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JANUARY 6, 2010 10:23AM

The Marginalized Muse

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Hesiod and the Muse 

Hesiod and The Muse by Gustave Moreau 

 

There was a period right after I graduated from university when I knew I wanted to write, but I wasn’t sure exactly how to start going about that.  To support myself I worked the Saturday shift at an old style Montreal tavern.

There aren’t many of these left anymore.  When they thrived in the early half of the 20th century, they worked like neighborhood men’s clubs. By the time I started working there, they all had signs that read “Bienvenue aux Dames,” which were about as enticing as let’s say a sign in a southern diner that reads “Coloreds Welcome!”

The community of men who showed up to start drinking at 9 am on a Saturday morning was not, fortunately, a big one.  They were usually harmless, but for whatever reason they’d rather not be around the normal drinking crowd. Some were old regulars whose wives thought they were grocery shopping. Some had just left prison, didn’t want to talk much and didn’t have many friends they could legally hang around with. Some were very poor and preferred as few people as possible to see that.  And some were mentally ill, but still felt the need to be in a room with some people, which wasn’t a hospital.
 
Davey fell into this last group.  He was a small, pale red headed man of obviously Irish descent, which he emphasized with an unfortunate preference for bright, but filthy green clothing.  He was skinny with big teeth and a walk that made him look like a demented leprechaun. Davey was a ranter.  He would show up regularly before 10 a.m.  Usually my first customer and always alone.  About halfway through his first quart of Labatt 50 he would start building up a heart full of bile and by the time he was ready for his next one he was usually screaming at a gang of invisible people comprised of politicians, the rich, and whoever happened to fall into a general category of “fuckers.”

He was white noise to most of my Saturday morning regulars. If he started getting to me I’d just turn on the giant sports screen television and watch Pee Wee's Playhouse, which back then was followed by Ralph Bakshi's brilliant version of Mighty Mouse.  All I had to do was pretend I was in a new Jim Jarmusch film until lunchtime, when the weekend construction crews and hockey teams would show up and tip me enough that I hardly had to work for the rest of the week.

But one morning Davey brought a date.  Maybe it was his girlfriend, maybe it was his mother. I’ll never know because she wasn’t actually visible to anyone but Davey.  But I could tell it was a woman by the tone and vocabulary of his abuse.

Finally it was time to order that second quart.   I’d always been able to count on Davey to snap out of his rant long enough to pay me.   But this was the most hotheaded I’d ever seen him.  This time when I put the beer down, he just pointed across the table and said, “she’ll pay.”

I was stunned and silent, until fortunately he returned to something closer to mutual reality.  He reached into his pocket, pulled out some crumpled bills, threw them down and muttered viciously  “she’ll pay in the long run.”
_________________________________

A few years after I quit, I had a conversation with somebody who worried about the fact that she had developed a habit of muttering to herself.  “Do you think I’m going crazy?” she asked me.  “No” I answered. Thanks to Davey I knew difference between a moderately disturbing habit of self-muttering, and crazy.

But I’ve been thinking about Davey these days because I’ve been struggling with a way to talk about a subject I find incredibly uncomfortable, The Muse. Some creative people feel fine talking about the disassociative process many of them experience when in a creative groove. I’m not one of them.  And it’s never been because I’m afraid that people will think I’m crazy. I know I’m not. It’s more from fear that I will be taken less seriously as a writer.

To turn your creative drive over to a power that feels to you to be outside  yourself, or to confess that you do that, feels, in our era of enlightened scientific materialism, unevolved.  Just writing this, I can feel Stephen Pinker and Richard Dawkins silently scoffing, not at me because I don’t run in their circles, but my “type.” 

In our society, or at least among the elite intellectuals of our society, disassociation that is not pathological is, at best, regressive.  You can say that this “presence” feels alien.  But if you actually believe that it’s alien, you keep that to yourself. Mature intellectuals  take responsibility for everything, their failures and their successes. They don’t blame their lack of creativity on society, and they certainly don’t credit it to forces outside society. They don’t believe there’s an invisible presence that will repay their attention with units of inspiration, which they will be able to convert into a reasonable living, either now or in the long run.

Artists who do seriously nurture their sense of inspiration as a force outside of themselves are caught in a double bind. On the one hand there is  a very deep desire to function happily in reality in a dignified way with other professional people. On the other hand there is the artist's empirical experience, at least to them, that the creativity flows better when they surrender to it as an "it", and not as a serendipitous and occasional experience. 

Sometimes a writer is so successful she’s invited out in the open to talk honestly about this process. But no matter how many people watched Elizabeth Gilbert’s TED talk, and no matter how much money she’s made writing about her transformative mystical experiences, she’s paid the price in terms of critical respect. Especially amongst her peers who’ve been doing their very best recently to distance themselves.

Read this week's reviews of her new book, Committed. This is Gilbert’s fifth book, her first three made her a finalist for almost every major American literature award there is: PEN/Faulkner, National Book Award, National Book Critics Circle Award.  No mention of those accomplishments in this New Yorker review by Ariel Levy.  She is now, forevermore, a neurotic blonde who once had a breakdown in her bathroom and uses research as a “coping mechanism.”  Katie Roiphe’s review in Slate, makes Levy look supportive.  According to Roiphe, Eat, Pray, Love was not a writer’s honest and very vulnerable spiritual quest and recovery of creative and psychic strength. It was "a highly structured nervous breakdown set on three continents."

  Gilbert had what once looked like a promising literary career.  Then she wrote a book that is considered not just chick lit, but spiritual chick lit.  As long as her ambitions are mostly financial, I’m not sure this will matter.  But she’s smart enough that it probably will.

________________________________________________

So why would I want to write about this?  Because a couple of years ago I started becoming obsessed with the possibility that there was some helpful solid materialist explanation for this process that would help better manage my intellectual dignity.

I’m not alone. In the last half decade, titles on the neurology of creativity and spirituality like The Creative Brain and Rational Mysticism have been trickling into the bookstores and they’ve been selling well.  With the advent of neuroimaging, scientists no longer have to rely on pathological subjects to research how the brain works.  Now they can study healthy brains, and brains that are considered extraordinary.  And so we have an increasing number of studies looking at the outlier left pre frontal cortex activity of Buddhist monks.   One day perhaps, a scan of Philip Roth’s brain will explain everything we need to know about how to build the kind of brain that can expect a long respected, lucrative writing career.

 Or will it?  I’ve searched for this credible neuroscientific theory behind inspiration, really I have.  But from what I’ve read so far, it’s just not there. Whenever there’s been a theory, whether it be the “temporal lobe personality”, or the God Helmet, it’s been pretty effectively debunked or impossible to replicate. I’m going to keep reading over the next year.  And my plan is to keep writing about this. But to be honest, I’m not hopeful. Creativity seems still to be as much a mystery to science as it is to anyone, and if it turns out that Roth has an impressively large hippocampus, I'm skeptical that this will teach us much.

Why does it matter?  Well, it’s kind of like we’re sitting here in a culture that we sense is running on empty, and we have this sign on the door that reads “inspiration welcome.”  And yet we don’t really believe in inspiration, we believe in goals and hard, hard, hard verifiable work.  Science stays mostly away from this problem, and anyone that takes the leap and treats creativity as a palpable energy to be nurtured, cultivated and trusted is subtly marginalized. Tolerated more than welcome.

Which leaves me, far too often these days, ranting quietly. Sometimes at the “fuckers." Sometimes at my muse, who I trust on good days, and not on bad days, and who may very well end up sticking me with the bill.

But for whatever reason, right  now, I'm still not ready to quit.

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I used to walk to work through a neighborhood in Worcester, Mass. that had a bar, Moynihan's, like the ones you describe. The wild kids in the neighborhood would sometimes break into cars and release the brakes, sending them down the hill. One crashed into Moynihan's and as I walked by and peered in over the wreckage I saw the regulars sitting on their usual stools, having their early morning shots and beers.

A minor accident like that wasn't going to upset their routine.
Con. Nothing would upset their routine. God forbid if there was a massive city paralyzing snowstorm, and I didn't show up at 9am to open that door. They'd be waiting there, furious.
Why does "their opinion" matter? As a regular reader, I enjoy your posts, I don't have to know where you get your inspiration from, or if you just free write? I'm interest in the finished product. I don't need to know how my commuter train was manufactured, just that it gets me to work in the moring and at home at night.

To both from Duke Ellington, "If it sounds good, it is good."
I'm glad you enjoy my posts OE.

Well if you wanted to actually make commuter trains, you'd want to know about electricity, I imagine. And interestingly modern physics is about the only place were serious intellectuals are allowed to get a little mystical, because the evolutionary psychologists don't have the expertise to scoff at them.

But everyone thinks they can write. So when writers get spiritual, people get antsy. No?
Jeeze, Juliet, I started about five different responses to this before realizing that I don't understand the premise. Not you -- I get what you're saying -- but that there are people who have to invoke the dead hand of Aristotle (tiresome listmaker that he was) and "explain" everything ... or dismiss and denigrate same.

Socrates had his daemon and no one questioned it. It's a sad commentary on our time that most of society today would probably want him locked up.
Very interesting thoughts as usual. I think of writing as a process of "falling away." One of my teachers would have us do a meditation exercise before beginning to write. Another would do a word association game that was meant to get us past the surface layers of consciousness. I still do something of this when I write (or when I'm doing my best writing) I have to let everything on the surface fall away. It doesn't seem like possession by a muse as much as recovering something deeper inside. I like this idea better because depending on a muse is tricky stuff. She can depart whenever she wants, but if inspiration is always inside you- well-that's more comforting. Thanks for thoughtfulness in the morning, Juliet. You always make me stretch.
When Beethoven composed his violin concerto and presented it to the soloist, the violinist said, "This piece is unplayable!" Beethoven replied, "What do I care about your puny violin when the Almighty speaks to me?" Beethoven had no trouble seeing a source of i0nspiration outside himself. Even more to the point is Sam Harris, who might take issue with Dawkins and Pinker. Harris has studied meditation. He says that in the deepest states of meditation, one has a sense of consciousness lying outside oneself. He has been criticized for such a statement, though he admits to making no definitive claim on consciousness. (He studies the neuroscience of religious faith with functional MRI, incidentally. It's a fascinating subject.) This is a thought-provoking piece, Juliet. Inspired, in fact.
Excellent essay, much appreciated. This is tangential but I have to say that in this culture, inspiration or no, I wouldn't mind seeing more of the hard, hard, hard work.

And you will get stuck with the bill.
Thanks for getting it B. I'm reading Phillip Pulman's Dark Materials with my son right now and everyone has daemons. It's so cool. And you look at that painting by Moreau, and the women are so strong and gorgeous. Now Hesiod would probably only be welcome at the Omega Institute as warm up for Stephen Segal.
Julie. Wow - thought provoking piece on a topic I have mused about...ok, well. I'm a bit with OEsheepie on this which is interesting because I saw your blog hit the feed and was the first to read and rate. I had to think about this one as I puttered around. I am trying not to think too much about things these days and just do. Just write, just love, just live. You have the permanent muse. Maybe, I'm afraid if I think too hard about the muse, he will disappear. I am also with Mr. Blevins in that what we think is our self is actually something we can transcend to be something free and inspired outside the limitations of a defined self. I'm going to stop here before I keep ranting but this, your blog is a feast of words. Thanks for the brain food - very inspiring!
I view writing as a consumer of it and not a member of the elite intelligensia. So I don't get antsy if you want to get spiritual. Just keep writing, please.

@Steve Blevins -- Sam Harris? Sounds like a 1940s haberdasher from Hoboken. Seriously, where can I find more about his work?
I like the idea that my bolts from the blue are not accidental strikes.
@OESheepdog: I would start with his Web site: http://www.samharris.org/
Juliet, neurons or muse, does not matter. You took me on a wonderful journey.

We share the interest in the study of the brain. We know so little. Csíkszentmihályi, work on the flow really describes the muse in whatever work one is doing.
Juliet - apologies for forgetting the t to your name...
"Sometimes at my muse, who I trust on good days, and not on bad days, and who may very well end up sticking me with the bill."

Great post.

I wonder, though. I think you have to wine and dine the muse, take her out, entertain her, and of course, there is no one else to pick up the tab. As Davey said, "she'll pay later."
thanks so much for the link, i loved her talk& yeah..it made perfect sense to me.
I am fascinated by how many artists of all disciplines say that the work seems to come from elsewhere, from outside. Many, in the tradition of Cocteau, Spicer, and Snyder have used the metaphor of taking dictation. Other than that, in my opinion, anyone who claims to know how creativity works in neuroscientific terms is a liar. I'll take dictation any day.
nice piece. the materialists are the delusional ones
Juli, it's a fine balance. I meditate, and much of the time it's like what you say, things are falling away. But if you want to take it to another level, you do have to surrender your sense of self and be willing to be dependent on a entirely different drive.

Which brings me to Consonantandvowels. I believe in hard work, but people who are inspired work from a different place than people who just believe in a work ethic. They're being driven by something other than the high of achievement. So, ideally, they're able to work longer, in a more relaxed way, and achieve more. More often than not, this recipe probably follows the old 10,000 hours rule. But the 10,000 hours has to have a good percentage of inpired hours. Otherwise it's just cultural slavery.

Steve, thanks so much for your comment. I'm going to take another look at Sam Harris. I've obviously made the mistake of lumping him with the more arrogant atheists.

Leonde. I don't think people need to think hard about the muse. But if we want be even ordinarily creative, it's hard to do that without some sense of sustained support. I read this study recently that kids who have imaginary friends tend to be demonstrably better story tellers than kids who don't. Yet we never worry that there's something wrong with our kids if they DON'T have imaginary friends. I'd rather that people who read this just contemplate little puzzles like that, than take this too seriously. Although if anyone wants to take this seriously that's cool too.

Thanks for dropping by Mumbletypeg,

and Stella. I've looked into the flow research, and it's totally fascinating. But I'm not sure that flow alone can drive people. That's what I'm sort of interested in right now, not the spark, or the flow, but the drive. What can get an artist through the worst, driest, scariest periods. And sometimes all that's left is your belief, habit, I dunno what, that you're not alone in it.
All I can say is that the ancient Greeks believed in the Nine Muses. As a culture the ancient Greeks created the basis of Western Literature. 1500 years later, the Greek masterpieces are still studied and held in high esteem. Evolutionary psychologists write stuff that's chiefly read by other evolutionary psychologists, a tiny trickle of which may actually seep out to the general public on a good day.
Juliet, why is that "drive" limited to artists? I find that drive in many other vocations. Even accountants.
What an interesting post. I seem to be completely at the mercy of some unseen force when I'm writing, and the only thing I know for sure is that I'm better in the morning, I start to lose it in the afternoon, and I'm completely useless at night unless I'm drinking wine and writing about dance competitions. I have noticed that I can access the "groove" much more easily when I'm consistent and writing daily - but it never lasts. It's like I'm riding a wave that crashes and I just have to wait patiently for the next one to come along.

I was struck years ago by Madonna saying in an interview that she could summon her creativity at anytime. Perhaps this was during the days that she was writing crap like "Into the Groove" - hell, I could summon that kind of creativity right now. But she seems to have an endless well of something going on and the one thing that I know for sure about her is her unparalleled work ethic. Maybe it's not such a mystery after all.
Thanks for the brilliant thoughts, as usual. One thought of mine is that this is a very American value, the "hard work" and "by my own effort" idea of everything, including creativity. As a strong intuitive-introvert (INTP) I am strongly aware of the value of extraversion in our culture, which binds us, I feel, to these values of independence. (I know you're Canadian, maybe there is something to add from your perspective here). Anyway, I don't mind saying that I must be crazy by these standards, as I am sure that all of my inspiration comes from my ability to loosen the veil between my own consciousness and the collective consciousness. It gets me into trouble, but it is also a precious gift that I credit for anything that comes forth.

Just some thoughts, and happy new year to you!
Stellaa. I don't want to imply that I think only artists are inspired. But I do think they are a bit more isolated that people in other professions and often have to rely more on...how should I put it...psychic resources, rather than material ones? Businesspeople, athletes, other people have a supportive society and culture that mostly share their values to drive them on and back into the zone. Artists not always so much. Am I making sense? Sorry I'm heading into my fuzzy afternoon stage. My muse and I are going to have to go take a nap.
Brilliant post! I have a lot to say, but not the time. Just know that most of us writers have our "crazy" moments while writing. There's nothing wrong with that.
I marvel at your ability to withstand the rantings of the mentally ill at the tavern. I find such raving lunatics very difficult to be around, and avoid such situations at all costs.

I believe we all carry that aspect which is mysterious, uncontrolled, connected to the cosmos in a manner which cannot be defined through the lens of rational thought. Perhaps this is our daemon. For some, the daemon is cruel, destructive. For others the daemon is gentle, disposed toward creativity, dreams, imagination.
Juliet,

I really like how you examine the way in which society marginalizes the very idea of the "outside consciousness." I learned a while back not to talk about it too much, after I understood my experiences were not that common. In writing my best work, and I am sure this is true for you, the words appear easily and I sometimes feel like I'm just there to function as a typist. Even thought this sounds strange, it is a very euphoric feeling; a feeling one does not want to let go of.
I used to willingly throw myself into "going deep," as I like to call it. Not deep like super-duper intellectual, but deep like on of those divers who go down, down, down without equipment or sense. It was next door to crazy. I produced some amazing work, but blocked out everything else. I don't know how I got my brain to do that, nor how I got it to stay above water when I decided the risk was to high. But if you find out, let me know. This was fascinating, and intriguing.
hadn't much thought about my Muse until this piece--had always just assumed she was fickle, moody and looked like susan sarandon...sometimes i'm afraid to analyze the creative process, afraid that its akin to taking apart a music box--you'll find out how it works, and then it won't make music...really well-written piece...rated
This was enjoyable. I believe that the muse has everything to do with immortality. The muse could be a block of wood as long as it inspires us to produce something, whether words, art, music so that the world to remember us. It would be a shame that we never experienced those words of Whitman who remains immortal to this day. We know, inside, that we are mortal...and time is slowly ticking away. The muse is really us.
This is a brilliant post, Juliet - thank you. I think of habits as the basket you build to contain the flow...grounding rods for the lighting of inspiration, so that when it comes, you are ready. And in working with it, you are inviting it. Like tuning your receiver. (Three metaphors in one para, I'd better stop now. ;)
horray! don't quit. rant away, even if you end up muttering in the corner of a bar with a sign that says "Bienvenue Aux Gentilhommes"
I wrote a novel once, and it was like a possession experience. it was scary, and maybe scary looking.
I worked eight hours cleaning in, and it was like I was in the book, and the next day was at school, and was trying to move the cursor with my thumb, and it wouldn't move. I sat there for five minutes, and then was like, oh, yeah, this is a desktop, not a laptop, move the mouse moron. I have never written a story that just didn't pop in my head. I don't know what it is, almost like an epileptic seizure or muse or both, but it is a very, very different state of consciousness, and your post was great demonstrating that, although I think Stella makes a great point that at the limit of any human experience, it is just a weird mental state, biology researcher, whatever.
So much I wanted to quote here. So much to say.

" Well, it’s kind of like we’re sitting here in a culture that we sense is running on empty, and we have this sign on the door that reads “inspiration welcome.” And yet we don’t really believe in inspiration."

That feels like it, in a nutshell.

It's the price we pay for being so sensible, logical and emotionally flat. That inspiration could just as easily be called bipolar or dissociative disorder or borderline personality disorder. Clinical doesn't foster "muse"ical.

I'll tell you one thing (go ahead, Beth): I don't believe in muses though I believe in magic. Wait. I believe in muses but you can't hope one of them is around, blessing you, in order to complete something.

One of my favorite theatrical pieces (It was called "Titsy the Clown - the Story of a World-Renowned Topless Clown"), I FORCED myself to write. I was feeling nothing. Nothing. Museless, hopeless and dry. And just as an experiment, I said, "Push past it and write a piece anyway. Just do it. See." So I did. And I loved that piece. I still do.

So go muses. Love muses. Don't depend on muses. And everyone has to stop killing all the magic.

I'm not high.
Excellent post, Juliet. Smart and thought provoking. I watched Gilbert's TED talk a while back, and I'm aware that she is taking some lumps for it. Haven't these people ever read poetry or taken a classics' course? Speaking personally, I have found that I am most creative when I write every day, but not necessarily when I was writing on deadline several times a day. Then there are times when I have just sat down and something has poured out of me -- that's happened with some of my most personal OS writing. I edit it of course, but I don't generally know what I'm going to write until I sit down to do it.

I talk to myself all the time, I curse at, rage at, and praise at the muse. Most creative people I know have similar experiences. It's definitely not 100 per cent explainable by science, at least not yet, but I am satisfied that it is a worth while process. There's also the old adage that there is a thin line between genuis/creativity and madness. Something else to ponder.
Your posts are always so interesting and thought provoking. I'm basically with Sheepy on this one. As an artist and a writer, I never know what is going to come out of me next. I don't think about or plan posts any more than I do paintings. They just need to come out of me. Sometimes an event, observation or an emotion can trigger the words or paint to flow but I am unaware and don't intellectualize it; in fact, if I try to (which is rare), I abandon the piece completely. The fact that I feel "compelled" to paint or write is something I don't challenge or question. I would be miserable if the desire was there but circumstance or other people would stop me from doing it.
I may have to pay a little more attention to the rhythm and timing of creativity simply to see if there is any "science" I can glean from it. Thanks for a great post.
What a fascinating post. In the 21st century, we suffer from terminal hubris. Throughout human history most people have believed in some power beyond themselves, but we are so certain we have evolved beyond that. What fools these mortals be?

Risa, you wrote: "Anyway, I don't mind saying that I must be crazy by these standards, as I am sure that all of my inspiration comes from my ability to loosen the veil between my own consciousness and the collective consciousness. It gets me into trouble, but it is also a precious gift that I credit for anything that comes forth." That is certainly the essence of mania for me.
Our inability to believe in any power greater than ourselves is our society's downfall.

When NASA was sending men to the moon and making spaceflight possible for the first time in human history, people died, but we all knew it was for the greater good and we celebrated their contributions to science and knowledge and progress.

When a few Virgin Galactic employees died in the production of a revolutionary new machine that will finally move spaceflight out of government hands into industry's the Nightly News made it sound like the entire project should have been scrapped.

When were American's more likely to believe in God, and not think it irrational to believe in muses?

When you believe in a power outside of yourself and bad things happen, the people that they happen to are heroes who should be celebrated as they are mourned. When all we can see is human life, then anything that causes that life to be less than it's very, very best is cause for abandoning any otherwise worthy pursuit.

Don't give up. Believe. It's the only way to do anything worthwhile.
Don't know who or what the Muse is, but it's real, and it echoes Arthur Miller's line from Death of a Salesman:

"Attention must be paid."

If I don't pay attention to my Muse, I pay in lots of other ways. Call it self-inflicted if you like, but I pay.

Native American cultures speak of the Songcatcher, who is able to hear the songs that are all around that no one else can hear. I wasn't familiar with that when I wrote these lines:

The poet is the man who knows
Of all the thoughts God give to him
Which are the ones that should be kept

Or maybe I was aware and didn't know it yet.
Juliet, I think what the artist has that is different, is the following. Let me see if I trip up on myself:

The artist is communicating with whatever medium at hand, something unspoken about "being", an emotion, a thought, idea--all of these are not constants in the physical world. They are mere flickers. One reader, listener or viewer somewhere will catch that glimmer/flicker.

This is the part that seems other worldly. The artist sends it, then someone somewhere could connect with it. It's a gamble. It's a risk. It's hard to grab those fleeting moments and sharing them with another being through an artistic medium.

No fuzzy brain for you, just acedia, of noontime.
I was watching a documentary on Music and the Brain, a bunch of physicists including my favorite String Theorist, Brian Green interacting with a bunch of musicians, Sting and Bobbie McFerrin amongst others. The whole idea was to understand how the brain did music. What was striking was that the artists simply got 'carried away', inspired; they just played, while the scientists analyzed and interpreted. While I'm fascinated by the interface between the inexplicable mystery of creative expression and science I don't believe it holds the key to anything we'd want to unlock in order to write. On the contrary I think if we're to write we need to let go of any desire to control the variables. Beth speaks of magic. I totally agree. The scientists studied, the musicians played. When it comes to writing I think we're suppose to play. Whether it comes from inside or outside us, it's all the same to me by that I mean IT IS ALL THE SAME. Can we milk what insights science yields in order to tame it, this Musely thing? Fabulously, NO, I don't believe so. It's wild by definition. It will never be tamed.
Oh and thank you for this brilliantly written, thoroughly thought provoking piece. I don't expect to have been particularly coherent, especially at this most ungodly hour, but I felt I'd try and respond anyway.
Juliet, you are a fine writer, and if you put your mind (pen, ass-sitting time, less time-consuming things like O.S., etc. etc) on it, you can write anything you choose. Maybe the first great Canadian satirical novel since Richler, which would be excellent! Enough already with that morbid Atwood and that parochial Munro. Let's resume the biting, bitter prose about the truly nonsensical Canadian lifestyle left so glaringly vacant when Mordechai finally had his fill of us and left the building.
Writing requires all manner of both outer and inner influences. Muse (whatever that is), some money in the bank, a inspired idea (fictional or not) with an articulated plan (not necessarily to the extents of Tolstoy, but almost), plenty of patience, the courage to throw out beloved passages that simply don't work, talent (whatever that is), an intense desire to communicate and entertain, a determination to finish a project, and total disregard to the depraved publishing industry whose interests in fiction begin and end with sensationalistic novels that can instantly be turned into infantile movies.
I am talking about real writing here. The kind of stuff that deserves to be printed on paper (recycled, of course) and which the last few remaining book-lovers of the world (some several millions of them) would pay to own.
The other kind of writing, which we see all over the web, including sadly on O.S., requires absolutely no inspiration. It does serve a purpose (therapy for the writer, harmless waste of time for the readers) but it has very little value, being either a rehash of current events already much better reported in our good newspapers, or the random emetic ravings of a sick and fragile society trying to reconcile the American Dream with ever worsening quotidian miseries.
I love your little vignettes, like the one about the grimy Leprechaun. I bet you have enough of them to embellish a major novel powered by a protagonist based on yourself (writers make the best heroes of their own work). It wouldn't hurt if it had a compelling story at its core, but even if not, it would be a good read if you kept it funny. I know I would buy it.
Pressed for time here, but my answer in one word to the teaser question on the cover entry to this intriguing piece is "no."

No time either to do more than scan the comments for names I recognize, but I agree largely with most if not all of them. One of Stellaa's comes to mind because I read it first:

"The artist is communicating with whatever medium at hand, something unspoken about "being", an emotion, a thought, idea--all of these are not constants in the physical world. They are mere flickers. One reader, listener or viewer somewhere will catch that glimmer/flicker.

This is the part that seems other worldly. The artist sends it, then someone somewhere could connect with it. It's a gamble. It's a risk. It's hard to grab those fleeting moments and sharing them with another being through an artistic medium."


Stellaa has captured, for me, the rational explanation for what others may consider mystical, and which I sometimes will call it as a short-hand, which doesn't mean I think I'm communicating with extra-terrestrials. This "mysterious" process not only doesn't diminish the value of the product, for me, but it's often the key that opens a new door of perception.
Ahhh, girl. This, too, will pass. Read the new book Supersense... which validates intution. Scientists are actually embracing it. Honest.
However, NONE of that excuses Gilbert's nonsense...that wasn't a book. It WAS a breakdown that a publisher paid her for. More power to her but, really.:)
Great post, Juliet. I've watched that TED talk by Elizabeth Gilbert several times, and I love it, but I've never interpreted it as saying that the muse is an actual entity outside ourselves (although yes, she puts it in those terms...), more that the realities of life - ourselves, the environment, etc. - combine and conspire in ways that SEEM to create a real, external force, and that it's foolish to think that we can control it or that it comes entirely from within us.

And I've always felt that writers/critics who talk about Gilbert as though she's a flake are purely, simply jealous. It's the same old story: a writer who becomes wildly successful can't possibly be any good. If she'd remained obscure and marginal, serious writers would be slipping her name into Harper's essays and congratulating themselves on discovering her (a la Jonathan Franzen on Paula Fox.)
Until scientists can give an explanation for the origins of the universe, I reserve the right to not view them as the gods of the intellectual, emotional or spiritual. Because I see myself much more as a therapist rather than as a writer, I related to your incredibly well thought out post in the following way. There are clients I work with who struggle with addictions. I cannot explain this in scientific terms nor would I attempt to. I can only say that the power of Addiction is real and palpable. When I am working with the one who is addicted, I can literally feel a third presence in the room. The energy of Addiction is palpable and real. I'm sure there are many who would scoff at thi, but I respect this presence, not in the sense that I have admiration for it, but in the sense that my client will be better off understanding that there is a real Something that wants nothing good for them. I would call myself a spiritual agnostic because mystery abounds...there are too many unanswered questions. Those I work with and myself included, seem to have different quadrants: the intellectual, physical, emotional and spiritual. Ken Wilber, the philosopher and author of "A Theory of Everything" became disillusioned with science, dropping out of Duke University where he was enrolled as a pre-med student....He refers to the current state of science as "narrow science", which only allows evidence from the lowest realm of consciousness. You have initiated a complex and intriguing conversation, one in which I will feel ill-equipped to adequately discuss. But these are a few of my thoughts. Thanks for a fascinating post from a woman with a fascinating mind.
This was such a fascinating essay, Juliet. You're such a thought-provoking writer. I'm happy to read you , again.

Whenever anything is subjected to scientific inquiry, especially things like creativity and the supernatural, I get hopeful. I am hoping that there will be a paper published in a top-tier journal that definitively proves to all the naysayers and eye-rollers that although I make no money at it and will never prove the usefulness of it--writing is very important work. Some writing books will insist that all this talk about inspiration and "the muse" is a load of nonsense. They will suggest artists 'do the work' as if tapping into that place, creating a practice of doing so, isn't the hardest part. It is some of the hardest work I've ever done. It's a fine line between sharp concentration and dreaming, hanging on and letting go. Most of the time, work produced in such a state is pretty useless to the world and no matter how great it felt to go there, I'm left with nothing to defend my use of time and being productive is very important to me. That's how I was raised. Those are the times when a scientific explanation (and defense) could really come in handy.
My two cents....and, believe me, this ihas been boiled way down from the 50 cent version.

Science has never been able to explain consciousness, except to say that consciousness is what directs our attention to the subjects of our observations....but science doesn't really know what consciousness is, or how it works, although we all recognize consciousness without effort. We know, however, that consciousness has something to do with memory because consciousness is to some degree the memory of itself. We don't even know how memory works, although there are some cute theories on the subject. (I especially like the one that claims memories are holographic images stored in the brain cells; some people will go out on any limb, no matter how thin.)

The mystic simply responds that consciousness is self-awareness, the self perceiving itself which, of course, requires the mind to bifurcate itself so that it can observe and report upon its own process. (see Julian Jaynes, "The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind. And I mean, literally see it; you don't have to read it. The premise is in the title. I keep a copy on my self right in front of me.)

As a poet, my own experience is that I don't write poetry. It - the daemon - writes poetry and I'm merely taking dictation, the daemon being the indwelling entity that brings knowledge and wisdom to the host, and quite different from the muses, which are external entities that infect the mind with inspirations but not with an actual presence.

However, I agree that writing requires both inspiration and effort, the effort being expressed in the process of capturing the inspiration and reducing it to words that work.

I don't think anyone will ever be able to catch that on an MRI. You can catch the RESULTS of consciousness in brain activity, but not that which activates the activity.

My son used to talk to himself out loud while working on networking or software problems. He said that was how he kept his focus of attention on his work. When I am writing code, I talk to myself (albeit silently) as I work through the steps of the programming issue, and I don't know any programmer who doesn't do that.

When we speak out loud, we become our own audience and, when we hear our own voices saying what we're also thinking, it clarifies and reinforces the thought process.

Anyone who doesn't understand this is nuts.
The Muses were actually living women singers who performed in the temple called a Museum while priests cooked beef which the worshippers ate while watching the Muses perform. The poet men who sat at tables with the newly developed technology of pens and parchment were copying what the Muses performed, thus the phrase "Sing for me Muse the tale of ..."