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Every writer needs an editor. Rough drafts are rough, and writers need another set of eyes to create something beautiful and meaningful. 

We need this in life, as well.

Each of us needs an editor, someone we trust enough to tell us what needs to be revised about the story we are living…

Last March, around the time the river (and beer) in Chicago were turning green, and the leprechauns had replaced Cupid in the seasonal section at Target, I was stealing a quiet hour on a Saturday afternoon. I lay on the couch, reading Father Fiction by Don Miller, when the idea for a blog post hit me.

I sat upright. I grabbed my phone to record the idea. And I told my wife I was going to write a post about how important it is for people to be assured they are strong.

She looked at me and told me it was a horrible idea.

She does that. A lot.

She told me some people do need to hear they are strong, but other people know they’re strong—they have spent most of their lives being strong and courageous—and what they need to hear is it’s okay to be weak sometimes and to not have it all together.

Deep down, a part of me knew she was right. But I’ll be honest, there was a little kid in me who wanted to talk back. I can’t remember how exactly I responded, but I’m pretty sure there was pouting and grumbling involved. Because I love ideas—I love forming them on the page—and I like to get them right the first time.

But I don’t like to revise.

In the same way, writing our life-stories with passion and abandon can feel electric. Telling a good story with our lives—one written in flesh and blood on the paper of time—is giddiness and joy. But revising the story of our lives is especially difficult work.

Because we have to admit we may have been wrong the first time around.

And we are not used to doing so.

So often, we are raised in homes in which authority was maintained with a heavy emphasis on right and wrong. And the big-people always seemed to end up on the “right side” of the divide. So, life became like an education in courtroom procedure: the terrible twos were like an opening argument, adolescence the tedious process of cross-examination and defense, and we live the rest of our lives like one long closing argument.

So we populate every corner of the world with people unwilling to revise the stories we are living. Daddies overreact and it feels like pulling teeth to get them to reverse the kneejerk punishment. Waiters rarely fess up to an error: they get the manager instead, and the patron gets a free appetizer. If a doctor confesses to a mistake, she exposes herself to lawsuits that may crush her career and steal her livelihood. If a politician admits to an error, he risks plummeting poll numbers. And people of faith take centuries to admit they acted out of hatred born of certitude rather than grace born of love.

Why is it so painful to embrace our errors?

I think facing our mistakes can feel like a condemnation of all the good things and best intentions in us. It can shake our confidence in ourselves. It can crack the lens through which we view the world. It can mess with our heads and make us wonder what is real.

But most of all, it equalizes us.

Whatever pedestals we sit on in the trophy-room-of-our-minds get kicked out from underneath us when we embrace our mistakes and start to make revisions.

Suffice it to say, most of us will not claim our errors happily and willingly. We will tend to go on writing our lives, stubbornly confident in our authority and authorship.

That’s why every single one of us needs a trustworthy editor.

In the spring of 1998, I had just wrapped up my junior year at the University of Illinois. The day after finals found me and two of my closest friends sprawled out on the quad, soaking up the soothing rays of a spring-sun and dodging wayward Frisbees.

And we were debating.

At that time in the University’s history, it was in vogue for students in Urbana-Champaign to exercise their budding liberal-arts-analytical-skills by debating whether or not Chief Illiniwek was a racist mascot.

And I loved to debate.

As I pounded away at the argument, I sensed I was wearing my friends down.

I knew I was going to win.

And then my good friend looked me in the eye (I saw sadness in hers) and she said, “You know, Kelly, it’s not fun to talk about this stuff with you.”

Outwardly, I think I smirked, pretending she was talking about losing an argument. But inwardly, I felt like I’d been punched in the gut.

Because I knew I could be brutal. I knew I usually put being right before treating people right.

Yet, her “edit” was so powerful not just because it was true, but because I trusted her.

We had met three years before on the very same quad, during freshman orientation. When my freshman homesickness had been bad, she was the one who showed up and invited me to parties. She was the one I ate dinner with in the cafeteria, and the one who gave me dating advice, and the one I set up with my best buddy. She was the one who I could trust really, truly cared for me.

And she was telling me I needed to change.

Stephen King says, “Write the first draft with the door closed and the second draft with the door open.”

As we write our life-stories, everything is a first draft, and we need to open the doors of our hearts to people we trust enough to tell us where we have gone wrong and how we need to be changed. We need people who will say the hard things, people who will serve up the hard medicine, people for whom we will swallow it because we know they are serving it out of love and caring and respect.

And there is healing in the medicine.

Because, when we open ourselves up to our errors, when we invite someone into our mistakes and release the need to be right the first time, we are no longer alone. We discover it is better to embrace our faults—and to be embraced by a caring other—than to sit steadfastly on our certitude, and to sit alone. As we become open books, open to revision, we open ourselves to editors who are loyal and true.

We walk through the world a bunch of rough drafts, making mistakes as we go, and we desperately need to surround ourselves with people who love us enough to live with our mistakes, who value us enough to tell us the truth, and who believe in us enough to know we have a “revision” living somewhere in our hearts.*

You have a beautiful story to tell with your life. It has purpose and meaning, and it needs to be told to a world confused by noisy, numbing narratives. But the beauty of your story will only be complete, and its purpose will only be fully realized, when you have submitted it for editing.

So.

Go! Find your editor. A spouse, a friend, a pastor, a therapist. Find a safe and trustworthy space where you are not alone. And find a place where beauty and meaning can erupt out of your errors.

*About the Blog: I had planned to write about “editors” and “revisions” (e.g., apologies) in a single post. But I sent out a query on Twitter and Facebook regarding the nature of apologies, and I got so much great feedback I decided to give it its own post. It’ll be coming sometime soon.

Share Your Comment! Has anyone ever suggested a “revision” that made an important difference in your life?

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The UnTangled community is always growing and the blog is constantly changing. Click here to visit the website, where you can also subscribe by email, share the post with the share buttons at the bottom of each page, and comment on any post. 

Interested in more content?

“Like” the UnTangled Facebook page to follow more conversation and hear some of the backstory behind each post. This week, I relate an intervention I do with clients to encourage the development of “editors” in the lives of my clients.

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And always, thank you for reading. It’s a gift.

Photo Credit: Photo taken from this website.

I’ve never met anyone who didn’t want to write a brilliant story with the one life they’ve been given.

So why do so many of us fail to put down on the pages of existence the kind of lives we aspire to? Perhaps we are caught up in the paralyzing prison of our minds, analyzing each action before it is lived, trying to avoid any mistakes. Maybe our life-stories end up stranded between our ears.

We need to write the stories of our lives now, and save the editing for later…

When I began UnTangled in January, I discovered the posts tumbled out of me. When I sat at the computer, it was like a dam burst, and a flood of words would pour forth.

But in recent weeks, the writing slowed down. Each post materialized like a slow trickle. I still enjoyed the writing. But deep down, I wondered if my words were drying up.

Last week, I realized what was happening.

I was editing as I wrote.

And I was reminded writing and editing are two separate processes. Trying to edit while you write is fatal to the creative event. It’s like a white-hot sun drying up the river of generativity and spontaneity and passion. Editing is critical to producing things of beauty in the world.* But its place is after the writing.

Yet, I think many of us are writing our life-stories, and trying to edit them as we go.

I think we harbor the misconception that our lives get messed up by bad choices. But I think most of us with stories still-waiting-to-be-told have not made bad choices—we’ve made no choices. We aren’t writing crummy stories—we’re simply not writing our life-stories at all. Because our existential pens are frozen in midair, with a kind of paralysis by analysis.

And our lives are drying up because of it.

So, why do we continue to edit? Why don’t we just brazenly write the stories of our lives and save the editing for later?

I think we are constantly guarding against making mistakes.

We wake each morning, and we begin planning, rather than living. We become like directors of our life-stories, rather than actors in them. We try to orchestrate the perfect day for ourselves and our families and our co-workers. We balance work and kids and finances and we constantly second-guess our choices, wondering who we are hurting and which person in our life will end up holding a permanent grudge.

We are afraid of offending anyone, so we sift through our thoughts, and we settle on the safest words—the dialogue least likely to attract negative attention. Having been taught we must not upset others, we edit out anything visceral and real.

We avoid mistakes, because they may reveal parts of us we wish to keep hidden. Because, you see, our mistakes make us vulnerable.

Our mistakes reveal the cracks in our armor. They reveal our imperfections. They advertise us as broken, fallible creatures. And we are terrified others will decide our mistaken actions mean we are a mistake.

Instead of being in error, we are afraid others will think we are an error.

Even the dictionary tries to shame us for our mistakes, defining mistake as “an error in action, calculation, opinion, or judgment caused by poor reasoning, carelessness, insufficient knowledge, etc.”

Really?

Can you argue with a dictionary?

Maybe it’s a mistake, but I think I will.

I think the vast majority of mistakes we make have nothing to do with crappy reasoning, acting careless, or being ignorant. I think we make mistakes because mistakes happen.

They just happen.

So, we must end the ceaseless editing of our lives. We must enter into writing an incredibly rough draft, mistakes and typos and all. If we can do so, we will make mistakes, but we will learn from them, and our stories will come alive with fallible creatures living redemptive stories in a crazy world.

In his song, “Alive In The World,” Jackson Browne writes:

I want to live in the world,

Not inside my head.

I want to live in the world,

I want to stand and be counted…

I want to live in the world,

Not behind some wall.

I want to live in the world,

Where I will hear if another voice should call

To the prisoner inside me,

To the captive of my doubt,

Who among his fantasies

Harbors the dream of breaking out,

And taking his chances

Alive in the world…

With its beauty and its cruelty,

With its heartbreak and its joy,

With it constantly giving birth to life

And to forces that destroy,

And the infinite power of change

Alive in the world

I started editing while I was writing, because I suddenly felt like my words mattered. You were telling me they matter. And I don’t want to steer you wrong. I don’t want to make a mistake.

But there’s something I want even more than avoiding my own mistakes.

I want to live. I want to write my life story with passion and hopeful abandon.

And I want you to do so as well.

I want you to stop editing as you go. I want you to live in the world, instead of inside your own head. I want you to find freedom from the captivity of your doubt, and I want you to walk tall into a world crying out for a good story. I want you to live a life fully immersed in a world rich with both heartache and joy.

If you are ready to begin writing your story, if you are ready to begin the joyful making-of-mistakes that any life contains, you will join the army of courageous souls who march through my office every day, deciding the worthwhile cost of really living is the vulnerability of mistakes:

Couples who finally, tenderly, share the heartache of a honeymoon that wounded them rather than exhilarating them.

Young men who publish their thoughts in the school newspaper and smile peacefully as the taunts roll in, because it feels so good to be swept up in the river of really living.

Young ladies who eat thick sandwiches, no longer worrying about the thickness of their waist, because life tastes good and its time to eat it up.

Elderly men who have waited for years to say “I love you” to their children—because for some reason no one ever said it to them, and the idea makes them queasy—finally saying the words and feeling their hearts throb with life in an entirely new way.

Join us.

Stop trying to live your lives just right. Instead, just write.

And when you end up needing to make edits, when you end up needing to apologize for a mistake—and you will—do that with your whole heart, as well.

 

*About the Blog: The next post will focus on the process of editing, especially surrounding ourselves with good “editors,” who we can trust when they tell us we messed up, and entering into the “editing” of an apology with our whole hearts.

 Share Your Comment! Did I make any mistakes in this post today? I hope so, and I’m wide open to hearing what you think! Please feel free to share your ideas. And don’t worry about making a mistake!

Reading by Feed or E-mail?

The UnTangled community is always growing and the blog is constantly changing. Click here to visit the website, where you can also subscribe by email, share the post with the share buttons at the bottom of each page, and comment on any post. 

 Interested in more content?

“Like” the UnTangled Facebook page to follow more conversation and hear some of the backstory behind each post.

Follow UnTangled on Twitter

And always, thank you for reading. It’s a gift.

Photo Credit: Taken from this website.