I’ve recently come to realize that writing styles cover a
spectrum that that runs from two poles: the functional and the aesthetic. The
functional, as the name suggests, is that kind of writing we use to communicate
simple ideas or facts. It is best represented by the kind we do every day such
as memos or simple descriptions in a report or log. And though there is always
a better way of describing a thing, there's usually not that much at stake that
it would require a lot of work. The aesthetic, on the other hand, is that which
we do to dazzle and is best represented by the poem. In it, not only is there
always a better way to get a point across, we must always be looking for a more
impressive or seductive way to do so. Given this demand, it stands to reason that
it can be the more difficult of the two. Another important distinction, that
must be considered, is that with functional writing we always start out with a
clear idea of what must be communicated whereas the aesthetic starts with a
vague sense of what one would like to achieve, but is never committed to it.
And now that we have recognized this spectrum, we begin to understand a little more about the different writing activities we engage
in. For instance, we now see what the appeal of Facebook is. Even though there
is some attempt to impress, generally with humor, the writing done there is
generally a functional report of one’s day to day activities. The ideas about
what to write are always close at hand. It doesn’t put a lot of demands on the
writer. This, in turn, explains the value of the journal, even to many
professional writers, as a kind of cultivating ground for what can become more
elaborate and aesthetic achievements.
But most important, for our purposes, it tells us a little
more about the appeal of the message boards. Certainly, we do write to dazzle;
but that has more to do with the content of our minds than it does the style of
expression. Moreover, the bulk of what we do here is respond to the content of
the mind of the other. And the very act of responding naturally assumes having
something to respond with, of knowing what is to be communicated, which leaves
only the functional act of writing it down.
The problem for me, though, is that I've come to a point
where I want something more. I find myself drawn from the ease and
functionality of what we do here to the accomplishment and self transcendence
of the aesthetic. It's like a musician that jams all the time and never writes a song. It sounds masochistic, I know. The struggle to break through
the creative hymen, that elastic barrier, is painful to say the least. It is
not a myth: the misery of the artist is real. Still, what would be the point of
this, this commitment at the expense of all else, if one didn't, at least,
attempt to resonate with and seduce the world? To be more than something to
bounce off of?
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