It helps to stop worrying about what you are and concentrate on what you do. If you think of a poet as a person with some special qualifications that come by nature (or divine favor), you are likely to make one of two mistakes about yourself. If you think you’ve got what it takes, you may fail to learn what you need to know in order to use whatever qualities you may have. On the other hand, if you think you do not have what it takes, you may give up too easily, thinking it is useless to try. A poet is someone—you, me, anyone—who writes poems. That question out of the way, now we can learn to write poems better.
Judson Jerome, The Poet’s Handbook, Chap. 1 (“From Sighs and Groans to Art”)
The lesson I draw from this is that doing stuff is a better means of figuring out if I’ve got what it takes. Because surely, ultimately you want to focus your efforts on what you in fact can do?
Judson Jerome, The Poet’s Handbook, Chap. 1 (“From Sighs and Groans to Art”)
The lesson I draw from this is that doing stuff is a better means of figuring out if I’ve got what it takes. Because surely, ultimately you want to focus your efforts on what you in fact can do?