The Dogged Determination of Imagination: Smack Dab in the Imagination by Dia Calhoun

 Completing a novel, or any long, complex work, requires a doggeddetermination. You write draft after draft over months and years. Sometimes you feel like it will never be done. Often thereis a final push to the finish. Polish! Polish that red apple! For months youfocus, work, ignore all the shiny distractions—what about this poem? That new idea?That essay, book, trip, social event? Many days, you doubt the book will everbe done. Toward the end of the polish process, this can feel like the eighthmonth of pregnancy—

 

That’s where I am in my current book—and I haven't even started labor pains yet.

For me, imagination is a co-partner with determination. Idon’t mean imagining my completed, printed book or manuscript in my hand or ona bookshelf (although I know this helps some people). What helps me to keepworking is imagining my book becoming its own luminous self, existing in theworld independently of me—like a cluster of candles, that in the aggregate,will cast its own unique light. Something born. When my imagination can picturethat, hold that thought, my determination is renewed.

 

OK, back to work.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 23, 2023 00:00
No comments have been added yet.