From a recent Mike Cernovich substack: âWriters canât not write. Itâs therapy. Thatâs why people who ask how to write are admitting that they donât want to be writers. Theyâd already have a huge volume of work. It might not be that great. It may need an editor. But it would exist.â That describes me in college. I was the guy who spent all day reading about writing and writers. I talked a lot about writing and writers, too. And I even did a little writing and was a writer at times (like a variety show script for my fraternity, a TV script for a student produced show that was never used, and an adaption for a short story called âThe Werewolfâ by Angela Carter for a comicbook-style video for a video production class â which, incidentally, is in my Enoch Wars mobile app). But I wasnât really âa writer.â Or, rather, I was one of those writers who was full of crap. Because I called myself a writer but wasnât regularly writing with little to show for it. Thatâs most âwritersâ these days as well. No, I didnât really become a writer until I got into copywriting. And even then, I didnât hit my stride until I started writing daily emails for a few months, and realized the therapeutic benefits in addition to the sales that resulted from simply writing more content than I did before, faster than I did before. But the sales and business-side is almost secondary. And nowadays you cant get me not to write. Thatâs the only reason I have been able to write something like 8,000-9,000 pages of content between my books & print newsletter runs. Plus over 7,000 emails to my list (including some that are 6, 7, even 8 or more pages long, which also tend to be some of the best converting ones..), hundreds more emails collectively for clients I've worked for and/or other business ventures I partner in or have partnered in, God-only-knows how many sales letters (my Copy Slacker book published in 2019 has nearly 500 pages of my sales letter copy in it, and I've written many more sales letters since), hundreds of ezine articles for multiple niches, multiple comicbook scripts for the ongoing Email Players comicbook (that runs through the newsletter each month - I've written the stories through 2024's issues), and even nine novels in my Enoch Wars horror story series â the last of which I'm less than a month away from finishing editing. Yes, thereâs an enjoyment aspect to it. i.e., If I donât find it fun I donât write it. Which by itself is a lesson for writers.. But what Mike Cernovich said about writing above being therapy is 100% true. I work out all kinds of mental bull shyt via writing. Itâs like wakeful dreaming. And at this point I do it whether Iâm getting paid to or not. Like, for example, my Enoch Wars novels which I haven't spent hardly any time marketing other than very superficially to my list (most of who don't even read fiction) - and that barely make back the costs I spend on the covers and having them produced into audio books. Doesnât matter because I cannot not write them. The last couple months I've spent 3-4+ hours per day on just tediously editing them, in addition to banging out emails and other content - like Email Players issues, 20+ emails sequences selling those issues, plus some other stuff I have going on for later this year. If I didn't love writing - if I found the process painful or boring - I wouldn't bother and would just spank out one email per day and do nothing else with my time like I used to do. But I write fiction because it's a blast building out worlds and characters and storylines, and seeing the kind of stories I like to indulge in that nobody else has ever written (that's why a lot of authors write books, because nobody else has written the books they want to read), and all the other copywriting benefits I get from the process. And that's the thing about people who spend literally 4, 6, 8+ hours per day writing: It ain't normal. Itâs quite abnormal in a lot of ways. Just like being perfectly comfortable spending 8-9 hours (or more in my case sometimes) completely alone each day writing and/or walking while writing in my mind, thinking up ideas for writing, living inside my head (I don't know how Stefania copes with it) to prep for more writing is abnormal. Thatâs why when someone asks about "how to get into copywriting" I already know theyâre probably dead in the water. Otherwise theyâd just start doing it, figuring it out as they go, making mistakes, and enjoying the process. That's how I did it, at least. I can't speak for anyone else. But itâs not unlike how James Cameron started making movies. He didnât go to school for it. He didnât get permission to do it. And he didnât haunt masterminds, Facebook groups, or sit around talking to other filmmakers on social media about making movies for motivation, accountability, and inspiration. No - he just picked up a camera... and started making movies. The result? The only filmmaker whose made three movies that have cracked $2 billion. You don't do that by talking. You do it by doing. Anyway, I donât know who needed to hear this. I literally typed the first draft of this email on my phone, shortly before bed. (Writing right up until sleep probably ain't normal either..) But whoever is reading this finding it useful, Iâll just leave you with a song lyric by the late, great Fred Rogers whose life, work, and success habits Iâve been digging deep into over the last 8 or 9 months especially (this monthâs January Email Players issue was essentially all about that). If children can grasp this then any adult should be able to: == You can make-believe it happens, or pretend that somethingâs true. You can wish or hope or contemplate a thing youâd like to do, But until you start to do it, you will never see it through âCause the make-believe pretending just wonât do it for you. == Good advice for children. Even better advice for those longing to be writers. All right, speaking of writing: The February Email Players issue ain't just "about" writing. But, I do spend a couple pages on something I suspect a lot of email copywriters (if you write for your own offers, not so much if you write for clients) will find especially profitable if you're not afraid to do it, or if you care what others think. Something that can make you almost "swipe proof." Certainly AI proof from what I've seen (AI cannot "create" anything, it can only "remix.") I'll be talking a lot more about the February issue soon. In the mean time, if you want to get in on this action early, go here: [httpsâ¶//www.EmailPlayers.com]( Ben Settle This email was sent by Ben Settle as owner of Settle, LLC. Copyright © 2023 Settle, LLC. All Rights Reserved. No part of this email may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from Settle, LLC. Click here to
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