What’s writing really about? It’s about trying to take fuller possession of the reality of your life.

Ted Hughes
What’s writing really about? It’s about trying to take fuller...
What’s writing really about? It’s about trying to take fuller...
What’s writing really about? It’s about trying to take fuller...
What’s writing really about? It’s about trying to take fuller...
About This Quote

Writing is about trying to take fuller possession of the reality of your life. I believe this quote captures the essence of writing. When you write, you are trying to take full possession of the world around you. You are trying to take more control over your own life. You are trying to make your ideas come alive.

Some Similar Quotes
  1. And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt. - Sylvia Plath

  2. You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you. - Ray Bradbury

  3. The road to hell is paved with adverbs. - Stephen King

  4. Fiction is the truth inside the lie. - Stephen King

  5. The most important things are the hardest to say. They are the things you get ashamed of, because words diminish them -- words shrink things that seemed limitless when they were in your head to no more than living size when they're brought out. But... - Stephen King

More Quotes By Ted Hughes
  1. The only calibration that counts is how much heart people invest, how much they ignore their fears of being hurt or caught out or humiliated. And the only thing people regret is that they didn't live boldly enough, that they didn't invest enough heart, didn't...

  2. He could not stand. It was not That he could not thrive, he was born With everything but the will —That can be deformed, just like a limb. Death was more interesting to him. Life could not get his attention.

  3. Nobody wanted your dance, Nobody wanted your strange glitter, your floundering Drowning life and your effort to save yourself, Treading water, dancing the dark turmoil, Looking for something to give.

  4. The inmost spirit of poetry, in other words, is at bottom, in every recorded case, the voice of pain — and the physical body, so to speak, of poetry, is the treatment by which the poet tries to reconcile that pain with the world.

  5. I think it was Milosz, the Polish poet, who when he lay in a doorway and watched the bullets lifting the cobbles out of the street beside him realised that most poetry is not equipped for life in a world where people actually die. But...

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