Writer

AUGUST, A MONTH TO TAKE A BREATH?

If July was all about travel and community, from my MFA residency in Tacoma, WA to my family reunion in southern Oregon, August is all about staying home and walking in the forest. Even if that is not exactly how the month has gone.

While I did walk in the forest this month—we had a few visits from a Great Horned Owl—the past four weeks contained much more activity than merely idle strolls. The days filled with guests, a mural festival, a brews cruise, concerts, and caring for my mother as she recovers from knee surgery. I also got back to work on my Armenian family manuscript.

Work: On a Zoom meeting with a group of writers, one of them talked about making a mid-life career change. Writing became her new career. Not a passion or a vocation, though writing might also be those things to her, but a career. She was being deliberate in pursuing her new career, in carving out a place for her writing in the world, in the paying market world. And her efforts were, shall we say, paying off. Writing is not a hobby for me, she said.

Writing is not a hobby for me either. Though neither is it a career, certainly not one that comes with a paycheck. Writing for me is the thing I can’t not do. The thing I must do, which is a less clunky way of putting it, but the double negative more honestly conveys what writing is to me, what writing, or not writing, feels like. A hollow space in my chest waiting to be filled with the pressure of my fingertips on the keyboard. The whirring of gears in my head waiting to be put to use in the form of words flowing, or plopping or dripping, onto the page. The spin of despair in my gut slowed by the attention to story.

Is writing a career if you aren’t getting paid? Or is that a vocation? Or even an identity? The thing you are because you do the thing. The thing without which you are not yourself.

Wonder: This month I’m wondering, again, if I should move my blog to Substack, a newsletter platform with content ranging from straight newsletters to blogs to literary journals accepting submissions. Besides sending out my blog to subscribers, as I do now, on Substack’s website my blog would be more visible and easier to find by a wider range of readers. Substack has an active writing community and I’d like to be a part of that scene, I think.

I hesitate for a few reasons. One, I have great affection for my blog which started on my then brand-new website in October 2015. My blog and my website were public declarations: I am a writer, and they helped me feel like a writer even when the writing was a struggle. Two, Substack’s tagline is “a new economic engine for culture.” While writers can choose to keep their newsletters/blogs free to subscribers, they can also monetize content. Substack is free to use; they make their money by taking a cut from writers who have monetized all or part of their Substack content. I’m not seeking income with my blog but connection and conversation. So is Substack the right platform for me? Three, I worry that some of my current subscribers will feel abandoned, and/or won’t take the time (we’re all short of time!) to subscribe to a new platform. Finally, moving my blog to Substack is yet another thing that would take time away from the writing of my Armenian family book, essays, and this blog.

What do you think—blog on my website or Substack? Any insights or concerns I haven’t considered?

Windows: This month ended with new windows to gaze out of while boating in the San Juan Islands on our 19’ C-Dory.

8 Comments

  1. Heidi Beierle

    I’d subscribe to your Substack. Love the pros and cons. Been meaning to start a Substack for a while myself but haven’t…yet.
    You can read and comment on Substack and be part of a community there without publishing there per se. If you want it for the long game in promoting your book, it’s a good way to build your platform.
    Websites rank better when you make regular changes, like posting a blog does. When people check out your site it’s nice to have the content there.
    Bandwidth/time has been what keeps me from Substack at the moment, but I’m also trying to work out keeping track of different channels. It feels like Substack could be a complement to what you’re already doing if you felt moved to add it.

    • Laura Rink

      Aw thanks! And thanks for your thoughts on Substack. I think it’s becoming clear what I need to do, it is just the doing that is holding me up.

  2. April Smith

    I don’t know anything about Substack, but could you put it on both?

    To me, a career is something you have to do for money. A passion is something you do because you love it- sometimes for money, sometimes not. Sometimes something is both. I feel passionate about what I do, and I do it for both pay (as my job) and unpaid enjoyment (volunteering at the twin’s school).

    • Laura Rink

      I think it’s considered bad form to post on both platforms, but I’m going to look into that some more. I agree with your definitions of a career versus a passion. And it’s such a fulfilling life when your career and your passion are similar. Thanks for commenting/1

  3. RICHARD LITTLE

    I appreciate your Substack pros and cons. Let’s talk more when we get together… soon!
    ~ D

    • Laura Rink

      Thanks for reading. Talk soon!

  4. LINDA QUINBY LAMBERT

    Blog v. Substack. I’m thinking, if you’re most interested in writing and are interested in being part of the writing comunity that Substack engenders, Substack might be best.
    But blogging formats give you more creative control and diversity of presentation. I don’t think you’d lose audience. We’d move with you!

    • Laura Rink

      Linda, Thanks for your thoughts! I appreciate your insights.

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