âAbsolute attention is an act of generosity.â ~Simone Weil
When I was a child, I used to write poems as presents for my parents on birthdays and holidays.
Iâd sit quietly and think of what I wanted to say. Then Iâd try to turn that into musical language. Iâd write those words on the page, and then Iâd draw a picture to go with it.
It didnât occur to me to even ask whether my parents would like my poem or not; I just assumed they would.
Then I got older. I stopped giving my parents poems for presents. I stopped writing poems.
I didnât write poetry again until I was in college, and then I began to wonder whether my poetry was âgood.â Were my poems âgood enoughâ to get me into the advanced poetry workshop? Would they dazzle the teacher? Would the other students like them?
I paid more attention to the way the words sounded on the page than to what I actually was saying. The depth was covered up by surface. And after all, I wasnât sure I wanted to really bring my depth to the surface for other people to see.
I didnât write poetry very much again until I was pregnant with my first child. Then what was inside meâliterallyâwas calling my attention. I started to put it on the page.
But there was still this concern about whether what I was creating was âgood enough.â
Iâve been dancing with that âgood enoughâ question for many years. I see now that that question is not just about my writing, but about myself, about my own interior life, and about the relationship between that interior life and my external life: Can my depth come out on the surface? Is my surface appropriate for my depth? Will I be seen, appreciated, understood? And how can I develop myself to the best of my potential, showing up and not shying away from who I am and want to be?
Now, many years later, Iâm a creative writer and a creative writing teacher, and I see my students similarly worry about whether their work is âgood enough.â
I often tell them that their concern, that comes out in relation to their writing, is really a deeper question of how they approach themselves.
I tell them that, yes, the writing for so many of us brings out these insecurities, uncertainties, and learned patterns of thinking about ourselves that otherwise would lie buried. But that the writing doesnât create those insecurities, uncertainties, or learned patterns. Theyâre there within usâand all around us.
From the time weâre little, weâre given messages about what it means to be a worthwhile person: people are expected to act a certain way, to look a certain way, to speak a certain way.
For women, our bodies often bear the brunt of these expectations about our physical selves: are our bodies âgoodâ enough, thin enough, pretty enough, light enough, curvy enough, straight enoughâŠ
And for women and men, our writing often comes to be the place where our intellect is valued: our writing is judged in schools; our expression is given grades. We measure ourselves against others.
But if weâre always being judgedâin body and mindâthere is no space to be and to become.
The question of whether we are âgood enoughâ comes from feeling judged, and this restricts us. We experience ourselves as lacking, and a sense of lack leads in turn to our not being able to inhabit our full selves, to our making poor decisions and to living in constricted ways.
So what happens when we put aside our judgment and allow ourselves to be with ourselves and with our creative voices?
What helped me overcome my worry about being âgood enoughâ (or mostly overcome it) is being a mother and seeing what itâs like to love my children unconditionally.
When I am with my children, it never occurs to me to ask whether they are âgoodâ or âgood enough.â Those questions seem absurd and meaningless.
I know that my children were bornâas I believe all children are bornâas wonderful light beings, miracles with unimaginable potential and unique personalities and gifts. They are, like all people, uniquely themselves.
I also know that my children were born with the capacity to grow in countless ways. And this potential to grow and learn never stops.
My children are âgoodâ but that does not mean that they were born good at walking. They needed to learn, as we all do, how to walk. They needed to crawl and then learn how to pull themselves up, needed to learn how to take one step and fall down and then another. At times, also, my children, like all of us, learned how to be more self-aware, how to say they were sorry, how to think about how their actions impacted others.
We all have room for growthâthroughout our lives. We all have room for greater awareness and more skill. But as we mature and grow as people, our essential âgoodnessâ does not change.
I try to take the same attitude towards our creative acts: of course, we can learn how to be more skillful writers. But each of us is also born a creative being with a unique creative voice, and more skills will enhance the voice, but wonât essentially change what it has to express. Furthermore, our work is an expression of that voice that is appropriate for who and where we are at the moment that we create.
As a poet, I needed to learn the skills to take my inner world and put it more effectively on paper. I learned from reading others and from having others read and comment on my poems.
As I wrote more poems, my poems got more understandable, more moving, more skillful. But I donât think I was ever asking the right question when I was asking whether my poems were âgoodâ or âgood enough.â Because that question was like cutting the life force off that was full of life and growing
Similarly, as a teacher, I can help my students have more skills. I can show them writing that inspires them and that they can learn from; I can give them tools to use in their pieces. But itâs never my job to judge them or to suggest that their creative expression isnât worthy.
We are all creative beings. Not everyone is given legs to walk, but everyone is given a unique story and a unique perspective and a unique voice. And who are we, any of us, to say that one story is âgood enoughâ and another is not? Would we ever say that one birdsong is worthy and another is not?
Perhaps some people will like my poems. I know some will.
Perhaps some people will not like my poems. I know many wonât.
But I donât set myself up waiting breathlessly to be âlikedâ or not. I set myself up to do my best work and to accompany myself, whether I fall down or walk across the room.
When my children were little, I delighted in the freedom with which they played, danced, drew, sang. I want them to be able to be themselves as fully as adults, and to love themselves in the process.
And I want that for all of us, even for myself. For I know that if I want something for my children, then I need to be able to at least try to model it, otherwise what message am I really sending?
I tell my students: you might not write your most captivating poem this time around, but if you cut off your breath, then you will never will write at your full potential. So take a risk: go for it, and keep trying. Read, write, learn from what you love and engage fully, and keep listening inside and allowing the process to move from the inner to the outer without judgment.
I started writing as a gift to my parents, but now I write as a gift to myselfâand to the world.
For me, poetry is an act of love, attention, and presence. When I show up fully and listen, then I can create a passage from what is larger than me through my interior self and then out onto the page.
âAbsolute attention is an act of generosity,â the philosopher Simone Weil wrote. When I pay attention to the world around and within me and to the language that I use that is an act of generosity and graceâto myself and to the world and perhaps, also, I can hope, to some of my readers.
About Nadia Colburn
Nadia is the founder of Align Your Story Writing School and Coaching, which helps women unlock their full creative voice. She's the author of the poetry book The High Shelf and her work has been widely published in The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, Kenyon Review, etc. For free recorded meditation and writing sessions, writing prompts, yoga and writing videos, and other free resources for writers, visit nadiacolburn.com.