structures, dialog techniques and industry-specific styles and tools.
Then, fill blank pages. Fill thousands of them. And if you don't fill them, no co-worker will step in. No union will help you. And no one will care if you didn't fill them, and ask to help, or encourage you (except maybe a loved one. Good for you, now get back to writing.). Now every day, wake up and make something brand new. Or don't get paid. No sick days. No day where you just sort of zone out and get by.
In your experience. You're correct that you have no "sick days", but then again you don't have to be at work at a certain time every day, put in a certain amount of work, and then do it again the next day. Writing is much more of a freeform experience, and it varies greatly from writer to writer.
Is writing digging ditches? Not hardly, don't envy that job. But a frikkin' artsy-fartsy life of dashing off a few thoughts before tea-time? Noooo.
Sure, being a writer isn't bad. You could even say "easy" if you disregard the whole ten years on the way to becoming one. But, sadly, that's kind of the package.
By the by, I'm mostly discussing this because I enjoy it, and I think you misunderstood the main thrust of my point, which I'll bring up now... No job is easy, and no one job is in every way possible harder than other jobs available. Some people will have an easy time in a job others struggle in, and vice versa. But regardless of what career you choose to focus yourself in, you will encounter difficulties and hardships on the way to success, if you ever get there.
A job is not something you do (unless you're very, very lucky) because you like/love to do it, you do it so you can get the money and financial independence to do what you really want to do in life. I actually consider writing a "better" job than most because it's more likely than usual you actually enjoy what you do, but that doesn't mean it's "easy" or responsibility free. But it most certainly isn't the "hardest" job out there, but of course almost no job can be qualified as the "hardest", since they all have their own unique problems and difficulties to be faced. Which brings us to the next part of your post.
(Okay, we're getting to the inspirational part.)
If you want to write for a living, and you just don't have the talent, that sucks. Nothing's more frustrating.
But IF you have the talent and IF you have the skills, and you'd do "almost anything ..." then shut up and do "anything." I HAVE NO SYMPATHY FOR YOU.
(That's inspirational? Wait, wait, it's coming ...)
Because this is the one field where you don't have to know anybody, you don't have to have gone to school for it (I didn't, nor did most of my friends) or have any seniority. You need to fill pages. Ten minutes a day, fifteen minutes a day, for however many years. Housewives with nine kids do it. Commuters do it. Guys in frikkin' PRISON CAMPS do it.
Come get this life. Come take it away from me, and from every other professional writer, take it as your own. Simple statistics say you're probably more talented than we are. Write more pages, work harder and come tear this career from my bloated, bloody corpse and wave it triumphantly overhead.
(Hmm, very Warren Ellis-y today, no?)
Usually I'm Mr. Nicey-nicey on the boards. But what the heck, for one day I'll be unapologetically opinionated.
So for those "plenty of people who would do almost anything to write for a living ..."
Type or shut up.
John
You call that not being nicey-nicey? Pffft. You just don't have the "I am going to crush you with my words and leave you feeling insignificant and worthless" vibe you really need to have, here.

Yes, it can be difficult to be a writer, but my point wasn't that writing was "easy", it was that writing isn't the hardest job in the world, and some people would love to be doing what you're doing. As I said earlier, I consider writing to be a nicer job than most because you have a higher chance of actually liking what you're doing, but that doesn't change the fact work is work is work. Any job can be hard, in it's own way, and the experience in each job varies from person to person.