In 1960, a young guitar player was living in a Nashville trailer park.
He’d been a dishwasher, a saddle-maker, a bouncer, a door-to-door salesman.
He’d been in The Air Force, the oil fields, in a pawnshop, in the cotton fields.
But all he dreamed about was playing guitar and writing country songs.
His friend, Hank Cochran, had a job as a songwriter.
He said he could get him a job as a songwriter, too.
It was his dream job, what he’d always wished for.
He couldn’t believe it when it finally came true.
But on his first day on the job, he froze.
He’d never had to write songs to order.
Normally his ideas just came to him while driving or doing something else.
He tried everything to make an idea for a song happen.
But the more he tried, the worse it got.
All day long, his mind was blank.
His dream job was slipping away from him because he wanted it too badly.
He felt like giving up.
He had no one to talk to about it.
He spent all day, alone, staring at a blank pad.
Staring at the walls.
Eventually, in frustration, he heard himself say “Hello walls.”
He even thought, I wonder if I could start a song that way?
Then he thought, no that’s stupid.
Then he thought, I’ve got nothing else – it’s better than nothing.
And he thought, if I can talk to the walls I can sure as shit talk to the window.
And he said “Hello window, I see you’re still here.”
Then he looked up and said “Hello ceiling, I’m gonna stare at you awhile.”
And, because he had nothing else, he began to write it all down, as a country song.
And when he’d written the lyrics, he wrote a harmony to go with them.
And soon he had a complete song called “Hello Walls”.
“Hello walls,
How are things with you today?
Don’t you miss her,
Since she up and went away?
I bet you dread to spend another lonely night with me.
But lonely walls I’ll keep you company.
Hello window,
I see that you’re still here.
Aren’t you lonely,
Since our darling disappeared?
Is that a teardrop in the corner of your pane?
Don’t you try and tell me that it’s rain.
Hello ceiling,
I’m gonna stare at you awhile.
You know I can’t sleep,
So just bear with me a while.
We gotta stick together or else I’ll lose my mind.
I got a feeling she’ll be gone a long, long time.”
That song went to number 1 and sold two million copies.
The writer was, of course, Willie Nelson.
Willie had learned the secret to getting unstuck: just start writing, about anything.
Willie wrote the song ‘Crazy’ for Patsy Cline.
It became the biggest jukebox hit of all time.
Since then he’s written 2,500 songs and recorded 300 albums.
He became a millionaire many, many times over.
Because he learned one thing about writing, and creativity in general.
Don’t wait for inspiration to hit you, just get started.
Being stuck is just that: stuck.
So use anything to get unstuck, to get moving: just start writing,
Start with anything, it doesn’t matter.
Once you’ve started, everything begins to fall into place.
Absolutely right Dave.
I want to become a professional Artist.
A year ago, an Art Expert at Moscow Ministry of Art
gave me the endorsement I desperately needed.
She said my work is to a “Professional standard”
About 3 years ago, someone advised me that I need about
50 original oil paintings to have a one man show.
I thought, that’s a bit of a tall order and did nothing for a year.
Then my wife sent me to still life classes for 2 years.
The other day I counted up all the paintings I have and can get hold of
to have an exhibition of my work.
They total 43 (not including the still life work) and I’m not stopping there.
What I do is scribble.
Once I’ve made a scribble
It gives me a choice.
Once I have chosen one, I know I just have to paint it
because it may be THE ONE that gets me into the limelight.
I don’t know.
Life always gets in the way,
It always gets in the way
so I have to push it out of the way.
Two weeks ago I jumped on the Metro to go home.
Then I jumped off it and went the other way.
I went to the Art Shop instead of going home.
I bought 5 canvases I cannot afford without a clue of what I was going to paint.
That was an illogical decision.
I put one blank canvas in front of my bed.
It’s so annoying, I have to paint it.
But I can’t sit still waiting for oil paint to dry for two weeks.
So I painted all of them at the same time
and now I have bought another 5 canvases
and only 3 are still blank.
Art is so subjective.
I don’t know what others see in my work, but they see something I don’t.
It’s not my business to analyse others.
My job is to “paint what I know.” as Mr Picasso taught me that.
Whichever dries first I work on next if I feel like it
and before I know it, I’ve got five paintings, not one.
What this also does is it allows me to think about the other
paintings while the one I have just worked on is drying.
The pressure is good.
Now, I don’t have enough canvases or enough time
to paint everything I want to paint, so that means I have to find more time.
So I do, and I’m having a great time doing it.
Not only that, but having no time makes what I do more precious
so what I paint is better. (My wife has told me this, and she doesn’t lie).
Have to go now.
The canvas is calling me.
PS Thanks for your Blogs, as ever.
Keep ’em coming.
They inspire me and push me to soldier on regardless.
How I’m going ship this lot back to the UK
or how and where I will have an exhibition
God only knows, but it’s a nice problem to have
and I don’t have to worry about that for now.
Hi, Dave.
It took me 50 years to learn that lesson. I find with both copy and blogging, and even other more serious writing, if I can put aside the bs and just type, I’m usually pretty good.
Red Smith, the great sportswriter for the New York Times and Pulitzer-Prize winner, once said, “Writing is easy. You simply sit down at the typewriter, open your veins, and bleed.”
I guess we’re all the same boat George.
The most important thing for me was learning that writing consists of two parts: writing and editing.
And editing is the more important part.
A tycoon once told me his motto: “Do it, then fix it”
‘Your mistakes is your style’
Grayson Perry.
Love that Kev
Hi Dave,
Do you have an email address so I can contact you regarding an interview?
I am contacting you from Radio Wolfgang, let me know how best to get hold of you.
Best
Ivor
There’s a new book on creativity coming out, and it’s got something to do with MacGyver and his methods. Your writing reminded me of it. I usually get inspiration while in the bath, or walking at peace, even in dreams a few times — sort of mindless pursuits. But there’s something about the mindlessness of them that pushes creativity forward.
I guess, it’s like your writing. It’s so effortless to read, yet so inspiring, profound, and absolutely well done. Thanks, Dave.
Loren,
(Sorry auto-correct changed it to Logan on the other post)
MacGyver of the mind is exactly right.
I think of it as blue-collar creative thinking.
That’s why I have a spanner in my photograph
I know little about the man, but Zig Ziglar once said that “you don’t have to be great to start, but you have to start to be great.”