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Lessons I Learned from My Inner Ten Year Old

My 2020 Reflection: I wrote this almost 9 years ago, and it’s a necessary reminder to me that excuses are just obstacles you need to jump over. I hope it inspires you, as much as it inspired me to re-read this post.

It’s amazing how inspiring cleaning the house can be. So, while listening to “Jump Around” by House of Pain and sorting through old papers, boxes, and magazines, I came across my treasure of old stories and novels that I have attempted to write into completion.

And while the music played on, and the vacuum and furniture polish were tossed to the side, I read through the pages, and I thought of one story in particular. The very first book that I ever wrote was called, “A Light Burns At Midnight,” and I wrote it when I was ten years old. It was 50 pages long, handwritten. I don’t even have it anymore and I’m not really sure what happened to it. The last time I saw it, it was in the lower dresser drawer inside of a Lion King folder that I used for school. It’s been years since I’ve seen it, but every time I look through old stories I think of it.

At ten years old, I thought my idea for “A Light Burns At Midnight” was pretty good. It was about a young girl moving to a new neighborhood and discovering that a candle goes on every night at midnight in the empty house across the street. Of course, within the high school and town, there are all sorts of stories going around about it being a ghost. So, being the Nancy Drew-inspired writer I was at the time, I had the young girl bring together a team of (new) friends to investigate the light coming from the house across the street.

So, coming back to the present, having successfully distracted myself from house cleaning, I thought about the significance of this story and why it stays with me, still today. In recent years, I have learned very quickly that one of my biggest struggles with writing is finishing my stories. I often become my own worst enemy and rewrite my story when I am not even done with it. What happens is that I end up losing my motivation and scrap the novel or short story entirely.

So, what was so different about me as a ten-year-old?

  • I just wanted to see how the story would play out.

At the time, I just liked my idea and wanted to see where the story would go. I didn’t focus on whether or not it was publishable. I didn’t focus on whether or not people would like it and if it would be worth finishing. I just enjoyed myself and enjoyed the process of telling a story (remember what that’s like?).

  • What self doubt?

No, I didn’t have a Master’s Degree in Creative Writing. Nope, I wasn’t published yet. I just liked to write. I didn’t even think about those other things that seem to get in the way now. I just wrote.

  • I just wanted to finish the story.

Towards the end of my little novel, I began to lose my energy. It would have been easy for me to push it aside and say, “I’ll go back to it later.” But I didn’t. I kept at it, even when my handwriting got sloppy and my hand got tired. I kept at it until I finished it. And I did. I even wrote, “The End.”

  • I wrote with a pen and paper and that was fine.

I didn’t have a computer growing up. Actually, up until I went to college, I would have to go to the library to finish typed assignments. So, for me at ten years old, I didn’t think twice about not having a computer and having to handwrite my stories. I especially didn’t say, “Well, I can’t write till I have the right equipment.” I wanted to write, so I wrote.

  • I didn’t let excuses to get in the way.

I know, I know, at ten years old, what type of excuses would I have to not write and be creative? I was still at the age where “playing pretend” was okay, so of course, writing and creativity would be okay. Well, now that I’m a bit older , and I have responsibilities, things to worry about, expectations to meet, and everything else you can think of, I have all kinds of reasons to not write. But most importantly, if you want to write, you can’t let excuses get in your way. I didn’t then, and I shouldn’t now.

So, what did I learn about my ten-year-old self? She had a lot of wisdom, back then, that’s for sure. Many years later, I have a lot to still learn about writing, but too often, I let my obstacles get in the way. Whether that’s self-doubt, responsibilities, the degrees I don’t have, the publications I haven’t yet obtained, or the right equipment…they all serve to be barriers standing before me, daring me to jump the hurdle and go for the finish line.

My inspiration came from the ten-year-old I was once was and still hope to be. My advice? Be creative today. Get in touch with your inner ten-year-old. Write for the fun of it. Remember what that’s like?

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5 thoughts on “Lessons I Learned from My Inner Ten Year Old

  1. I am not a writer. I could, however, identify significantly with what you wrote, here. I think as adults we are far too bound by our own rules and expectations. A return to the state of mind of a child is a refreshing way to be.

  2. Thank you for your response to my post!! And yes, you are so right..the rules and expectations just seem to bog us all down and take away creative urges! I'd love creative approaches to be from that of our child self!

  3. I can totally relate to how you felt when you found that old stuff. I had a similar experience a couple months ago, when I found an old CD-ROM full of stories and essays I'd written as an early teenager. That was back before high school and college. You know, before all the creativity was bashed out of me (I went for a journalism major, so yeah…creativity, dead).

    But I've been trying to get back into creative writing. You're absolutely right…there's a lot we can learn from our younger selves, especially when it comes to just doing things because they're fun and not worrying about the end result.

    And I think your 10-year-old self’s idea for “A Light Burns At Midnight” sounds pretty interesting.

  4. Rob,

    Thank you for responding to my post! It's amazing what rediscovering your younger creative self can do – – and how much energy and creativity you realize that you had back then!

    Thanks for the compliment on my idea too! 🙂 Wouldn't it be cool if one day I published that book? My inner ten year old would be shouting for joy! 🙂

    I like looking back on the old stuff for nostalgic reasons and to remind me of what's still there…

    Thanks for the follow too! (And I'm following yours too!)

  5. Hi! It sounds like something I would do. I have a few journals that I have written in through the years. Though I am missing some others due to my divorce I lost a lot of them that I had when I was much younger. I write a lot about my personal life, very little story's. I tried and I have tried many times but I tend to lose interest and move on. (shaking my head). Maybe one day I will but who the heck knows with me.

    By the way, I am following you through Voiceboks.Com blog hop! When you get the chance I would love for you to stop by my page and check it out.

    Have a wonderful day!
    Kirsten
    http://www.theemtmommy.com

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