"This is what I learned: that everybody is talented, original and has something important to say"
About this Quote
A line like this risks sounding like a greeting-card bromide, but Ueland makes it land by framing it as hard-won knowledge: "This is what I learned". She isn’t selling inspiration; she’s testifying to a conversion. That opening clause quietly signals a struggle against the entrenched modern myth that art belongs to the naturally gifted and the officially credentialed. Ueland, a writer and teacher best known for urging people to write with abandon, is staking out a democratic theory of creativity that doubles as a moral stance.
The triad - "talented, original, and has something important to say" - is doing strategic work. "Talented" addresses the fear of incompetence. "Original" counters the anxiety of derivativeness, the sense that everything worth saying has already been said better. "Something important to say" rebukes the deeper shame: that your inner life is trivial. Read together, it’s a full-spectrum defense against silence.
The subtext is less "everyone is a genius" than "everyone has been trained not to speak". In Ueland’s era, especially for women and the non-elite, self-expression often came pre-censored by etiquette, gatekeeping, and a culture that equated seriousness with male authority. Her insistence on universal originality is a way of smuggling permission past those sentries. It’s also a challenge to professionalized literature: the notion that writing is a rarefied craft practiced by a few becomes, in her hands, a social habit anyone can reclaim.
The triad - "talented, original, and has something important to say" - is doing strategic work. "Talented" addresses the fear of incompetence. "Original" counters the anxiety of derivativeness, the sense that everything worth saying has already been said better. "Something important to say" rebukes the deeper shame: that your inner life is trivial. Read together, it’s a full-spectrum defense against silence.
The subtext is less "everyone is a genius" than "everyone has been trained not to speak". In Ueland’s era, especially for women and the non-elite, self-expression often came pre-censored by etiquette, gatekeeping, and a culture that equated seriousness with male authority. Her insistence on universal originality is a way of smuggling permission past those sentries. It’s also a challenge to professionalized literature: the notion that writing is a rarefied craft practiced by a few becomes, in her hands, a social habit anyone can reclaim.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | If You Want to Write — Brenda Ueland. (Originally published 1938.) Contains the line: "This is what I learned: that everybody is talented, original and has something important to say." |
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