Cracks In Time The Podcast
If you’d rather watch this instead of read it, click here: Watch Here [https://youtu.be/DppU4mkSQls] A few months ago, someone asked me a question that completely caught me off guard. “So, you’re an author?” And for some reason, I froze. Not because I didn’t know how to answer. Because I wasn’t sure the answer was true. For years, I assumed that if you were writing a book with the intention of publishing it, then you were automatically an author. It seemed simple enough. You’re writing a book. Therefore, you’re an author. Right? The more I thought about it, though, the more uncomfortable I became with that title. Because while I was spending my mornings, late nights, and stolen pockets of time writing a novel, I still didn’t have a published book. And that made me ask a question I never expected to wrestle with: Am I actually an author, or am I something else? The Difference Between a Writer and an Author This is just my opinion, so take it for what it’s worth. A writer is someone who writes. That’s it. You write novels, poems, short stories, scripts, comic books, journal entries, fan fiction, or anything else? You’re a writer. An author, on the other hand, is someone who has written and published work. Publication is the difference. That doesn’t make one better than the other. It just makes them different. Right now, I am absolutely, undeniably a writer. I write constantly. I think about stories constantly. I spend an unreasonable amount of time talking to fictional people who only exist inside my head. But I am not published. Which means, at least for me, I’m not an author yet. And strangely enough, admitting that has been incredibly freeing. Why I Stopped Calling Myself an Author For a long time, every time I called myself an author, something felt off. It felt like I was introducing myself as something I hadn’t earned yet. Maybe that’s imposter syndrome. Maybe it’s semantics. Maybe it’s both. But the truth is that I felt more pressure when I called myself an author than when I called myself a writer. Because the moment you say you’re an author, people ask questions. “Where can I buy your book?” “What’s your book called?” “Do you have a link?” And when you don’t have those answers yet, it gets awkward fast. When you say you’re a writer, people understand you’re in the process. You’re creating. You’re building. You’re working toward something. There’s room to grow. The Weird Middle Space Nobody Talks About This is the part I think a lot of aspiring authors live in. You aren’t a hobbyist. This isn’t some random thing you’re trying on a weekend. You’ve built a world. You’ve developed characters. You’ve written thousands—or hundreds of thousands—of words. You’re serious about this. But the book isn’t published yet. So what are you? You’re not quite where you want to be. But you’re far beyond where you started. You’re standing in the middle. And sometimes that middle feels uncomfortable because it doesn’t come with a clear title. For me, that’s where “writer” fits. Not because it’s smaller. Not because it’s less important. But because it’s honest. Why We Care So Much About the Title I’ve spent a lot of time wondering why this bothered me so much. Why did I want the title of author so badly? I think part of it is because we see successful authors everywhere. We see bestseller lists. BookTok. Bookstagram. Publishing announcements. Movie deals. And we start to believe that becoming an author is the finish line. But when I really sat with it, I realized something. The thing I actually love isn’t the title. It’s the writing. It’s the characters. It’s the worlds. It’s sitting down and creating something from absolutely nothing. The title is nice. The work is what matters. Stop Comparing Your Journey This is the reminder I needed most. You cannot compare your journey to someone else’s. Some writers are working full-time jobs. Some are homeschooling moms. Some have three kids. Some have none. Some have unlimited time. Some are squeezing writing into fifteen-minute increments between laundry, appointments, and bedtime routines. No two paths look the same. And yet so many of us spend our energy comparing our Chapter 3 to someone else’s Chapter 30. It’s exhausting. And it’s unfair. Your circumstances are different. Your timeline is different. Your story is different. So What Am I? Right now? I’m a writer. Tomorrow I’ll be a writer. Next year I’ll probably still be a writer. And someday, if all goes according to plan, I’ll also be an author. But becoming an author won’t erase the fact that I was a writer first. Because every author is still a writer. The title changes. The work doesn’t. And honestly? That’s enough for me. If you’re sitting in that strange middle space between wanting publication and not being there yet, I hope this helps. You don’t need a published book to prove you’re creating something meaningful. You don’t need a title to justify the work you’re doing. If you’re showing up and putting words on the page, you’re already doing the thing. You’re a writer. And that’s a pretty incredible thing to be. Are you a writer, an author, or somewhere in that messy middle space? Let me know in the comments. — Ash KairieUnfiltered. Unapologetic. Still Becoming the Indie Author. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit ashkairieauthor.substack.com [https://ashkairieauthor.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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