Why Even Bother?
No. 20: Pointing your way... why I write, shareworthy links and a surprise in the footer

Hey! Thanks for reading issue 20 of my newsletter.
Today’s issue is a day late because I exchanged the writing time I’d set aside for it to usher for last night’s Short+Sweet Essex Film Festival.
I watched some excellent short films from UK-based and international filmmakers, and if any of my favourites get shared online I’ll be sure to link them in a future edition.
Also, compared to my other newsletters, this one is going to look a bit spare. As alluded to in a previous edition and in the essay I’ve linked below, I want to divert some of the time I put into this newsletter elsewhere. My goal is to share more personal and fictional stories with you in future.
✍️ Writing Report

Why Even Bother?
Many things bemuse me, but nothing bemuses me more than those who met my younger self and found him so likeable that they remained his friend long enough to meet the man he is today. Having known the boy so well, I find it hard not to think he was deserving of at least some of the scorn he reserved for himself.
However, for all his many faults that I struggle to forgive, I must lend him credit where it’s due. He had an unshakeable belief in his own writing abilities. As much as he loathed who he was, he was utterly in love with what he could do.
In life, he was quiet and terminally gloomy. On the page, however, he was confrontational and confident. At the time, his chosen form was hip-hop lyrics, emulating the rappers he often had on loop. And like his (ill-chosen) heroes, he could brag about his verbosity in one song and then be thoughtfully introspective in the next. He could shine a light on the darkest corners of his mind, and that perpetually nervous child got to be a tragic romantic figure.
Many who read his songs said they were good, but they wanted to hear them. Only he couldn’t perform very well. His voice could not match the confidence of his pen. There was no joy in the performance, either. This wasn’t the right path for my younger self.
His inability to perform his own lyrics didn’t hold him back, though. Blissful denial played some part in this. A greater part, however, was played by his best friend at the time.
Whenever he finished typing up a song, he printed it out on cream-coloured paper and folded it to fit inside the pocket of his school blazer. Then, the following school day was spent eagerly waiting for it to end. Once the final bell rang, he and his best friend would meet under the willow tree beside the school gates. There, he would share with her his newest verses. At the time, her enthusiasm for his words was all he had needed to feel content in his craft.
Back then, his talent was about the only thing he truly believed in. Perhaps if life had been less miserable, he wouldn’t have bothered trying his hand at writing at all. He might have stuck to filling his hours with video games and television.
When did that young writer lose his stubborn belief in his abilities and become the ever-doubting perfectionist that is me?
🐦 Twitter Treat

🔗 Links
Was It Ever Possible For One Person To Read Every Book Ever Written (in English)?
Genres Are Historical and Cultural, Not Scientific (why rigid rules for genres never quite work)
Hobbits and the Hard Right: How Fantasy Inspires Italy’s Potential New Leader
‘A new way of life’: the Marxist, post-capitalist, green manifesto captivating Japan
Why Jaguars are an Avengers Level Threat (and cheetahs are not)
“If you want your mussy to look like it just got back from a Donald Duckkake party …”
👋 Thanks For Reading!
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