You Are Uniquely Qualified

You Are Uniquely Qualified

Alan Watt

Table of Contents

write 100 words a day
win a Tuscany retreat

explore upcoming
writing workshops

finish the day with a completed outline

It seems it should go without saying that you are uniquely qualified to write your memoir. And yet, the voices lurk at the edges of your consciousness: Who do I think I am? Am I a fraud? A wannabe? We live in a culture that forces us to mistrust our deepest impulses. We tend to mistake practicality for wisdom and statistics for the truth.

When I met with the publishers of my first novel (who had just paid me an obscene amount of money) I was flown to New York and took the elevator to the top of a skyscraper to a room where seven publishing executives sat. They asked where I had studied creative writing: “Was it Iowa Writers’ workshop? Irvine Writing Program?”

I hesitated before responding sheepishly that I didn’t really study anywhere, at least not formally. Frankly, I just read a lot, took writing seminars, and wrote a shit ton in my bedroom for over a decade.

Well, the room fell so quiet you could hear a cow fart in Saskatchewan. Imagine their dismay that they’d squandered their precious advance on some unschooled Philistine.

I don’t think it is essential that we endure a Darwinian vetting process to be given permission to write our truth. Whether conscious or not, our culture throws up all sorts of intellectual firewalls to dissuade or silence us.

Release Your True Voice

There is a disparity of middle-aged white male privileged writers whose stories lead to the perception that these books reflect our collective reality. While the gap is narrowing, the disparity is real. Whenever I listen to discussions of literature on the radio, we seem expected to bring our sophisticated minds rather than our wild animal selves, our emotional curiosity, our spiritual hunger. We are expected to worship at the shrine of consensus, but one’s truth is by definition anomalous, even subversive.

The irony is that what the marketplace is looking for is You. Your true voice. You must let go of your desire to appeal to some godlike patriarchy. Dismiss the notion of gatekeepers staring down their spectacles at you, deciding whether or not your life is worth telling.

You hold all the power.

What makes your story compelling isn’t the outward accomplishments that you have achieved (that’s autobiography). But, rather, your willingness to write honestly and authentically about your inward struggle.

 

Learn more about marrying the wildness of your imagination to the rigor of structure in The 90-Day NovelThe 90-Day Memoir, or The 90-Day Screenplay workshops.

Alan Watt

Writing Coach

Alan Watt is a bestselling novelist and filmmaker, and recipient of numerous awards including France’s Prix Printemps. He is the founder of alanwatt.com (formerly L.A. Writers’ Lab). His books on writing include the National Bestseller The 90-Day Novel, plus The 90-Day Memoir, The 90-Day Screenplay, and The 90-Day Rewrite. His students range from first-time writers to bestselling authors and A-list screenwriters. His 90-day workshops have guided thousands of writers to transform raw ideas into compelling stories by marrying the wildness of their imaginations to the rigor of story structure.
Alan Watt with L.A. hills behind

unlock the story within

Join my newsletter for writing ideas and news on upcoming workshops.

Related posts

creative writing

What is Creative Writing? How to Shape Ideas into Art

Creative writing invites writers to move beyond facts and formulas, using imagination and craft to shape ideas into compelling stories....

how to start a story

How to Start a Story: Crafting Openings That Captivate

In the best stories, the reader’s attention keeps in sync with the rhythm of the prose. It’s like a snowball...

stream-of-consciousness

Stream-of-Consciousness Writing: Tips for Creative Expression

There’s rhythm in prose. The rhythm might be intentionally terse, like a Charles Bukowski novel, or dense and languid like...