Yesterday was not the best morning.
I became frustrated by the fact that my computer - in fact both of our computers - were acting up. They were acting slow and even when I got here to write the morning entry, they laughed at me with blank web pages and slowly spinning icons. My mood quickly came to match that of the computers: running from room to room I started snarling at everything and everyone.
Why? Because I could not get my morning post written and posted.
Imagine! I, the great blogger of the blogosphere, could not get my thoughts out to my adoring and waiting fans. I was trapped between the hammer of old technology and the anvil of having to run to my "job", the thing I hate to do but have to (when I really should be writing, after all).
The whole thing ate at me: all the way driving in and dropping off Na Clann at school, all the way to the office. My writing, my career, my wisdom - half done and empty.
I hope at this point you grasp the foolishness I only came to see later.
The simple reality - the reality I like to ignore - is that I am not really a writer. I write, yes. I even have some books I have published (self-published, to be fair). I certainly enjoy writing. But none of this should distract from the actual reality that is.
I am a very small fish in a very big sea. I have a core of loyal readership (thank you all very much!) but in no wise do I have some vast horde clamoring for me to express myself. My need to write is simply that: my need. It is not a requirement or a geas laid on me by someone else. Occasionally I touch the life of someone else for which I am grateful - but it is not a sure thing. And it is certainly not anything (based on actual results) that I can argue is some kind of calling from God, something I should be doing to the exclusion of all else.
And an successful author? The bright part (I suppose) is that I have sold enough to cover the cost of my hobby - but it is certainly nothing that is moving me in the direction of this high demand second writing career that I constantly see myself in.
Is it possible for me to improve? Always. Is it guaranteed that such improvement will make me a desirable author or suddenly make my blog one of the top 1,000,000? And (let us be fair) is it something that I have any proof of is a legitimate calling from God? Beyond the raw desire and occasional flashes of insight, no.
Perhaps the point of this whole incident is to remind me - gently the first time around, anyway - that my primary goal in life is not the writings I do or not do or the unseen people I touch or do not touch. Perhaps it is simply to remind me that the mood I am in - the mood of the family that sees me and the coworkers I work with - is more important to their long term memory of myself and what it says about my God than any well crafted text could ever be.
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