For John Irving, the need for a daily ration of solitude was his strongest "pre-writing" moment as a child.<br /><br />Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/how-to-tell-if-youre-a-writer<br /><br />Follow Big Think here:<br />YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/bigthink<br />Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom<br />Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink<br /><br />Transcript:<br />I supposed I had a number of what I might call pre-writing moments as a kid. I recognized at a pretty early age, certainly I was pre-teens, I noticed that the school day was enough of a day to spend with my friends. I seemed to have a need to want to be alone. <br /><br />Even before I started making almost landscape notes in a journal, even before I started keeping a journal, which happened to me when I was fourteen, even before then I had a need to come home from school by myself and to be in a room by myself or in my grandmother's garden by myself. <br /><br />I guess the earliest sign was how much I liked being alone, how much I actually needed to be alone, the way you need, or I need, exercise or food or a certain amount of sleep. There was that desire to be, and a comfort, at being alone.