In
homage to Jeff Foxworthy, I’ve come up with a writer’s version of his classic “You
might be a redneck if. . .” And yes, all
of the following apply to me. Scary, huh?
You
sleep with pen and paper next to your bed—and the stove and the couch and the
dining table and the shower and the toilet and the. . .
You
have a favorite punctuation mark. My editor’s trying to wean me off of em
dashes—good luck with that. However, I’ve recently discovered the joys of the
semi-colon.
You’ve
been known to argue with someone on the usage difference between en and em
dashes. Don’t even get me started.
You’re
completely and utterly addicted to fountain pens. You have more bottles/colors of ink than you
have pens, and use this as an excuse to buy more pens.
You
get caught up in plotting your next scene and put the cereal in the fridge and
the milk in the pantry.
The
salespeople at the local Staples know you.
While
in Staples, you should never be left unchaperoned in the briefcase aisle. (One
briefcase is never enough.)
The
stacks of your old manuscripts and rejection letters officially constitutes a
fire hazard.
You
desperately want Crayola tub markers so you can write down the great dialog
that comes to you in the shower.
All
you want for Christmas are fountain pens, ink, and journals.
Most
people who hear voices take medication.
You get paid to write down what the voices say.
You
love restaurants that put a big sheet of paper over the table cloth and leave
you with a handful of crayons.
If
you didn’t have a book contract, you’d be writing anyway.
You
just know you’re on an FBI list of people to watch because of the books you’ve
ordered: poisons, how to dispose of a body, government conspiracies, secret
societies, planning the perfect crime, espionage secrets . . .
Your
surgeon orders your glasses taken away before you’ve finished memorizing the
operating room for a scene in your next book.
BTW—operating rooms are uber-cool, then really blurry.
When
you’re not writing, you get this persistent twitch in your left eyelid.
You
proofread your Tweets and text messages before sending.
You
take more writing paraphernalia on vacation than clothes—and don’t mind if it
rains.
You’re
talking to a real, living, breathing person and suddenly stop and listen
because one of your characters interrupted you.
You
think sleep is way overrated. Who needs more than three hours anyway?
Your
novels are backed up on your laptop, your netbook, your husband’s computer, two
thumb drives, and you’re seriously toying with the idea of getting a safe
deposit box.
You
don’t mind extra long waits at the doctor’s office because it gives you more
time to write.
And
finally, you know you’re a writer if you look at yourself and see a writer.
Everyone else looks at you and sees an obsessive-compulsive, anal-retentive
insomniac with a pen fetish.
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