by Bad Girl (Melodie Campbell)
Everybody knows
they shouldn’t marry a writer. Mothers
the world over have made that obvious: “For Gawd Sake, never marry a marauding
barbarian, a sex pervert, or a writer.” (Or a politician, but that is my own personal
bias. Ignore me.)
But for some
reason, lots of innocent, unsuspecting people marry writers every year. Obviously, they don’t know about the (gasp!)
“Zone.” (More obviously, they didn’t
have the right mothers.)
Never mind: I’m
here to help.
I think it pays
to understand that writers aren’t normal humans: they write about people who
don’t exist and things that never happened.
Their brains work differently.
They have different needs. And in
some cases, they live on different planets (at least, my characters do, which
is kind of the same thing.)
Thing is, writers
are sensitive creatures. This can be
attractive to some humans who think that they can ‘help’ poor writer-beings (in
the way that one might rescue a stray dog.)
True, we are easy to feed and grateful for attention. We respond well to praise. And we can be adorable. So there are many reasons you might wish to marry
a writer, but here are 10 reasons why you shouldn’t:
The basics:
1. Writers are
hoarders. Your house will be filled with
books. And more books. It will be a shrine to books. The lost library of Alexandria will pale in
comparison.
2. Writers are
addicts. We mainline coffee. We’ve also been known to drink other
beverages in copious quantities, especially when together with other writers in
places called ‘bars.’
3. Writers are
weird. Crime Writers are particularly
weird (as weird as horror writers.) You will hear all sorts of gruesome
research details at the dinner table.
When your parents are there. Maybe
even with your parents in mind.
4. Writers are
deaf. We can’t hear you when we are in
our offices, pounding away at keyboards. Even if you come in the room. Even if you yell in our ears.
5. Writers are
single-minded. We think that spending
perfectly good vacation money to go to crime writing conferences like
Bouchercon is a really good idea.
Especially if there are other writers there with whom to drink
beverages.
The bad ones:
6. It may
occasionally seem that we’d rather spend time with our characters than our
family or friends. (See 9 below.)
7. We rarely sleep
through the night. (It’s hard to sleep
when you’re typing. Also, all that
coffee...)
8. Our Google Search
history is a thing of nightmares. (Don’t
look. No really – don’t. And I’m not just talking about ways to avoid
taxes… although if anyone knows a really fool-proof scheme, please email me.)
And the really
bad ones:
9. If we could have
affairs with our beloved protagonists, we probably would. (No! Did I say that out loud?)
10. We know at least
twenty ways to kill you and not get caught.
RE that last
one: If you are married to a writer,
don’t worry over-much. Usually writers
do not kill the hand that feeds them.
Most likely, we are way too focused on figuring out ways to kill our
agents, editors, and particularly, reviewers.
Yup, on all 10 counts. LOL
ReplyDeleteDonna, you make me smile.
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