I have good news and bad news for you.
The good news: screenwriting is a craft. Like learning to play the piano, anyone — and I mean anyone — can become great at it. You don’t need to have been born in Hollywood. You don’t need an MFA. You don’t need to know the right people. You need something far more rare and far more powerful than any of that.
The bad news: getting there is like wrestling a black bear. And here’s the rule nobody tells you before you step into that ring —
You don’t quit when you’re tired.
You quit when the bear is tired.
Welcome to screenwriting.
The Craft Is Real. So Is the War.
Let me be straight with you. I’ve worked in Hollywood. I learned my craft as an HBO filmmaker. I’ve been in the room. And I can tell you that the romance of screenwriting — the glamour, the credits, the awards — is real. But it sits on top of something far less romantic: years of brutal, lonely, grinding work that most people aren’t willing to do.
“The easiest thing to do on earth is not write.”
— William Goldman
He wasn’t being cute. He was warning you.
Because every morning you sit down to write a screenplay, you are choosing the harder path. You are choosing to wrestle the bear. And the bear will be there waiting — every single day — in the form of a blank page that asks you one simple question:
Do you have what it takes?
Your job is to answer yes. Then prove it.
The Blank Page Is the First Battle
Nora Ephron — the woman behind Sleepless in Seattle and When Harry Met Sally — said the hardest part of writing a script is the first draft. Not the tenth. Not the rewrite. The first one.
That’s not a coincidence. The first draft is where most writers die. Not dramatically — quietly. They sit down, stare at the cursor blinking on an empty document, feel the weight of everything the story could be, and then slowly, inch by inch, they back away.
“The professional tackles the project that will demand the most of him.”
— Steven Pressfield
That’s the warrior mindset applied to craft. You don’t run from the hardest version of the story. You run toward it. You strap in, you feel the fear, and you write the first ugly, imperfect, necessary page.
“You want to look at a blank screen and cry? Go ahead, but do it while typing.”
— Shonda Rhimes
That’s it. That’s the whole secret.
The Rewrite Will Break Your Heart. Do It Anyway.
Here’s what they don’t teach you in film school: your first draft isn’t the work. It’s the raw material for the work.
“I think writing is a horrible, lonely, painful thing… it’s the rewrite that breaks your heart.”
— Ernest Lehman
He’s right. The rewrite is where you kill your darlings. The scene you love most. The line you stayed up until midnight to get right. Gone — because the story demands it.
“A screenplay is never finished, it’s just abandoned.”
— Akiva Goldsman
“Writing is a process of constantly feeling like you are failing until suddenly you don’t.”
— Frank Darabont
This is not a warning. This is a road map. If you feel like you’re failing, you’re in the right place. Keep going.
The Industry Will Ignore You. Love the Work More.
“The screenwriter is the most important person in Hollywood, and the most easily ignored.”
— Marc Norman
That is the precise, maddening truth of this industry. Without the writer, there is no film. And yet the writer is the first person pushed aside when the director, the star, and the studio all have opinions about your script.
“You have to love the work so much that the industry’s indifference cannot stop you.”
— Brian Helgeland
Rejection is not a detour on the path to a screenwriting career. It IS the path. It is the terrain you walk every single day.
“Being a writer is like having homework for the rest of your life.”
— Lawrence Kasdan
That’s not a curse. That’s the price of admission. And for those of us who love this craft, it’s worth every late night, every empty coffee cup, every page that didn’t work.
The Bear Gets Tired. Stay in the Ring.
“I’m always convinced that the thing I’m working on is the worst thing ever written.”
— Charlie Kaufman
Charlie Kaufman. One of the most acclaimed screenwriters alive. If he feels that way, you’re allowed to feel that way too. What you are not allowed to do is quit.
“Idea gathering is a struggle, but catching a good one makes the suffering worth it.”
— David Lynch
That’s the deal. You suffer through the blank pages, the bad drafts, the self-doubt, the rejection — and then one day, a scene clicks. A character speaks. A story comes alive on the page in a way that gives you chills.
And you remember why you started.
The bear will get tired. They always do. Your job is to still be standing when it happens.
Ready to write your screenplay — for real this time? Book a free Zoom session at warriors-life-coach.com. I coach writers from the first scene to the final draft. No theory. No fluff. Just the real work.
If I can help you, I’ll tell you. If I can’t, I’ll tell you that too.
Ritchie Farrell is a WGA screenwriter, HBO filmmaker, and story coach whose work has been shaped by some of the most demanding rooms in Hollywood — and some of the most unforgiving places on earth.