Life Without Writing?
When I remember the past, it comes in a series of snapshots, which (rather like a 'Harry Potter' photograph) begin to move when I select one, bringing to mind details that I can never be sure I have not added over the years. There are some that keep coming up, like a picture of me on a Greek beach at Christmas wearing a royal blue jumper and a pink skirt with my arms stretched out to the side. I look happy, my head tilted, a big smile on my face. I look as though I am on the point of taking off and gliding over the sand. Another comes to mind, forcing out the girl in the blue jumper. I am at the zoo with my daughter. She is not much older than one and she is grinning because she has just counted to three, or I think she has. I see her face close up and wonder where this version of her has gone. Then there is the jolly camper van I used to have and the adventures that went with it. I recall the smell of grass and the dripping of the rain as I boiled a kettle and made tea on the tiny stove. The interior was orange and green, but I didn't care. All these people. All these places. All these moments.
Today, at my desk, I listen to the birds outside my window and I wait for the sound of my children returning from school, as they have done so many times before. A collection of returnings - I can't remember the first time and I don't really want to think about the final time, which is surely nearer than the first?
I should go down and do something useful. Make some tea, or hang the washing out. But I came to my desk because I was wondering about the way my life has turned out and whether I should change it. There must be stuff that I'm missing and stuff that I would do better without. Perhaps I should write a list?
There are things I wouldn't miss. Like housework and going to the doctor's or the dentist's. I don't much like shopping, either. I wonder what the children would say if there were no milk in the fridge and no clean pants in the drawer. I wonder whether everyone's teeth would go brown and fall out without regular checkups. I consider whether I could get used to internet shopping.
When I think of giving up these things, it's just a kind of madness, obviously. I play my part for my family's sake, just as they play theirs. They expect me to do these things and lots of others that I was not made for, just as I expect them to be polite, pass their exams, earn a salary and love me. It would be no good messing about with the everyday things. Not until we found a world where there were new rules, allowing us all to pursue our creative ideals, and where food preparation had become redundant.
What then should I change?
I think of the books I have written, published and sold or given away to people who either read them or didn't. Liked them or found them unremarkable. Could I give it all up? Should I go out and find a 'real' job that pays better? Increase my teaching hours? Do some fruit picking? I might survive for a while, after all, the world is a lovely place, with lots of things and people in it that I haven't seen yet.
But I'm pretty sure I couldn't stand it for long. Not writing, I mean. I know it is a luxury, a self-indulgence, when considered against the horrendous stories in the news. I could go and help those worse off than myself, sell my house and give away my possessions. Maybe I will one day. Who knows?
The fact remains that, for now at least, I write because it seems to me that writing is what I was made for, above all else. And I am constantly delighted that it should be so.
Life without writing? Not an option.
Today, at my desk, I listen to the birds outside my window and I wait for the sound of my children returning from school, as they have done so many times before. A collection of returnings - I can't remember the first time and I don't really want to think about the final time, which is surely nearer than the first?
I should go down and do something useful. Make some tea, or hang the washing out. But I came to my desk because I was wondering about the way my life has turned out and whether I should change it. There must be stuff that I'm missing and stuff that I would do better without. Perhaps I should write a list?
There are things I wouldn't miss. Like housework and going to the doctor's or the dentist's. I don't much like shopping, either. I wonder what the children would say if there were no milk in the fridge and no clean pants in the drawer. I wonder whether everyone's teeth would go brown and fall out without regular checkups. I consider whether I could get used to internet shopping.
When I think of giving up these things, it's just a kind of madness, obviously. I play my part for my family's sake, just as they play theirs. They expect me to do these things and lots of others that I was not made for, just as I expect them to be polite, pass their exams, earn a salary and love me. It would be no good messing about with the everyday things. Not until we found a world where there were new rules, allowing us all to pursue our creative ideals, and where food preparation had become redundant.
What then should I change?
I think of the books I have written, published and sold or given away to people who either read them or didn't. Liked them or found them unremarkable. Could I give it all up? Should I go out and find a 'real' job that pays better? Increase my teaching hours? Do some fruit picking? I might survive for a while, after all, the world is a lovely place, with lots of things and people in it that I haven't seen yet.
But I'm pretty sure I couldn't stand it for long. Not writing, I mean. I know it is a luxury, a self-indulgence, when considered against the horrendous stories in the news. I could go and help those worse off than myself, sell my house and give away my possessions. Maybe I will one day. Who knows?
The fact remains that, for now at least, I write because it seems to me that writing is what I was made for, above all else. And I am constantly delighted that it should be so.
Life without writing? Not an option.
Published on April 30, 2013 03:28
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