Question: Is the Formless Path a Path?

21 Jul

A reader writes:

Longtime lurker, first-time writer. I was compelled to write based on a recent entry about how to start your writing career — I was intrigued by your advice, by the parameters you suggested for the hypothetical first project. I am a writer. I make my living as one (on staff, but not at a media company). I’ve long thought writing was a good fit for me, personality-wise. It afforded me the opportunity to explore and examine my varied interests. Over the past year or so, however, I’ve been concentrating on a particular area and am finding myself less drawn to the writing than to the area itself and the ideas it suggests to me. This isn’t necessarily a problem: My job affords me the opportunity to concentrate on this area. The problem is that as I try to strategize career-wise, I find that my strengths lie more in these ideas and less in my writing on them; I’m being recognized more for my thoughts, in other words, than for my writing. I feel in some sense that I’m taking on more of a curatorial position, building a body of work whose value lies in the sum of its pieces. I’ve thought lately that I could improve my brand by realizing those ideas in different ways: organizing a speaker’s series in my city, for example; I’m actually at the very, very, very early stages of a “book” project that I envision as a collection of images and an introductory essay — again, a work that I value for the ideas behind it and it being something nobody’s yet collected (or curated), and not something that will advance me as a writer (when I discuss this project with other writers, they’re very dismissive since, as I said, it’s not a “book” book).

I’m not quite sure what I’m asking for here, and I apologize if that’s frustrating. I guess I’m curious as to your thoughts on a path with no model in terms of form (writer, painter, filmmaker, etc.), but one guided by a defined yet intangible topic area. It seems a bit terrifying because there seems to be no firm goal to work toward — no novel or New Yorker staff position or Academy Award-winning film — other than gaining the opportunity to work in the ideas and issues and topics that interest me. And who knows how or if I could even monetize that. Am I naive to think a formless path is possible?

Your site is a real treasure. I appreciate your work on it.

Thank you the kind words and for de-lurking. I hope others like you follow suit.

As for taking the Formless Path, I don’t think you’re naive at all. When I’m with my writer friends all we talk about is the Formless Path. The Formless Path is killing us, and what’s extra infuriating is the fact that the Old Path (writer, painter, filmmaker, etc.) was ALREADY PRETTY F*CKING FORMLESS TO BEGIN WITH.

Frankly, I think the big decision facing every artist right now is not about the Nature of the Path, but what you expect to get out of the Path.

  • Do you need to write/paint/make films for a living?
  • Does the writing/painting/filmmaking need to be your identity?
  • Does the product of your creativity need to make sense to other people (i.e. my friend Dennis writes books that teach kids about famous artists)?

Your writer friends are thinking critically not creatively. Your book project doesn’t sound like a book to them. What do they know? It’s all up for grabs and there isn’t a creative professional alive who can tell you what they’re going to be doing five years from now or if they’ll be making any money doing it.

So do your book. Do your speaker’s series. Get yourself out there and collaborate and meet people and experiment and play. If you’re any good it will make sense over time, even if you have idea what to make of now.

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5 Responses to “Question: Is the Formless Path a Path?”

  1. bets July 21, 2009 at 11:31 pm #

    I strongly agree. I have certain areas in which I indulge my need to define a career path (sending queries, writing short stories and submitting them, editing my magazine). But I’m writing a novel which speaks to me, but also which may never sell. I edit my magazine–it’s a credit, sure. But I make no money (it actually costs us) . I do it more for the love of the thing. It’s on both the path and pathless sides.

    I happen to have a garage full of filmmakers outside right this very moment. No one’s getting paid (they earn collaborative hours for their own projects). They’re having a blast. But they’re also very serious about what they’re doing–far too serious to call it a hobby. No idea if anyone will ever make any money off it or any of the other projects. But something drives them, goals be damned.

  2. denniscass July 22, 2009 at 10:34 am #

    Your example about the filmmakers in the garage is exactly what I’m talking about. Read Clay Shirky’s HERE COMES EVERYBODY and it’s all about the blurring of professional and amateur.

    The hobbyist of old had almost no chance of his or her work finding an audience. The hobbyist of today is a website away from global fame (but not necessarily fortune).

    What do you call that? A hobbyjob? A jobby?

  3. bets July 22, 2009 at 11:25 am #

    Hey, jobby. I love it. Let’s go put that in the urban dictionary!!

  4. Dennis Lang July 23, 2009 at 9:48 am #

    Great conversation. Having been at this for awhile and lacking much in the way of commercial success I’m wondering more and more frequently if my own disposition–”far too serious to be a hobby”–isn’t more accurately expressed– “just a serious hobby.”

  5. librophiletransplant July 24, 2009 at 1:37 am #

    Your lurker should be an academic librarian! S/he would be able to projectile vomit creativity all over researchers’ faces, all day, every day. Say somebody comes in with an idea. A librarian can totally warp the idea and selectively choose which sources to present to the researcher and basically be the brains without having to write a stupid thesis, article, book, or whatnot.
    And yes, I’m blogging now…about moving to New York. My mom and Aunt Doris are my biggest fans.
    -Addie

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