Everyone lies about writing. They lie about how easy it is or how hard it was. They perpetuate a romantic idea that writing is some beautiful experience that takes place in an architectural room filled with leather novels and chai tea. They talk about their ‘morning ritual’ and how they ‘dress for writing’ and the cabin in Big Sur where they go to ‘be alone’—blah blah blah. No one tells the truth about writing a book. Authors pretend their stories were always shiny and perfect and just waiting to be written. The truth is, writing is this: hard and boring and occasionally great but usually not. Even I have lied about writing. I have told people that writing this book has been like brushing away dirt from a fossil. What a load of shit. It has been like hacking away at a freezer with a screwdriver.

I wrote this book after my kids went to sleep. I wrote this book on the subways and on airplanes and in between setups while I shot a television show. I wrote this book from scribbled thoughts I kept in the Notes app on my iPhone and conversations I had with myself in my own head before I went to sleep. I wrote it ugly and in pieces…

…Most authors liken the struggle of writing to something mighty and macho, like wrestling a bear. Writing a book is nothing like that. It is a small, slow crawl to the finish line.

Amy Poehler, in her preface to “Yes Please” (via thearetical)

One of the ten trillion reasons to love Amy Poehler. Reading YES, PLEASE now and loving it! (No surprise.)

Okay, see, yes. *This* I can agree with.

(via delilahsdawson)

Been there, done that, am doing it again right now.

(And like picking a scab, it’s so great when it comes off just right after all the irritation and annoyance and sometimes downright pain. It was C.S. Lewis who said that, not me.)

(via petermorwood)

Writing a book is an exercise in persistence, and in dragging order kicking and screaming out of chaos. Piece by resisting piece. Nothing heroic or romantic about it. The persistence is what counts, and what wins the day in the end. Period.

(via dduane)

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