Hello, friends! Welcome to this month’s meeting of the Insecure Writer’s Support Group, a blog hop created by Alex J. Cavanaugh and co-hosted this month by Diedre Knight, Lisa Buie Collard, Kim Lajevardi, and JQ Rose. Are you a writer? Do you feel insecure? Then this is the support group for you! Click here to learn more!

So this blog post is scheduled to come out the day after the U.S. Presidential Election; however, I am writing this a few days before the election. Therefore, the me who is writing this post does not yet know what the outcome of the election will be. Perhaps, when this post comes out, we still won’t know what the election results will be. It’s hard for me to guess what might happen, here in the past.
But I do know one thing. I know that, whatever the outcome of the election happens to be, a whole lot of people will be real happy about it, and a whole lot of other people will be real mad. I know I personally will be either really happy or really mad, depending on who wins this one. But it’s important to remember that elections are not the only things that matter in a democratic society. There are other ways to express your beliefs and advocate for causes you care about.
Which brings me, finally, to the real topic of today’s blog post: writing. I’m a science communicator and science fiction writer. I write about space, science, and the future of humanity. I believe in a future where we don’t destroy ourselves through nuclear war or climate change. I believe in a future where we come together as a species and where we go on to become explorers of the cosmos. In other words, I believe in the Star Trek future.
Sometimes, my writing gets a little preachy. Sometimes I want to get preachy in my writing. And sometimes I don’t. But even when I’m not deliberately trying to make some sort of moral or political statement, my beliefs and values still come through in everything I write. You can’t be a writer and not have your beliefs and values creep into your work somehow.
So if you’re a writer and if you have strong feelings (positive or negative) about whatever just happened in the U.S. Presidential election, my advice to you is this: go write. It doesn’t have to be overtly political writing. Write whatever makes you happy. Write whatever you’re passionate about writing. Just write. Your words matter more than you know. Your words can help people understand your point of view. Your words may change somebody’s mind. Your words can make the world a better place. So go write, keep writing, and make a difference.
P.S.: Oh no, I just wrote a blog post about politics and scheduled it for the day after a Presidential election. Okay, everybody, please try to be kind in the comments below. At the very least, try to be respectful. If you want to get into a fight with somebody about politics, there are plenty of other places on the Internet where you can go do that.


