Steven Pressfi
eld
Do Th
e Work!
28
Next: beginning and middle. We need to set the climax up and load it with maximum emotion and thematic impact. We must, in other words, establish both protagonist and antag-onist, make clear to the reader what each of them represents and what their confl
ict means thematically in the broader scheme of
the human (and divine) condition.Beginning : Ishmael. Our point of view. A human-scale witness to the tragedy.Once we have Ishmael, we have our start and our ultimate fi
n-
ish—aft
er the whale destroys the
Pequod
and all her crew and
drags Ahab to his death in the depths, Ishmael pops up amid the wreckage, the lone survivor, to tell the tale.
End fi
rst, then beginning and
middle. Th
at’s your startup, that’s
your plan for competing in a
triathlon, that’s your ballet.
“But hey, Steve ... I thought you said ‘Don’t think.’”Let’s pause for a moment then and consider the diff
erence be-
tween thinking and “thinking.”
Thoughts and Chatter Have you ever meditated? Th
en you know what it feels like to
shift
your consciousness to a witnessing mode and to watch
thoughts arise, fl
oat across your awareness, and then drift
away,
to be replaced by the next thought and the thought aft
er that.
Th
ese are not thoughts.
Th
ey are chatter.
I was thirty years old before I had an actual thought. Everything up till then was either what Buddhists call “monkey-mind” chatter or the refl
exive regurgitation of whatever my parents or
teachers said, or whatever I saw on the news or read in a book, or heard somebody rap about, hanging around the street corner.In this book, when I say “Don’t think,” what I mean is: don’t listen to the chatter. Pay no attention to those rambling , dis-jointed images and notions that drift
across the movie screen of
your mind.