Writers start by learning to read.

Writers start by learning to read.
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.com

Writers start by learning to read.

By David Joel Miller, writer, blogger, and mental health professional.

Writers are usually voracious readers.

One of the reasons that I had always wanted to write a book was that I had been a lifelong learner and a voracious reader. But my becoming an enthusiastic reader almost didn’t happen.

I’m not one of those people who fell in love with books in kindergarten or even the first grade. We moved around frequently, often in the middle of the school year. So, my memories of those early years are fragmented and probably inaccurate. I’m sure we had textbooks in the schools I attended, but it seemed to me that by the time I got issued a textbook, it was time to turn it in and move to the next town and the next school.

I don’t remember there being many books in our home, at least nothing that would’ve been age or grade-appropriate for me. My parents had planned to be missionaries, and my father had briefly attended seminary with the idea of becoming a pastor. We always had a Bible in the home. I also remember us having a commentary on one of the Gospels and a small handbook on learning Greek. None of these were particularly interesting to me, nor did they encourage me to take up reading.

My interest in books began quite by accident.

I remember our class going to visit the school library. I think it was the fourth-grade level; I really can’t be sure. I wasn’t familiar with reading books for pleasure. Each member of the class was supposed to look around the library and choose one book they wanted to check out to take home and read. Most of my classmates picked their book right away. I hadn’t a clue how to select a book.

After waiting for me for quite some time, the teacher lost her patience. Finally, in frustration, my teacher reached over onto one of the shelves, pulled out a book, and handed it to me. I can’t be sure whether she knew what the book was and selected it because she thought it would interest me, because it interested her, or her selection was purely a random gesture.

Suddenly, I was hooked on reading.

I remember quite clearly that that book was one of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Little House on the Prairie series. I read it alone in my bedroom, filling the hours during that time before a television made its appearance. Reading, rather than playing with other kids, finished off a book in short order. After finishing that book, I went back to the library every chance I got, reading all of that series and then exploring many others.

I do remember reading continually in elementary school and then in middle school. The frequent moves and the comings and goings of the few friends I made meant no one was in my life for very long. Being an only child with two parents who had their own emotional issues, I spent my childhood largely alone. My constant companions were the books I read.

Daydreaming is an important part of the creative process.

I recently came across an idea recently while listening to a podcast about writing that a major part of creating a fictional story involves putting together the plot. Whether you’re a hardcore outliner or the pantser type of discovery writer, it’s important to be able to imagine exciting things that will take place in your story. Daydreaming about your characters, the setting, and the events that will happen is a valuable part of the process of creating a readable novel.

I didn’t know that back in my high school days. What I did know was that I quickly lost interest in many of my classes. A considerable part of my time in class was spent daydreaming. I created a phenomenal number of adventures for the characters that inhabited my head. As with most creative people, the characters are in some respects reflections of myself, but in a great many other respects, they are the people I wish I were rather than the person I am.

What the writer part of me needs to learn to do is to hold onto those daydreams long enough to get them down on paper and create a first draft of the story I’m telling myself in my head that I can share with other people.

Reading widely is useful for writers, but it’s not enough.

When I began trying to craft novels, I discovered that all those books I had read, hundreds of fiction and also hundreds or more nonfiction books, still didn’t give me the skills I needed to write my own books.

Enjoying the daydreams of another author is a far cry from creating and recording your dreams in a form that someone else would want to read. So, in an upcoming post, I want to discuss the difference between how readers typically read and writers should be reading.

I hope you are enjoying some of these posts on creativity and my writing journey. Eventually, we’ll get to the point where I talk about the books I’ve written and the ones still in my head waiting to be written. If you enjoy these posts, please like them. If you’d like to find out what the next installment of this story brings, please subscribe to this blog. Thanks for reading.

This is a revised version of a post originally published on 12/13/22. Stay tuned for some new posts about writing and my writing projects.

Staying connected with David Joel Miller.

Seven David Joel Miller Books are available now! And more are on the way.

For these and my upcoming books, please visit my Author Page – David Joel Miller

Want the latest blog posts as they are published? Subscribe to this blog.

For more information about David Joel Miller’s work in mental health, please visit the counselorssoapbox.com website.

For my videos on mental health, substance abuse, and having a happy life, please see Counselorssoapbox YouTube Video Channel

My Career as an Illiterate Child

Fuzzy Blackboard – Does This Make Sense?
Photo courtesy of Pixabay.com

My Career as an Illiterate Child

By David Joel Miller, writer, blogger, and mental health professional.

My family told me I wasn’t very smart.

When I started writing this series of blog posts about my writing journey and how I became a published author, I decided I needed to say a little about my early educational experiences. I wasn’t one of those precocious kids who was always told how smart they were. In fact, I was never really encouraged in school at all. Somehow, that didn’t keep me from becoming a blogger and eventually writing and publishing my books.

The consensus in my family was that I was not very bright. In the language of those days, I might’ve been classified as mentally retarded. My family simply thought I was stupid and set very low expectations for me.

When I graduated from high school, I remember my mother telling my girlfriend they were surprised I had graduated. As I remember it, she said to that girlfriend, “his teachers used to tell me he was really smart, but I never believed them.”

I hope the story of my becoming a writer will be helpful to someone.

I’m not looking for sympathy or to place blame. Things were different back then. But from some of the tales I hear today, I think some young kids in elementary school are having experiences that are very similar to mine.

Martin Seligman, in his research, labeled it “learned helplessness.” If you’re taught that you’re not good enough or smart enough to accomplish something, most people would give up trying. I almost did that. I graduated from high school more by accident than by design.

My education got off to a very rocky start.

According to my mother, by the time I completed high school, I had attended twenty-two different schools. I often had the experience of moving to a new school district and finding out that the lesson I was about to learn in my old school had already been completed at my new school. These frequent moves and changes in curriculum resulted in some severe gaps in my learning, especially in the area of English, which we then called literacy.

My spelling was atrocious. I tried to offset that by using extreme creativity. At various schools, I learned bits and pieces about how to sound out a word, so rather than memorizing spelling, I sounded out each word as I went. The result was that I could and still can spell the same word multiple ways in one sentence.

In my forties and fifties, I did some genealogical research about my family and discovered that a few of my ancestors came over on the Mayflower. I read the early accounts by one of the colony’s governors and discovered that my unique way of spelling words wasn’t my own invention. Before we had public education and standardized dictionaries, people spelled words however they wanted to. But in the nineteen fifties, creativity in spelling earned me the reputation of a poor learner.

Our frequent moves across state lines resulted in learning multiple standard alphabets. I could never get my letters right because I couldn’t remember how they should be made in the school district I was in, and it didn’t pay to learn that since we were moving again at the end of the month.

I never understood anything the teacher wrote on the board.

Some of my teachers probably thought I was not a native English speaker. They put me right up at the front of the class so they could keep an eye on me and stop my misbehavior, but my grades improved only marginally.

Then, when I was in the third grade, maybe the beginning of the fourth, we went through a series of health examinations. The school determined I needed glasses. I remember getting that first set of glasses, and suddenly, all those squiggles on the blackboard made sense. However, I was still struggling to catch up in reading because each teacher had a different handwriting style.

My vision suddenly went blurry again.

I didn’t have a great deal of supervision as a child. We lived in rural areas and small towns. At least, that’s the way I remember it. I was an only child, and my parents were preoccupied with their own challenges. I remember walking around town without supervision from my earliest days. I don’t ever remember being driven to school. I always either walked or rode my bike. I did things in the first and second grades that parents wouldn’t let their teenagers do these days.

I remember in third grade, right after I got my glasses, walking down the street and around the block to a park. I went there by myself and hung out for a while. My recollection is that the glasses were bothering me, and I took them off and set them on the ground next to me.

When I got up to go home, I forgot all about wearing glasses. Once I returned to the house, my family had a fit, and we went back to the park. Fortunately, we found those glasses sitting right where I had placed them next to that old tree. As a result, I am never far from my glasses. I put them on before I get out of bed in the morning and often wait to take them off until I lie down again. Habits learned early in life tend to persist.

I accidentally discovered how to read.

Just about the time that I got my glasses, one of my teachers took us on a field trip to the school library. I don’t recall having seen or heard of a library before that. Reading was really not a family activity. The only book in the house was a Bible, which was not something a child was allowed to handle.

While the other students in my class were picking their books and checking them out, I aimlessly wandered around the library, looking at the books covers with no idea how to pick one. With almost everyone else gone and headed back to class, my teacher grew frustrated with me. She walked over to a bookcase and pulled out a book. She handed it to me and said, “Here, check this one out.”

That book was Laura Engel Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie. I read it late in the nineteen fifties. I went on to read every book I could find that she had never written. Through all those frequent moves, I had very few human friends, no siblings, and never a pet, but the one thing that was my constant companion was the books.

Through most of elementary school and middle school, I read every day. Before class, during my lunch hour, and after school when I got home. I didn’t bother to do my homework. What was the point? I didn’t think I was bright enough to be able to do it correctly.

But the one thing I knew for sure was how to be transported to other worlds by reading those stories. That talent for daydreaming came in handy when I decided to write my first novel.

Staying connected with David Joel Miller.

Seven David Joel Miller Books are available now! And more are on the way.

For these and my upcoming books, please visit my Author Page – David Joel Miller

Want the latest blog posts as they are published? Subscribe to this blog.

For more information about David Joel Miller’s work in mental health, please visit the counselorssoapbox.com website.

For my videos on mental health, substance abuse, and having a happy life, please see Counselorssoapbox YouTube Video Channel

Writers start by learning to read

books

Writers start by learning to read.

By David Joel Miller, writer, blogger, and mental health professional.

Writers are usually voracious readers.

One of the reasons that I had always wanted to write a book was that I had been a lifelong learner and a voracious reader. But my becoming an enthusiastic reader almost didn’t happen.

I’m not one of those people who fell in love with books in kindergarten or even the first grade. We moved around frequently, often in the middle of the school year. So my memories of those early years are fragmented and probably inaccurate. I’m sure we had textbooks in the schools I attended, but it seemed to me that by the time I got issued a textbook, it was time to turn it in and move to the next town and the next school.

I don’t remember there being many books in our home, at least nothing that would’ve been age or grade-appropriate for me. My parents had planned to be missionaries, and my father had briefly attended seminary with the idea of becoming a pastor. We always had a Bible in the home. I also remember us having a commentary on one of the Gospels and a small handbook on learning Greek. None of these were particularly interesting to me, nor did they encourage me to take up reading.

My interest in books began quite by accident.

I remember our class going to visit the school library. I think it was the fourth-grade level; I really can’t be sure. I wasn’t familiar with reading books for pleasure. Each member of the class was supposed to look around the library and choose one book they wanted to check out to take home and read. Most of my classmates picked their book right away. I hadn’t a clue how to select a book.

After waiting for me for quite some time, the teacher lost her patience. Finally, in frustration, my teacher reached over onto one of the shelves, pulled out a book, and handed it to me. I can’t be sure whether she knew what the book was and selected it because she thought it would interest me, because it interested her, or her selection was purely a random gesture.

Suddenly I was hooked on reading.

I remember quite clearly that that book was one of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Little House on the Prairie series. I read it alone in my bedroom, filling the hours during that time before a television made its appearance. Reading, rather than playing with other kids, finished off a book in short order. After finishing that book, I went back to the library every chance I got, reading all of that series and then exploring many others.

I do remember in elementary school and then in middle school reading continually. The frequent moves and the comings and goings of the few friends I made meant no one was in my life for very long. Being an only child with two parents who had their own emotional issues, I spent my childhood largely alone. My constant companions were the books I read.

Daydreaming is an important part of the creative process.

I recently came across an idea recently while listening to a podcast about writing that a major part of creating a fictional story involves putting together the plot. Whether you’re a hardcore outliner or the pantser type of discovery writer, it’s important to be able to imagine exciting things that will take place in your story. Daydreaming about your characters, the setting, and the events that will happen is a valuable part of the process of creating a readable novel.

I didn’t know that back in my high school days. What I did know was that I quickly lost interest in many of my classes. A considerable part of my time in class was spent daydreaming. I created a phenomenal number of adventures for the characters that inhabited my head. As with most creative people, the characters are in some respects reflections of myself, but in a great many other respects, they are the people I wish I were rather than the person I am.

What the writer part of me needs to learn to do is to hold onto those daydreams long enough to get them down on paper and create a first draft of the story I’m telling myself in my head that I can share with other people.

Reading widely is useful for writers, but it’s not enough.

When I began actually trying to craft novels, I discovered that all those books I had read, hundreds of fiction and also hundreds or more nonfiction books, still didn’t give me the skills I needed to be able to write my own books.

Enjoying the daydreams of another author is a far cry from creating and recording your own daydreams in a form that someone else would want to read. So in an upcoming post, I want to discuss the difference between how readers typically read and writers should be reading.

I hope you are enjoying some of these posts on creativity and my writing journey. Eventually, we’ll get to the point where I talk about the books I’ve written and the ones still in my head waiting to be written. If you enjoy these posts, please like them. If you’d like to find out what the next installment of this story brings, please subscribe to this blog. Thanks for reading.

Staying connected with David Joel Miller.

Seven David Joel Miller Books are available now! And more are on the way.

For these and my upcoming books, please visit my Author Page – David Joel Miller

Want the latest blog posts as they publish? Subscribe to this blog.

For more information about David Joel Miller’s work in mental health, please visit the counselorssoapbox.com website.

For my videos on mental health, substance abuse, and having a happy life, please see: Counselorssoapbox YouTube Video Channel