By Chandler Walter, Editor-in-Chief
Writing is a strange thing.
And please, just hear me out before you dismiss this as just another Lettitor written about writing, as terribly meta as that may be. I mean, yes, this is just another Lettitor written about writing, but what kind of an Other Press Editor-in-Chief would I be if I didnāt try my hand at it at some point?
Soā¦ writing. Iāve always been enamored by the idea of being a writer. Iāve always romanticized the act of creating something out of nothing but scratches on paper (or keys smashed onto a screen, nowadays) with the writerās own mind supplying the flow.
Writing comes in, quite literally, all shapes and sized. Whether itās a 14 book, million-word epicāhereās looking at you, Wheel of Timeāa 500-word article posted in a student paper, or a poem of only a few small-but-all-the-more-significant words, it still all comes down to that one constant: Someone pulled from these 26 letters and created this thing basically out of nowhere.
As a kid I always had my nose in a book. Going on a long road trip to a hockey game? Iād catch up with Harry and the Hogwarts gang. Canāt fall asleep? Check in on Frodo and his fancy ring. Even now, I keep a copy of Game of Thrones in my jacket pocket because my phone doesnāt get service during my 15-minute commute downtown on the Canada Lineāand god help us all if I have to go 15 minutes without some form of distraction.
I never seriously considered writing as a potential career path. Becoming a successful novelist seemed as rare as winning the lottery. I doubted I had experienced enough to ever make it as a poet. I really like eating, and the idea of becoming a starving artist for my craft never really vibed with my constant appetite.
It was in this paper that I realized I actually could do it, and only suffer a few of the usual ailments. Journalism is one of the newer forms of writing (Iāve disqualified tweets, if only for this one time), yet even nowadays it seems old. Papers are struggling, the industry is changing, and even our little paper here at Douglas College can feel the shift.
But itās still worth doing. Between the stress, the constant pressure to be on top of everything thatās going on, the angry Facebook comments, and the harassment that comes along with being considered āThe Media,ā Itās all worthwhile simply because of what it is at its core: Taking these 26 little letters and turning it into something that can inform, and educate, andāif youāre really good, and a little luckyāmake a difference.
So I found a way to become a writer, and here I am, writing. I still keep the first cheque I ever made from this paper framed and on my desk (as completely clichĆ© as that may be) because thatās the first $50 I ever made by making scratches on paper, and it reminds me of just how insanely awesome I found that to be in the first place.
I still do find it insanely awesome, of course, but sometimesāespecially when it begins to feel like excruciatingly painful workāitās a nice reminder to have.