I was helping my son with his homework the other day. For one of his assignments, he had to write a public service announcement. He has been visited by the muse at an early age. His goal is to publish his first book by the time he's 18.
It got me thinking about my life as a writer, and the young formative years. As a boy, I had a broad imagination, and much time alone. I remember coming up with plot lines in my head, and then writng little adventure stories. My dad was a drama teacher. He directed four or five plays a year. I grew up watching the classic plays, and developing a love for literature.
In Junior high, I saw the power of my gift. I wasn't a popular kid; somewhat of a loner. But one day in English class, I wrote a story about a ***** headed hamster, with an underbite like a French bulldog. The other kids loved it. They listened and laughed, and applauded. Words became my new best friend.
I grew, and leaned on writing through the good times and the bad. They were my warmth In the long winters, and my rain in springtime. Through the alcoholic haze of much of my adulthood, writing kept me sane, and it gave me the will to keep living when the pain grew into a beast of its own...
My son hands me his paper, and it's brilliant--it warns people about the dangers of cyber hackers, by portraying the average person surfing the net as a lamb walking along in the grass, thinking life is grand just being a sheep, when along comes the wolf that pounces and devours. He finishes with, "Don't let this happen to you. Protect your computer and files with such and such software."
He asked me if I thought he could be a good writer. I laughed, and and told him that he already was.