Writers are crazy, and I’m crazier than most

I’m about to share some scary shit. Some truths about myself that I’ve been too scared to share for years. Maybe decades, honestly.
And yet if there’s one thing I know after thirty years of writing, it’s that you have to tell the truth. You have to tell the truth in your writing and you have to write things that bite and sting.
Well, here’s the truth: I want to be the greatest writer ever.
Yikes, did I really say that out loud?
Crazy, right? More importantly, just why the hell did I publish that?
It’s scary putting yourself out there, but I want to say some things. I’m not even sure where I’m going with this. It’s like a novel: you don’t know where it’ll end. You simply write it. One sentence, one paragraph, one page at a time. You let it flow out of you. Or explode out of you. Or dribble out in tiny drops as you squeeze the tube with all your might, screaming and cursing in the night.
But no matter the pace, or how long it takes, the story comes together.
Let’s continue then, with this honest post as well. I want to be the greatest writer ever. There, I’ve said it a second time. See? Not an accident. Not a fluke.
And since we’re sharing truths… here’s a second truth: writers are crazy.
They really are. Also musicians, artists, and professional athletes. They’re crazy, too.
But let’s stick with writers. They are what I know. Hell, even better, let’s stick with me.
I literally wrote, “I want to be the greatest writer ever.”
How nuts is that? What kind of madness abides inside my head? What kind of person would say such a thing? (I can’t blame youth. I’m a touch over 44. Not some nineteen-year-old mouthing off in a college English lit class to impress the ladies.)
Want to know something scarier? I was pretty much thinking this thought at the age of 8 or 9. That’s the first time I slammed a novel shut and thought, “This book is terrible. I know I could do better.”
And the craziest thing about this story of my childhood is that I actually tried. Little old Stan, still in elementary school, started scribbling a story in pencil in his spiral-bound, school notebook. I remember it perfectly. And somewhere, out in some of my boxes in the garage, I still have it. Twenty pages or so. (Want to know something crazier? I think in my wildest dreams I imagine those pages being held in some museum someday, with literary geniuses studying them and trying to dissect them. It’s why I’ve never tossed them. It’s also further proof that I’m crazy, but I’ve already admitted that.)
I know no museum will ever care about the scribbles of some kid. And I also know I’ll never matter enough to be considered among the greatest. But I want to be, and that’s the damned truth.
That’s probably the greatest truth of my life. It’s my North Star. My beacon I’ve been moving toward my entire life, even when I veer or slow.
Back to my twenty-page story above, I didn’t finish it, but even at the age of eight or nine, a small part of my soul (or something) told me I was meant to do this. That I could be great. That indeed, my one true desire was to be the greatest writer ever (though I must never admit this to anyone).
What nine-year-old says such a thing? How can you feel (or be haunted by) such a thing at such a young age?
Let’s return to the writers are crazy part of this post. Let’s broaden things a bit. Because if I’m going to admit to being crazy, then I damn sure want some company in whatever boat I’ve shoved off from shore on.
Let’s start with Ernest Hemingway. A hell of a writer, but also a man who volunteered for war as an ambulance driver (where he was wounded), a man who married four times, and a man who survived two plane crashes in two days. Yes, I’m saying he had a plane crash on one day. Then decided to fly again the next day. And he crashed the second day as well. He also once shot himself in the calves while wrestling with a shark (Google it) and committed suicide with a shotgun at the age of 61.
I’m going to say that Ernest Hemingway, who’s considered one of America’s greatest writers, makes a pretty compelling case for proving that writers are crazy. But I could easily point out a dozen other authors to add to the ledger.
And we’ve all heard the theme of how much most writers drink, correct? “Psychology Today” even had an article in it titled, “Why Do Writers Drink So Much?” That article listed roughly twenty big-name authors.
So, if you’ll grant me that most writers are crazy (and/or drunks), we’ll get this show back on the road. Where were we? Oh, yeah. Just write one true sentence. And writers are crazy.
Here’s another one: Writing is a madness. It’s a disease. It’s a curse.
That was three, but I’ll stand by them.
I’ve learned that you can’t really run from this calling. It ruins your showers. Your bedtimes. Your conversations.
Writing afflicts your soul. It eats at you in the darkest parts of night.
When I’m not writing, I’m miserable. My conscience won’t stop pestering. Sometimes whispering. Sometimes screaming and shaking me. But he (or she) always says the same thing: You should be writing.
Also, when I’m not writing, my head goes into dark places. At the worst of times, it can plummet to scary depths. I’ll ask myself, “What’s the meaning of life? Is this all there is? There has to be more.”
My writing mania plagues me unabated.
I’ll grab books to read because they are some of my greatest escapes. But I can’t read for long. My head whispers, “You should be writing.”
There’s no getting away from it. Not a day goes by when my head doesn’t say, “You should be writing.”
Writing is a madness. It’s a disease. It’s a curse.
I’ve come to accept the three sentences above.
I believe them to be true, and if you’re afflicted with the calling to be a writer, I’m confident you agree.
But writing has a flip side. It can be the greatest high in the world. I’ve gotten so into the zone of writing a story that I will lose all track of time. I will enter an almost fictional world, where I’m dodging bullets or chasing down enemies. I have no idea what my opponent will do. Or even what my main character will do. But I’m there. I’m watching this movie and excited to see where it will go. And I don’t want to stop it. I don’t want to exit this world.
I don’t think about food or time or really anything. The concept of time disappears.
Crazy, right?
There are also times I try to write and it’s like I jump into my desk chair, remembering the day before when I wrote for hours and was really into the story (right in the middle of that firefight or fistfight). But I’m not sitting in that space machine anymore.
It’s like I’m a pathetic, helpless worm, without arms or legs or eyes. Do worms have eyes? Hell if I know.
But I’m helpless. And I’m not in some timezone where the story rushes through my fingers. Instead, I’m sitting on the hard metal seat of a 1940s tractor. It’s raining and freezing cold, a whipping wind gusting across the land, cutting my face. And the tractor won’t start. And after screaming in rage, I look down and realize it’s up on a jack, one of its wheels leaning against a fence, the tire flat. No, actually the tire is rotted, I note upon closer inspection.
And holy shit. There are wires hanging out the side of the engine. Some asshole thief has stolen the electronic ignition and distributor cap in the middle of the night.
These times when you struggle to write a single sentence can be as maddening as when you’re not creating at all. You’re sitting in the chair, chasing your “calling” and trying to do what you’re meant to do in life, but the muse won’t cooperate.
So what I’m saying is that you’re miserable on those days when you chase your dream, but the words won’t come.
And you’re also miserable on the days when you don’t write and you run from your dream.
Writing is madness, remember?
It can be infuriating. Like, if you’re meant to be a writer, if you’re destined to be the greatest, then why is it so hard? Why aren’t you a natural?
I think the answer to this question is that nothing in life comes easy. Maybe all those sports icons practice and work harder than we know, right? And maybe greats, such as Hemingway, who marry four times and shoot themselves at the age of 61 have struggled more than we know, right?
I’ve been chasing this dream for a long time. I will spare you the story.
But I eventually completed my first successful book after 12 years of total agony. It’s about a Marine sniper who gets betrayed by his government after completing a Top Secret mission (Sold Out — Nick Woods Book 1). It still sells well, and I’ve written three more books in that series. (The fifth one drops in a few months.) Yay, Stan.
![Sold Out (Nick Woods Book 1) by [Stan R. Mitchell]](https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/hostedimages/1644511749i/32557247.jpg)
Writing has tons of ups and downs, but about half of the time, I actually think I’m going to make a boatload of money. I’m driven as hell and my friends will tell you I’m as determined and stubborn as anyone you’ll ever meet.
On paper, I at least have a shot.
Desire? Check.
Writing degree? Check.
Typing speed? I can type faster than a cheetah with a rocket on his ass.
But on other days, I think of just how many writers have tried this gig. This isn’t the first time a tractor has plowed this field. It’s a community lot, and it’s been plowed and worked for at least a couple hundred years. It’s depleted of any good soil. The land is exhausted and consumed. There’s little incentive to plow the dry, parched earth.
And that’s assuming you get the tractor running.
And that’s further assuming you don’t look across the land, and then to your left and right, and notice the literally thousands of fellow writers staring at their own tractors in the pre-dawn darkness. Some look desperate and crazy. Some look determined. Some look broken.
These men and women in this field have been doing this for decades, and there is no excitement or hype or high energy here. Not on this community lot.
To be lucky enough to do this as a full-time gig is possibly one of the greatest things in the world. To attempt to get into the zone every day — for a full day — instead of dealing with the day job and all the rest of life’s interruptions? That’s heaven.
I know because I’ve been there. For almost two years.
Back in 2013, I made a lot of money one year. More than six figures, or just a tad over $100,000. In my hometown of Knoxville, if you can make a hundred thousand dollars in a year doing what you love (i.e., not a day job), then you’ve done something.
Making that kind of money in a single year from writing is beyond-words-awesome. And I somehow did that when I only had a couple of books published. In something I can only describe as magic, the books went viral, the fire burned hot, and I made great money. (It was mostly from that Marine Sniper book, called “Sold Out,” which you should totally go check out.)
But with just two books at the time, I lacked the inventory to keep it going. So the throngs of readers moved on to pastures with more sustenance.
I’ve continued almost every day since then believing they’ll return. You don’t quit when you’re hungry. Nor when you’re crazy.
Back when the money was good, I learned another painful truth to this crazy dream: it can all end tomorrow. A drought can arrive. And that drought may last for years. The throngs may not return.
I still don't know what happened. All I know is one day I was on top of the world and the next day I wasn’t. The sales slowed, the fear rose, and eventually, my career died. It became a hobby on paper; a life-or-death pursuit in reality.
I’ve worked so hard since 2013. And I’m a 100x better author now than I was then. Best of all, I’m super proud to have written eleven books. Some big-name authors don’t even do that. (Margaret Mitchell, Gone With the Wind. One book.) (J.D. Salinger, The Catcher In the Rye. One book.)
Hell, maybe I should’ve stopped at one, too? hahaha. Okay, kidding. I think.
Man, I really am crazy. (And I can’t even put this on on the Marine Corps. The details of my military career.)

Every writer needs a schtick. Some writers craft lines that are exquisite and supple. You read them because they seduce and lure you forward, page-by-page. Some writers blast you with a foghorn. Or put a dozen twists in a book.
The only schtick (or gimmick/skill) that I have is brevity. A couple of my books barely top a hundred pages. But they work. At least according to the reviews. (Hell, my character study/motivational book about Obama is like 50 pages.)
![Number 44: The traits and characteristics that carried Barack Obama to the top by [Stan R. Mitchell]](https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/hostedimages/1644511749i/32557249.jpg)
I learned brevity in journalism school. And in ten years of newspaper writing after graduation. You only had a small amount of space in the newspaper. You damn well better make good use of it.
And that brings me to my second skill. I hate boring books. Can I say that again? I HATE boring books. Even those with exquisite and supple writing. That kind of writing can work for a page or two, but something needs to happen. Blood needs to flow. Relationships need to start. Or relationships need to end.
This is the 21st Century. We live in a world of tweets, Vines, and TikToks. You can’t be screwing around and padding your books with fluff.
I firmly believe this is the formula. And it’s one I try to follow. I also firmly believe that these things are going to make me boatloads of money.
Of course, I’ve also admitted to being crazy, so there’s that.
But part of me just knows that tremendous success is going to happen.
Call it confidence. Call it madness. It’s probably a bit of both.
Writers are crazy, and I’m crazier than most.
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About me: I write fast-paced novels. No, I mean blistering fast. With great suspense & twists. Also prior #USMC with Combat Action Ribbon. Books are located here: http://amzn.to/3p6lAnQ. I also discuss foreign policy at https://stanrmitchell.substack.com.
