Attempts, art, and masterpieces (zaibatsu), 01/02/2019 ------------------------------------------------------------ As I continue to edit this first novel, I've come to a realization: I'm not yet capable of creating a work of art. Presently, I'm capable of writing a story; later, I hope to be able to produce a work of art, and one day I may make a masterpiece. But in this moment, all I'm capable of is a story, and attempt. Honestly, it hadn't crossed my conscious mind that I might be capable of creating a work of art. This wasn't at all a goal. But, as I've struggled through the editing process, an insidious little thought has worked its way into my brain: that I ought to refine what I've created until it was art. What first came out of my keystrokes is egregiously flawed, and I knew that it was when I wrote it, but the idea that I had to patch it up until it was art was a notion that came afterward and unnaturally. Instead of this impulse, I choose to believe that my ambition should be what it was at the beginning of my venture: to finish a book. The editing process is certainly important, but it is not a mandate to push through to perfection. It isn't an opportunity for abstract and unreasonable demands. I realize consciously that I am not capable of creating a work of art, and so the rational plan should be to create what I am capable of. I am closer to finishing a book than I have ever been, and that is exciting. Striving for art, at this point, would be foolhardy and counter-productive. This was a valuable realization for me this morning, because it made my editing session much more enjoyable, and much less self-deprecating. I'm looking forward to finishing this phase, and that means I'm far more likely to actually finish it.