The Chase
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As I type these words, my fingers are tingling and my palms are sweating. I’ve had these symptoms before. A lot recently.
Why the sweaty tingles? Good question. And you, my friends, deserve an answer. So do I. Truth be told, I’ve had this tingly/sweaty thing on and off for a while now. And it’s finally occurring to me that it’s not the copious amounts of Pike Place Roast that I pump through my veins at all hours of the day. No.
Maybe it’s the compelling chaos that is my current life. The juggling act at which I am continually failing. Balls are falling all over the place. Maybe it is the looming deadlines for LIFE AFTER YES? I am supposed to be writing reading group questions and an author essay. My publisher needs these things from me. Now. And I cannot bring myself to do these things. Maybe this is why the fingers are tingling and sweating. Could be.
I think I might be on to something here. But it’s not a simple matter of having things to do and not doing them. It’s the resistance. There is a reason I am not doing these things, writing these questions and this essay. I am not doing these things because these are the last things I have to do to complete my book. And maybe if I don’t do these things, there will not be a book.
Bear with me. I’m not crazy. Just suffering a moment of debilitating, crippling honesty.
I have decided that if I am going to stand up a blog about being honest in this world of ours that seemingly spins on an axis of BS, I should be honest. With you. More importantly, with me.
I am thrilled.
I am petrified.
I am both of these things at the very same time. As I type these words, I am literally living my dream. On the day I left the law firm, I penned that required departure memo to my colleagues announcing that I would be leaving. In that memo, I wrote these very words, “I am leaving to chase a persistent dream.” I wrote those words. And I meant them.
Those words, simple and true to me, ostensibly cryptic to most everyone else, said it all. I was walking away from prestige and a paycheck to chase a dream. My dream to write. And, here I am, writing. At 10:55pm when I should be snoozing. But should doesn’t have much currency when it comes up against must. So here I am. Writing. Writing words which matter. To me. And maybe, in some small way, to you.
And there is a book. The book. The story. The story of which I am maternally proud and protective. I took my time with this story. I butchered it and put it back together again. Off and on, between the pressing business of bellies and boobs and babies, for four years, I wrestled with my characters. I followed their lead. I had dreams about these characters. I still do.
And now. This story will no longer be just mine. It will no longer be that thing about which I am admittedly sheepish and a bit shy. In a matter of months, it will be yours too. It will be out there. Stacked on shelves. Flipped through. It will be read. It will be loved and liked and hated. It will no longer be just mine.
But this is what I wanted, right? Yes! I think so. Maybe. Of course. I don’t know. Of course. Of course this is what I want. I want to write books and I want people to read them. I want to teach and inspire and entertain. Of course. I wrote a book. I found an agent. I found a publisher. I have a deal. There will be a book. These are all of the reasons why I should shut up. Now. Before you boycott my unabashedly egotistical blog. This post shouldn’t exist.
But it does. You’re reading it now. And I’ll probably regret it later.
I am supposed to be strong. I am supposed to be proud. I am supposed to be cautiously optimistic. I am supposed to cross my fingers. I am supposed to do these things. And I will. Some of the time. But I can’t all of the time. Because that would be fake.
I am petrified. That the book will be a disastrous failure. That the book will be a huge success. I am petrified of it all.
But I am also thrilled. That here I am being me. Not an impostor lawyer. Not a meticulous mother. Not a blue ribbon wife. Me. Doing something that I love. Doing something that I must do. Doing something that I care about so much and so deeply, it makes my fingers tingle and my palms sweat. I am thrilled to be chasing.
But I am also petrified.











Both/and: always the reality – at least in realms that matter. LOVE, love, love that you know both – and are willing to share and express it with the rest of us. Beautiful: you.
I totally get that. I haven’t come close to finishing anything publishable like you have, but just those critique sessions in my creative writing classes were enough to tempt me to smuggle a flask into the classroom. I can’t handle it if I think of those comments — even the positive ones — as “my” words. I distance myself. Block the part of my mind that the story came from. Even harder is letting my family read my stories.
It’s good that you’re acknowledging this. And that you’re affirming even when you’re panicking. And for what it’s worth, I’m looking forward to reading your book next summer. If it’s got any of the heart and honesty in your posts, I’m sure I’ll love it.
i’m too spent to write you an appropriate response to this beautiful post of your’s….. but i just wanted to write something, so that you know you are heard.
and i will hold your hand.
I can only imagine what all these feelings and emotions are doing to you. I find it very logical that you are scared to finish, scared to see your results, scared to see how others will react. But honey, I read your post about your book, and I’m telling you right now, YOUR BOOK WILL BE A SMASHING SUCCESS. And you? You will be so damn wonderful through it all. From all that I have read here, you are smart, strong, & fantastic with words. And more words will come, I can feel it.
Tell me when the book is close to being available-I will do a review for you, I will promote the shit out of it on Twitter, w/ my IRL friends who read a ton like I do, etc. I GOT YOUR BACK, honey.
This is a great honest post. Appreciate it deeply and have experienced a similar emotional pattern with submitting my plays. Stumbled on this Rilke quote recently, ‘Without resistance, there would be no movement.’
Gorgeous, gorgeous. I can see that line as a reminder on your computer or over your desk: “I am leaving to chase a persistent dream.”
Maybe the uncomfortableness comes from not chasing any more?
Well right on. You came by today and left a nice comment on my post and here I am reading all about you and your glorious life as a lawyer turned writer chasing the dream. I love it. My sister is an attorney who abruptly left her corporate law job a year and half ago to chase her dream. But she doesn’t exactly know what the dream is….but she’s finding out.
This post really spoke to me – about the fear of failure and the fear of success and once we’ve lived our dream, then what? I have a similar problem I think….although like my sis, my dream is hard to define on certain days. I envy you for knowing what yours is….clear and true. Jump into the security of that.
Well, I have to say I will now be checking in on your blog and will await news of your published book so I can read it.
Congrats….you are living your dream already. Awesome.
I was searching for photography when I found your site. Excellent post. Thank You.