Some of you may know the now famous Hemingway quote about rewriting. –>
Interviewer: How much rewriting do you do?
Hemingway: It depends. I rewrote the ending of Farewell to Arms, the last page of it, 39 times before I was satisfied.
Interviewer: Was there some technical problem there? What was it that had stumped you?
Hemingway: Getting the words right.
(Ernest Hemingway, “The Art of Fiction,” The Paris Review Interview, 1956)
(Source)
Unfortunately some of us, myself included, take this advice and go crazy.
I mean like stark, raving, sitting in your underpants at 3am typing out your 7th draft of an email to you mother asking for the recipe for the delicious scones you ate as a child, crazy. And that’s just not good.
Perfection Can Be Bad
I know this because I am a perfectionist when it comes to writing. If I don’t control myself I will agonize over every single word. Then I will change it. Then change it again.
I spent an entire semester writing a short story for my Western Literature class. I must have rewritten the first paragraph at least a dozen times. Eventually I realized that my changes are not making the story better they are only making it different.
And we all know Einstein’s definition of insanity.
By the time I realized that I was insane the semester was winding down and I didn’t have the time that I wanted to spend on the rest of the story.
The result was an awesome hard hitting opening that quickly dissolved into bland prose.
The Truth
If I would have just learned to curb my voracious rewriting I would have ended up with a much better over all story.
When you are working with tight deadlines like the end of a semester or Wednesday, if that’s when you need to publish your post, perfection is unattainable. Most of us just don’t have the time.
Maybe an incredibly dedicated full time blogger could crank out one or two perfect posts a week but not indefinitely. Eventually the effort would take its toll and they would burn out.
Relax
We all need to realize that every blog post doesn’t need to be a masterpiece. I’m not saying you should single-cheek it. But every blog post cannot be Farewell to Arms.
Should you strive to write the best post ever? Absolutely. But be realistic. If you have already have all the information and your point is made the just click publish. Let it go. It is fine like it is.
Holla Back
Are you a chronic rewriter? What do you do to keep it from crippling you? Or do you think I am totally wrong? Let me know in the comments.
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Comments
So true about perfection. Reminds me of when I was in school and I’d have a paper due. Sometimes the one’s I worked the hardest on were the ones that got C’s and the one’s I quickly did at the last minute were the A+’s. Oh the irony!
…I would have posted this comment 5 mins. ago if I wasn’t dwelling on how to make it perfect.
:-) Ha.
So true about the papers. I have heard people say the same thing for blog posts.
Thanks Abel.
Rob!
This made me laugh because I JUST spent 15 min trying to think through how I was going to respond to your comment on my own site. Ha!
I have to constantly remind myself to let go of the perfectionistic paralysis and just “ship it”. If it isn’t perfect, it isn’t the end of the world. And maybe leaving it a little un-perfect is better anyways. Un-perfect can be a little bit more personable and invite conversation. Un-perfect allows me to get 50 things done instead of just 1. Don’t get me wrong. It is a struggle some days to just relax and let go but it is for the best.
Great reminder. Thanks!
–kk
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I find that a couple of beers (or 5) takes the perfectionist right out:). I agree that people should strive for a great post but not get too hung up on making it perfect.
The only thing that’s really something that should never be skipped is spell and grammar checker (which becomes especially important after the beers).
Ha! Thanks Angie. :-)
I’m not one for liquid courage so I’ll take your word for it.
Good point about the grammar. That is something that does need to be perfect or at least as close as possible.
Thanks for your comment.
Rob