Bad Advice.

I have posts coming about Wonder Woman and Midnighter and all the excitement I have about those projects, but I figured it might be a good time to talk about something that has bothered me for years. I’m not going to include names because the players involved are insignificant. I am only able to see this now, because of the confidence afforded through the forward momentum of my writing. There were long stretches of time where stuff like what I’m about to share really bothered me. If anything I’d like to think that the pain that comes from striving has made me only less likely to push that pain along to others.

It was maybe 8 years ago, I was very early in my efforts to self publish comics and had formed a collective called Mystery School Comics Group. The purpose of the group was to create the illusion of legitimacy, to give myself and the others involved a sigil under which to build our resumes, and mostly because it pleased me to do so. Early on it was myself, my brother Winston (who designed much of the imagery still in use), along with our friends Justin McElroy and Jef Overn. We had others jump in and out, but really that was the roster. We all tried our hands at writing and drawing with varied results, but it was our enthusiasm that fueled the whole thing. While sales were never great we weren’t in the practice of keeping count, we were there for the passion of doing it.

Part of the fun, but also part of the struggle was getting accepted into conventions. Most of these charged a lot, but they were also very choosy about who they would allow to table. I remember sending countless applications and only hearing back from a select few. When we would do shows it was always a party. We would get a hotel room and make a whole thing out of it. Nothing nefarious, just a couple dudes trying to sell comics and zines, drinking too much at the hotel bar, and retiring to the hotel room to shared beds and bad reality tv. None of us had interest in much beyond sharing our work, checking out the work of others like us, and spending time doing something that was ultimately quite costly but fun. Between the tables, the room, the tab, and all the comics we would buy we would VERY rarely even break even, most often taking a loss. No one cared. We were happy.

Around this time there was this influential comics creator who was well known for hopping on a soapbox and telling everyone the RIGHT way to do things. He was in our orbit as he had expressed some interest in Justin’s work, and rightfully so, Justin is a beast. This creator in question once again undertook to deliver unsolicited advice on a thread that several of us were participating in on an indie creators group on social media. Someone outside of our group had lamented the high cost of tables at shows and was asking for advice as to how to deal with this. Several from my group chimed in about the value of collective investment in projects, understanding that loss is almost guaranteed, and how we go about feeling ok about what others might see as a something less than successful.

So this established creator pops onto the thread and basically is like “If you can’t make money at a con you shouldn’t do them.” This might seem like sane advice, but we took it a bit like “If you fall off of a skateboard while attempting a new trick, stop skateboarding.” We said as much, without any disrespect, and were met with a really aggressive response from the dude in question.

“Comics aren’t for everyone, if you can’t make money that’s saying something, it’s saying they aren’t any good. Good comics sell, bad ones don’t… this is tough for some people to understand. If you do a convention and can’t make money you might wanna look at doing something else with your time.” I’m not exaggerating, this is almost word for word what he wrote. I remember my brother being like “Yo, fuck that guy.” But we all made excuses for him, and defended his stance by reworking the message to feel less gross. It turns out my brother was just the only one among us who wasn’t starstruck by some passing interest from someone in the industry.

This guy turned out to be a real shit. A couple years later it became public knowledge that he was a fucking creep. While we were losing money at conventions, he was using some of those same places to harass women. While we were drinking budget beers in the budget inn, he was using the perception of authority he carried to manipulate and deceive. This information wouldn’t come out until years later, I wish we had known it at the time, it would have been easier to shrug off his dumb comments.

Anyway, we kept it up, but the damage had been done. We couldn’t shake the nagging self doubt he had inflicted on the group. We didn’t slow down because of what he said, but we weren’t exactly empowered by it either. When you’re striving toward a goal the LAST THING someone should do is suggest that you aren’t growing, and that the struggle isn’t worth it.

This kind of gatekeeping bullshit has been the bane of my creative life. It was like this in music, and to see it in comics as well is incredibly disappointing. Art and storytelling serve a lot of purposes for folks, for me at the time it was giving me a reason to dream. I was working in a very taxing field, I had stopped playing music (unable to find time with the kind of work I was doing) and comics were my escape. I found myself dreaming of some of the things I get to do now, and really that memory is so strong, and so close, I don’t see how anyone can get anywhere in comics and manage to forget the fight. Maybe it’s easier for folks who have an art style that immediately grabs the attention of publishers? Maybe this creator never had the kind of struggle we had? Or maybe he had supportive voices in his life rather than the flat disinterest or discouragement most of us face?

With my achievements sometimes I fantasize about telling off doubters from those times. I daydream of my work being celebrated in the faces of those who didn’t believe in me. I want them to know that I kick ass, and I want them to feel ashamed for missing that. Of course this is the wrong way to engage with growth as an artist, but I’d be lying if I claimed to never have thought such things. 

I temper this egotistical thinking by reminding myself that I’m extremely lucky. I have been granted access that few manage, I have been encouraged by more folks over the past few years than I have deserved, and maybe most of all I’m thankful that I am the kind of person who doesn’t give up easily. I’ve had more dark nights of the soul than I care to admit, and it has really added gas to the tank. In many ways I feel like these are the last days I will be able to work with the vigor required to get where I wanna go and I don’t want to miss my chance. The hardship reminds me that the stuff I get sore about is much closer to my dream than the previous concerns.

This all comes to mind when I see how folks engage online today. Things have become even more aggressive, dismissive, and rude by orders of magnitude. I see people take shots at peers for sport, and grind their heels into those “beneath” them. I see putting on airs of superiority that’s almost laughable, but not entirely, because I know for those on the receiving end it can be a real wound. I’ve been wounded before, and will be wounded again, seeing it happen to others sucks.

So I try to be kind and to share the very little I know. In truth there isn’t a huge gap between the most established folks in the comic industry and those losing money at shows. We’re all just making things and hoping they make others happy. 

Not long ago I offered advice to folks looking to self publish. I had 2 individuals take me up on it. One was not motivated, the other dismissed my advice by saying he “wanted to do it for real.” Two polar opposite ends of the equation, both completely understandable, both as right as they are wrong. The lesson was mine, I can’t show others the path, that’s for them to discover. Their path will be invisible to me, occulted by my own experience. I’ve found all I can do is not stand in anyone’s way, to welcome them to this world with stories of my own, and to hear theirs with unbiased ears.

We need each other, we always have. Maybe when we realize this people will be less concerned about status and more concerned about the responsibilities we often neglect in pursuit of feeling important.

Somniloquy

This is one of those mornings when the words aren’t coming easy, not for lack of ideas as much as not knowing what the move is right now, let me explain-

I’m in an awkward position of having a number of projects nearly at a point where the fun can begin- projects with big publishers, more work with the incredible Noah Bailey, potential interest from even more publishers, a newfound interest in finding a literary agent, so much to do without really having a straight up greenlight to follow. This is a trying time, as I feel like I’ve been suited up, ready to enter the arena and there keep being delays. I tell myself to just keep writing, keep thinking about stories, everything I consume I consider and examine for its strengths- but I just want to get in there and mix it up- like, yesterday.

At GalaxyCon Richmond I told a young writer to just keep grinding, that the path to writing is simple: if you wanna be a writer you must, no matter what, write, always. Right now I feel like a bit of an imposter, but I’m doing what I suggested, I am typing. I told this guy that most will give up, most will be defeated, and only those who push can manage the sad pressures of waiting. I was speaking from a very real place of experience, it’s really the only advice I can give knowing that I am becoming a master of that particular discipline.

I am not where I want to be right now (who is frankly) but I write knowing that if I obey the creature that crawled into my mind and told me to write I will get closer to my goals. I know that if I keep throwing my body against the wall it will break, if I spend my whole life doing this it will not be a life poorly lived. I don’t know how many other writers meditate on this, but it has been my mantra, I will not stop.

Twitter can be an ugly place, right? Aside from the unavoidable elements of negativity there are the folks who, rightfully so, boast about new projects coming together. They got a Marvel contract, they have a book doing big numbers, they have something coming next month in Previews, hell- they have an editor/agent who believes in them. As someone early on the path this can be very discouraging because I want these things, I feel I have the ability to tell stories that will connect and intrigue and drive interest to a book, why not me? The answer is simple, I have to work more, work harder, attack my goals from all angles, I have to obey the mantra and not stop.

I recognize that I am in a position that is enviable, I have written for the big two, I have an OGN that has done well in sales and the critics have appreciated what I have done. I also recognize that due to having Becky coaching me through this I have a level of insight not afforded to many. Couple this with the fact that I have found a mentor in Shelly Bond, and numerous other seasoned professionals, I am in afforded opportunities that few have. This doesn’t stop the voices though, the nagging, taunting voices that drone on from the moment I wake till the moment I find sleep. The voices enter dreams, interrupt sweet moments, distract me from the work at times, they do as much good as they do bad. These are the voices every creator requires and hates all at once.

When I played music my friend Richard and I used to fantasize about what we would do and who we would become when we hung up our guitars. We would have hobbies and good jobs, we would be normal. I realize now that not only am I not capable of being normal, I wouldn’t want to be. Making things gives my life a value that cannot be fully defined, but it is by no means easy, and it doesn’t always feel good.

I know that when I post about some of these things coming together (soon) that some will feel like I have made it. This thought is laughable, and it speaks to the agonizing fate of an artist. Nothing/everything is not enough. It isn’t for money, or legacy, or acclaim, it’s to feed the monster. The more you feed it, the more it grows and the hungrier it becomes. I will, one day achieve the goals I have in place and on a grey day like this I will take a moment and write a post just like this one. I will be looking for more, looking for a sunrise, feeling like I am not doing enough. It’s a strange fate to resign yourself to, but I find some comfort in knowing that there are always upgrades.

Let’s change the subject though, let’s talk about some nice things.

-I’m really proud of those short stories I shared. I hope you took the time to read them. I continue to write them but I will no longer be sharing them here. This is due to “plans” I have and advice from folks in publishing. Additionally, I was starting to feel like I was hitting folks with a bunch of content that no one was asking for, so I’ll save it for only the folks who appreciated that part of my writing regimine.

-At GalaxyCon I was treated well by mostly everyone. I sold a good deal of stuff and signed a lot of the work that I already have out there. I got to be part of a panel with Becky and Richard Case, a man whose work I have admired for the better part of my life. I felt like I was at The Dance. This was a privilege and I look forward to more.

-I’m proud of the script I wrote for Noah Bailey, my partner on Tremor Dose. Our next book is going to really blow everyone away, and I hope that a few months from now I will be talking about how incredible it was to work with him again, and how much easier it was now this time around.

-I’m making strides in working on my self confidence. A huge part of it is adjusting my language to reflect a new opinion of myself. I’m trying not to say “I am not really an artist.” because this is patently untrue and it does a disservice to my work. I’m trying to accept compliments without running away from them, be it by dismissal or literally leaving. I’m trying to accept that I have the ability to connect to others through my work and that it is a mark of my hard earned skills. I’m feeling more like I have earned this.

-I’m trying to be a better person, to share what I know and who I am in an honest way. I’m trying to see myself as a peer and not someone who aspires to attain something that is an illusion any damn way.

-I’m trying to feel less jealous and critical of others in the industry. This is juvenile and weak, and it has no place in my life- or yours.

-I’m trying to be a better friend to the planet and to people. I aim to improve my perspective, and I’m really proud of that.

-I remain humble. I remember to feel gratitude, but not to displace my good fortune. Luck is not the critical ingredient, I work hard.

No, I’m not there yet. The destination keeps moving, the goal post is on wheels, it’s only in accepting this that I am able to grow. I thank you all for allowing me to share and for the kindness you have shown me. I’m living my dreams and that is the most important thing I must remember. I’m already there, with you.