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What is the objet petit a for aspiring writers?

I see so many kids that love being writers more than they love writing

From Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird: Instructions on Writing and Life loc 423:

The problem that comes up over and over again is that these people want to be published. They kind of want to write, but they really want to be published. You’ll never get to where you want to be that way, I tell them. There is a door we all want to walk through, and writing can help you find it and open it. Writing can give you what having a baby can give you: it can get you to start paying attention, can help you soften, can wake you up. But publishing won’t do any of those things; you’ll never get in that way.

From Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird: Instructions on Writing and Life

Almost every single thing you hope publication will do for you is a fantasy, a hologram—it’s the eagle on your credit card that only seems to soar. What’s real is that if you do your scales every day, if you slowly try harder and harder pieces, if you listen to great musicians play music you love, you’ll get better. At times when you’re working, you’ll sit there feeling hung over and bored, and you may or may not be able to pull yourself up out of it that day. But it is fantasy to think that successful writers do not have these bored, defeated hours, these hours of deep insecurity when one feels as small and jumpy as a water bug.

It strikes me that what she’s talking about here is a classic example of the objet petit a: the elusive target we yearn after to the core of our being, which we imagine grasping hold of will move us into a place of fullness from which we would never have to leave. If only we can get to this point, if only we can attain the object, everything will be ok… forever. The ceaseless pursuit of which risks cutting off from the satisfactions we can take in there and now, the embodied pleasures available to us as who we actually are rather than the person we imagine we could one day become.

Nothing is more entertaining
Than fucking with words and their arrangement
Every syllable can rhyme
If you can afford the time