Deceptively simple, this question broke my brain:
How did you picture the life of a writer when you first dreamt of becoming one? Did you romanticize your dream? Or were you pragmatic and realistic about it? Compare your dream to the reality.
I struggled because I never gave much thought to how my life would look like as a writer. I’m trying hard to picture that now, and I can’t. The wheels stop turning in my head and my brain shorts out. Maybe it’s because intuitively I’ve always been a writer? I don’t know. Let’s leave that up to the therapists.
When I first started writing, being a writer was not an
identity I ever thought about. Instead I was focused on the act of writing. Think verb, not noun. My dream was about
working to write my identity and experiences as an African American woman into
the larger but single narrative of TV shows, books, and film. I’ve talked about
this before, and explained it best in a Writer’s Digest article I wrote in
2022. Here’s an excerpt:
“When I was growing up in Shreveport, Louisiana, scriptwriters and some of my favorite authors appeared to not care about knowing or doing better when including African American characters in books or on TV shows. When these characters were included, they played mostly bit parts, shucked and jived as sidekicks, or mirrored stereotypes that to this day exhaust me. Being disappeared or misrepresented creates real psychological pain and trauma. Not seeing myself reflected in the stories of this country made me question if I belonged in this country. To make matters worse, while reading books by my favorite authors I would often encounter text that caused further isolation. Sometimes it would be a small, throwaway line, or an entire premise that spoke to a shared experience between author and reader— an experience that didn’t include Black people. Maybe something like, When our ancestors came to this country to escape religious persecution, or Women in America received the right to vote in 1920.
Books and television were an escape from both racism and poverty when I was young. The problem was that the very media I was using to survive was in its own way killing me. I would find myself daydreaming entire plots of The Wild, Wild West. In my version a kick-ass Black woman would best Captain James West using physical dexterity, cunning, and intelligence. And she definitely would not be the kind of woman who would surrender with a soul-sucking kiss at the end of the show.”
Eventually, however, I started to write original pieces for sheer pleasure. I’d write on anything and at odd times. At home, I’d might pen a vignette just before dinner on a piece of torn notebook paper. At work, I’d type a couple of paragraphs on a word processor only to exit without saving. During this time, I don’t think I thought of myself as a writer or imagined what it would be like to be one. I just wrote because it was a thing I did.
It wasn’t until grad school that I started
to imagine what it would be like to claim the writer job title. The fact that
there were published authors in my family tempered my expectations about the
life of a writer. Let me put it this way, no one was driving Bentleys. I
already knew writing wouldn’t make me rich, but I did hope that my work would
be read. I stopped crumpling up the notebook paper with my writing and throwing
them away. I saved the MS Word files with my vignettes to my desktop. With the
latest book in my Killing series released on April 14th I do hope
that I will fully realize my dream of being read. How will the results measure
up? It’s still evolving. Stick around. Maybe we can learn together.






