Irving started to write about the same time as he started to wrestle, and eventually made the connection between the two pursuits. Passion, fear and anger are fuel for a writer as much as they are for a wrestler; and just like a wrestler a writer must be able to manage them. He learned how do do this on the mat first through repetition. Through the hours of practice on the mat. He goes on to say that as a wrestler, you...
accept the responsibility of learning a small detail until it becomes second nature. Until a move or a response to someone else’s body becomes instinctive. It isn’t instinctive. It’s a learned process. But it has to be as quick as something instinctive if you’re going to be any good. I was disciplined at that before I became disciplined as a writer. And it helped me.
Irving relates the necessity of a wrestler to constantly repeat his movements over and over to the necessity of the writer to constantly revise. Wrestling taught him the stamina for constant rewriting.
I am thinking of Irving these days as I lay down my rough first draft of the Walls book. Quite frankly, most of what I’ve written is horrible. My experiences overseas were rich, and my notebooks are full of delicious details, but my prose so far is weak and my narrative disjointed. I know that the beauty, if there is to be any, will come later through rewriting. I have a long way to go and I get exhausted thinking about it. I could use a little of the wrestler’s stamina right about now.
2 comments:
After reading your blog re: John Irving, I'm reminded of a phrase that I often say to myself, "Repetition is the mother of all skill." If you want to be a good runner, you have to run all the time. The same, I imagine, applies to writing and wrestling.
I've read Irving's "The Imaginary Girlfriend." Considering your wrestling and writing background, I'd be surprised if you haven't read it. But if that's the case, I suggest you do. It's a memoir that focuses on the subject matter in the Enright interview. I haven't listened to it, but I'm going to see if I can find it.
Forge on with your writing. I'm sure it's not as bad as you think. You're probably just in a bit of a funk.
Jeff
I missed Irving in Calgary--it was sold out right away.
Good for you admitting you're struggling. I get most of my inspiration from hearing about people struggling--it is easy to identify with and I suspect those who don't struggle aren't trying too hard.
Great post
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