Dating and Books
In case everyone is getting sick of NaNoWriMo posts, back to my regular sort of post!
My friend, Sherilyn, who is also a writer, made a great analogy the other day between being an author and dating. I’ll get to that after I fill you in on some background.
I called her because I’ve been struggling with feelings that I’m not used to. Â I haven’t had a relationship in a year now and it’s been several months since I went on a date. I kind of gave up after much frustration and disappointment. Â I tried Internet dating, but it doesn’t work well for me. Â From this blog, from my videos, and from my books, you might think that I’m very articulate and well put together. Â I manage communication a lot better through writing than face to face. Â I do better meeting people in real life and feeling in-person chemistry because then the other person sees my aspie traits right away and (hopefully) finds them endearing! Â However, my aspieness also means that I tend to fall into a schedule and I don’t meet new people or go out much because I get easily overwhelmed or flustered and it’s too scary.
For a long time I’ve been happy with my fictional heroes, getting satisfaction immersing myself in the stories I write of men who do what I want them to do and never disappoint me. Â Real life is so much messier and scarier. Â I’d forgotten what it feels like to get a crush on someone and how painful it can be. Â I called my friend to complain that it seems like there’s never a happy time.
*You like someone and you wonder if he likes you back and you don’t want to flirt too much in case they don’t and you make a fool of yourself.
*You like someone and you find out that he doesn’t like you back and you wonder what’s so hideous about you that he doesn’t even want to give you a chance.
*You like someone and you spend time with him hoping that something will develop, but eventually you realize it will be on you to make a move and quite likely get shut down.
It’s all so unpleasant. Â I like logical things and crushes are anything but. They send me off a cliff into an emotional free fall that I’m powerless to stop. Â I try to spend more and more time with the person, all the while knowing that he isn’t interested and that every time I see him I feel more that will only serve to hurt me more. Â It is self-destructive and yet I can’t stop. This happens to me relatively rarely, but when it does hit, it takes over my life. I can hardly think of anything else. Â My NaNo novel has been suffering because it’s hard for me to focus on anything.
So I called Sherilyn to talk some sense into me. Â She suggested several things. One is to write about it. Â Of course I was already all over that! Â Always looking for good romantic plot ideas, I’ve already begun a story that uses these feelings, but of course in the story the affection is returned. Â Same as the story of Kaitlyn and Jason that I’ve been working on, the emotions of which are based on my real life first love, and the longings I harbor that he would show back up in my life and love me as much as I loved him.
Another thing she said is that trying to sell a book is like trying to find a relationship. Â It’s the same putting yourself out there over and over, opening up to the sting of rejection. Â Even if you do get as far as a traditional book contract, the chances of your book being a success are still slim, just like with marriage and its contract. Â The divorce rate scares me a lot, but putting it like that eased my mind. I understand book selling and how difficult it is for a book to make it, no matter how much love the author poured into it.
My friend put my fears and confusions over dating into a language that made sense to me and it helped ease my mind a lot.












