You have to write around life. Sometimes someone is sick. Sometimes your government is sick. You can still find 15 minutes every day to do the work you love. What you can’t do is to retreat into silence. I don’t know who wins if you do that, but it certainly isn’t you.
I’ve tried to comfort myself lately with the thought that, given the immense sweep of geological time, humanity is barely a finger snap and all human misery will soon be forgotten, but somehow that hasn’t helped.
So today I’ll tell you what I’ve been doing on my summer vacation, by which I mean since I finished the first draft of my novel in October.
I knew I had to forget the book I’ve been living with since time began so I could someday return to it fresh. I turned instead to the numerous scraps, starts, and dead ends I’ve accumulated in my files. Honoré de Balzac would call these scraps & etc. evidence of my “itch to scribble.” I call what I’m doing now my Word Purge.
The first thing I did was to consolidate all the fragments in one file where I could keep an eye on them, even if it was just a teensy idea (John Muir’s “An Adventure with a Dog” set in space) or a reminder about a mental-health professional I met with twice and fired (Sandy the Self-Absorbed Psychotherapist).
The second thing was to examine the longer pieces in their individual files and see if any of them sparked anything or should I give up and shut them down. One of them must’ve been channeling Cthulhu because it immediately called me. It was 909 words long and I had abandoned it in 2022. I took it up again in December and I am surprised to say that I now have 4,200 words. Will this be my second novel? Will it be about a dog in space or a tough-love look at a man in the wrong profession? William Zinnser said it best: “Don’t worry about labels. We’ll figure out what it is after you’ve written it.”
I’ll return to my first novel on Feb. 1. And I’ll keep scribbling, no matter what happens in the world.

Tango will never retreat into silence.