linux.poet
Love does not insist on its own way
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The title pretty much explains it.
13-year-old me in the 6th grade wanted to become a novelist, and like most things that I wanted to do, I actually sat down to do it, producing several drafts that would have horrified any agent who had the misfortune of reading them. Unfortunately no agent ever did, mostly because I had no money or connections to find one.
Now I'm an adult, several mental health experiences and a lot of doubts later. I have a lot of scars from novels I read in my childhood and teen years that left me with a lot of false hope. Overcoming evil is easy, they suggested. They sold me on the idea that adult life is a paradise and that adventures are fun. Now I know better: being an actual novel protagonist in real life is a miserable experience that the human body can barely handle or tolerate. There is no glorification of stress.
I am wondering if novel writing can be done without committing this sin of glorifying adversity and pain, or if it would be better to accept that my writing talents are best used elsewhere and burn my old dream along with these drafts. Does storytelling and novel writing have any ethical place in Christian ministry?
13-year-old me in the 6th grade wanted to become a novelist, and like most things that I wanted to do, I actually sat down to do it, producing several drafts that would have horrified any agent who had the misfortune of reading them. Unfortunately no agent ever did, mostly because I had no money or connections to find one.
Now I'm an adult, several mental health experiences and a lot of doubts later. I have a lot of scars from novels I read in my childhood and teen years that left me with a lot of false hope. Overcoming evil is easy, they suggested. They sold me on the idea that adult life is a paradise and that adventures are fun. Now I know better: being an actual novel protagonist in real life is a miserable experience that the human body can barely handle or tolerate. There is no glorification of stress.
Isaiah 5:20 said:Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!
I am wondering if novel writing can be done without committing this sin of glorifying adversity and pain, or if it would be better to accept that my writing talents are best used elsewhere and burn my old dream along with these drafts. Does storytelling and novel writing have any ethical place in Christian ministry?