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Stephen wrote: "I'm pretty sure I would find fame embarrassing and tedious. That does not mean I wouldn't be delighted to see general acknowledgment that something I'd written or done had value, but I just don't e..."Good points, Steve. FDR is an unknown. Wow. Thanks for the comments.
How many who don't know who FDR was - know who Lady Ga Ga is? The answer tells all.Bottom line is we can't write for the public - we write because we have to - like breathing.
Breathe in - breathe out - there's no such thing as 15 minutes of fame any longer - more like 15 seconds - if you're even aware of it. Being true to yourself is all that remains.




For a sobering take on the permanence of fame, choose any collection of names, starting, say, with FDR, and see how many high school kids even recognize them, let alone know why they were important or when they lived. It's scary.
I don't know much about Joe the Plumber, but have been thinking of him while reading a memoir by a soldier who fought in Desert Storm. This guy is not a writer, and will not make a splash, but the fact that he has a story to tell, and tells it in a geniune voice, leads me to suspend my normally critical judgments. It helps me to understand that writing can have value even when it comes from someone you'd never expect it from.