Feeling oddly ghostly

I've let the blog do that thing where I keep promising myself that as soon as strange and wonderful things stop happening for a day I'll update it. And meanwhile so many things keep happening.

I'm blogging now, not as a report on what I've been doing but because I wanted to remember this:

I'm in Sydney right now. Tomorrow, Amanda and friends and I are taking over Australia Day at the Opera House. I was sitting in the little apartment room the Festival gave us working ont he thing I hope to finish and read tomorrow night, when my computer screen turned off. I realised the computer was unplugged, and that Amanda (who was back at the Opera House doing press) had borrowed the Australian adapter plug (we had more, but left them behind us as we travelled).

So I went out to buy a couple of new adapters, so I'd have one, and so I could leave her another spare one when I left.

I wandered past sushi shops and backpacker places and Thai takeways and tobacconists in the hot Sydney summer evening sun. Last night Amanda (who is vastly amused by my complete lack of hooker recognition skills) had pointed out the hookers to me, and I saw a couple of the ladies she had pointed out to me coming on duty, looking wary in the daylight.

There were a couple - a man and a woman, both in their twenties at a guess, both short and dark-haired, looking into a shop window, with their backs to me. The woman had a tattoo on her shoulderblade - writing - and because I cannot pass writing without reading it, I glanced at it. Part of the writing was covered by a strap.

But I could still read it. And I knew what the words covered by the strap were.

The tattoo (thank you Google Image Search) was a lot like this (which is to say, the same content, and similar typeface, but probably not the same person. I'm already trying to remember if it was the left or the right shoulderblade):



(I took that photo from here.)

I read the tattoo, read words I had written to try and exorcise my own small demons eighteen years ago, and I felt like a ghost. As if, for a moment, under the hot Sydney sun, I was only an idea of a person and not a real person at all.

I didn't introduce myself to her or say anything (it didn't even occur to me to say hello, in all honesty). I just walked home, through a world that felt flimsier and infinitely stranger than it had that morning.
I don't know why it affected me like that. But it did.

Labels:  tattoos, the weirdness and small forgivenesses of time, ghosts
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Published on January 25, 2011 00:12
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message 1: by Calamity (new)

Calamity Jane Hm..maybe it affected you because it is kind of wierd. Kind of like seeing yourself but trough someone else's eyes. Or seeing your past self in the present. Or just realizing that something you wrote years ago is important enough for someone to carry it permanently with them, in their flesh of all the places!

I would be wierded out too.

And to think that girl, who is obviously a fan, had her back turned at such a crutial time!
I'll be sure to check everytime I look into a window now :)


Adrianna [SypherLily] It's amazing when writers realize the impact they have on some of his or her readers!


message 3: by Kat (new)

Kat M That story gave me chills. What a surreal moment.


message 4: by Justin (new)

Justin Fraxi What's great is that since the girl has that tattooed on her, she's clearly a fan, so there's a decent chance she'll read this and realize Neil Gaiman was right behind her and she didn't know it.


message 5: by Rhianan (new)

Rhianan Its oddly comforting that you share these thoughts we us. Its nice.


message 6: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Laura wrote: "What's great is that since the girl has that tattooed on her, she's clearly a fan, so there's a decent chance she'll read this and realize Neil Gaiman was right behind her and she didn't know it."

And he wrote a blog post about it. So cool! She's probably in shock right now... I'm really interested to see if she's going to comment!

Well since she is a huge fan, and lucky her is in Australia now, she could be going to the Australia Day at the Opera House.... Rather strange when you think about it that way...


message 7: by [deleted user] (new)

You'll learn one day that you could problably start a cult, not saying you should, just fyi.


message 8: by Michelle (new)

Michelle <3


 ManOfLaBook.com You should have introduced yourself, you probably missed out on meeting a random great person who you touched through your words.

http://www.ManOfLaBook.com


message 10: by D.M. (new)

D.M. I'd have to go with an earlier poster who said it was probably like having an encounter with your younger self all of a sudden, out in the sun. (Reminds me of that 'Holy god, there I am!' moment in Gilliam's Fear & Loathing..., when Depp-Hunter sees actual-Hunter in the club in the 60s.)
Gaiman, I hope you'll tell us which story this has been you've been working on, when it finally sees light of day (i.e., our eager eyes).


message 11: by G.S. (new)

G.S. And here I'd always thought that you really were only an idea of a person. Albeit, a rather interesting one.

The world does need its archetypes, after all.


message 12: by Zuzana (new)

Zuzana Urbanek Eerie ... and wonderful!

We all affect someone in our lives profoundly. Authors (and teachers, film directors, musicians, artists, etc.) have the opportunity to affect many people the world over whom they don't even know. It's mind-boggling, isn't it?

:)


message 13: by Micki (new)

Micki While not quite so dramatic, I once was sitting in a sports bar w/friends and happened to notice a poster I had designed for a golf tournament a few years before that had been framed and was hanging there in the room. It was an odd experience, albeit a good one! Had you chosen to introduce yourself I imagine it would have been quite the treat for the girl w/the tattoo, but a bit bizarre for you!


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