Is Personal Experience Critical to Your Writing?

Doran Roggio
Doran Roggio
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Curiosity, Empathy and Imagination Are Far More Important in Writing

All writers have pondered the question of what to write. In answer to that question, for many years students were told to write what you know. This attempt to clarify the dilemma is too incomplete to be satisfactory.


Many new writers may feel lacking in life's experience and wonder if they have the essential knowledge and occurrences from which to draw insight. Some may have lived their entire life in a very small town with limited resources and activities, enjoy a sheltered, quiet, family arena, or are so naive as to have not fully tasted life.

Does this naivety hamper their ability to write good and interesting prose? For a writer all life's experience is filled with information, no matter how insignificant it may seem. It is the gifted writer that can bring forth creative prose from a little information. In fact, if one can not create something out of a little experience, then the task of creating out of a great deal of cognition will be, in all likelihood, just as daunting.

What is the solution then? Where does the writer draw insight? How does the writer choose topics and write with depth, clarity, and believability. How pivotal is individual experience in the process of writing? How vital to the depth of your creative work is the extent of your familiarization and knowledge?

To answer those questions, consider the life of Emily Dickinson. Dickinson is noted in American literature as one of the great American poets, composing 1,775 poems. Yet Miss Dickinson was a spinster who resided for 56 years in the town of Amherst, Massachusetts, gradually becoming a recluse. In spite of the lack of outside influence, Dickinson profoundly addressed subjects such as love, death, immortality and nature.

What can we conclude from Emily Dickerson's writings? When considering the craft of writing, it is far more important to possess imagination, curiosity, and empathy than personal experience.

The fact that you want to be a writer is a good indication that you already possess imagination. True understanding comes from within, in the ability to contemplate the experience rather than be immersed in it.

  • The Witty Pen
 
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I had posed the same question to myself recently. I have lived in many states and encountered many different types of people and yet was somewhat sheltered by an overbearing father. What can this experience bring to my writing? Or better yet what has it already brought? You have given me more to ponder with my journal in hand to take notes. Thank You!!

Posted on 07/03/2008 at 1:07:10 PM

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Posted on 06/27/2008 at 11:06:49 PM

Very well written article with excellent suggestions in that last paragraph.

Posted on 11/13/2007 at 6:11:00 AM

I enjoy sharing my personal experience and some of the things I have observed over the years. A writer does has to find his or her voice and take it from there. Great article. Thanks for sharing.

Posted on 10/18/2007 at 8:10:00 AM

great info...thanks

Posted on 09/24/2007 at 12:09:00 PM

I agree but you have to be so careful with AC's proscriptions on prose which seem to create a double-edged sword for articles based on personal experience.

Posted on 08/21/2007 at 1:08:00 PM

I agree great article.

Posted on 08/19/2007 at 9:08:00 PM

Great article!

Posted on 07/29/2007 at 1:07:00 PM

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