Category Archives: The Writer’s Life

Weird

September 5, 1999
Labor Day, Sunday

Daddy would be amused by the irony, I think…his daughter as the embodiment of the joke that got him into trouble twenty year ago.

Back then, I taught junior high English.  While it was lots of work, it was also loads of fun.  There is an energy in junior high schools you don’t find anywhere else.  This also goes a long way to explain why many people refuse to enter such a campus while the students are there.  But if that kind of thing turns you on, there’s no other place you’d rather be.

Junior high teachers are…taken in the best light possible…a weird breed.  They can laugh at things regular people aren’t supposed to laugh at because it might damage the child’s self esteem.  This is what allows them to remain sane.  This also explains why, even as I was a teacher myself, I could appreciate the humor in the following joke.

Those who can, do.
Those who can’t, teach.
Those who can’t teach, teach teachers.

I could appreciate the instances in life when it seemed all too true, and I had confidence I was smart enough to know when it wasn’t.  Unless someone pointed out directly that it referred to me, I figured it didn’t.

I found the joke a clever way to laugh at a truth that could otherwise be sad.  So one night I shared it with the family at the dinner table.  We all laughed.  Nobody pointed directly at me.  And that was that.

Until months later, when my dad greeted me, “Boy, you sure got me in a lot of trouble.”  I had no idea what he meant.  “I always put a joke at the end of the column I write for the Insulator Collector’s Magazine,” he said, as I remained clueless.  “I wrote that joke about teachers.”

“Which joke?”

“Those who can….”  I winced in expectation of what he would say.  “I never got so many angry letters.  I had to take the whole next month’s column to explain that I got the joke from my daughter who is a teacher herself, and she thought it was funny.”

“Well, Daddy,” I laughed.  “I could have told you not to print it.”

Daddy died eight years ago.  I wish he were here today to appreciate the irony that his own daughter, an ex-teacher, is now a not-quite-writer.  And the first book it looks like I’ll complete is a book on how to write a book.  A book on how to be a writer…by a non-writer.  Complete with advice for editors and agents.  Now wouldn’t that be a killer to put in his next column!

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A WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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I Am?

Cecil Murphy stood up for his address to the American Christian Writer’s conference. “I’m a writer!” he exclaimed with a wide grin.  “O.K.  It’s your turn.  You have to believe it.  Say it loudly, with confidence, all together now.”

Voices became one, in loud unison, a believing audience declared, “I’m a writer!”  But my own lips refused to move, my vocal chords quivered.  I sat alone in the crowd and wondered, “Will I ever be able to join the chorus?”

I’ve always been in love with the written word.  A faithful Carolyn Keene fan, I followed each Nancy Drew escapade.  It was thrills galore to find Nancy Drew mysteries I hadn’t yet read for ten cents in the Salvation Army thrift shop.

In school I wrote passable book reports and term papers.   This meant, of course, I got good grades.  But today, the only evidence I have of any early writing is a poem I wrote in seventh grade.  It marches in dependable but not very interesting rhythm, twenty four lines composed late the night Kennedy was shot.  My teacher read it to the class the next day, and I felt honored.  I never wrote poetry after that.

Raised on books as a child, it was a shock to marry someone who doesn’t like bookcases.  I’ve had to find a variety of ways to space books throughout the house, pleasing both Vic and me.  On our coffee table sets a special book my Mother kept in her own living room, Leaves of Gold, a comforting collection of poems, sayings, and observations by wise people, possibly the forerunner of today’s plethora of inspirational collections.  It’s the only book I brought from Mother’s wall-length bookcases after she died.

Last week, I discovered why I claimed Leaves of Gold alone out of the hundreds of other books.  Cleaning a hidden bookshelf in my own office closet, I pulled out an old forgotten notebook, brightly hand-painted in shiny turquoise and covered with red acrylic flowers.  Back in high school I had designed this my personal Thought Book to hold clippings of wisdom, words to songs, poems, and cartoons, all special to me back then for one reason or another.  I carried my Thought Book into the living room and set it on the coffee table next to Mother’s Leaves of Gold.

It’s not surprising, then, that I became an English teacher.  I wanted to live in the world of words.  From my first day as a teacher, I insisted all my students keep journals, a new educational technique just in vogue.  It would be good for them. It also gave me a method of trying to relate to and understand them.  For ‘their own good,’ I kept my own journal in class right along with the students, setting an example, practicing what I preached.  Some students enjoyed writing, but most of them dutifully counted up to the required fiftieth word, slammed their journal closed, and waited for the five-minute timer to ring. What was wrong with them?  Five minutes was barely enough time to get started.

Students struggled to know what to write about, and I struggled to make it easy for them.  How could I explain how easy it was to find something to write about?  It wasn’t really writing.  It was thinking.  For me, it was time to myself.  Peace.  Quiet.  A connection to my own thoughts away from the intrusion of others.  If only I could help students discover that special peacefulness.

After three years at a junior high school, I realized I wasn’t as successful at teaching as I had hoped.  So, I became a real estate sales agent.  However, unhappy in a job where words only appeared on purchase contracts and loan applications, I took up photography.  Reality struck with lightning speed.  Unless I could get hired by National Geographic really fast, I would miss my next house payment.

Good luck gave me the perfect reason to quit my dead-end job at a photography lab; I was pregnant.  As I waited to become a mother, I enrolled at the university.  My entire life had focused on words; this seemed to be a good time for a change.  One semester later, exchanging words for numbers, I left the university prepared to be an accountant.

After the birth of daughter Jamie, I opened a small bookkeeping business at home. I spent days recording numbers, counting and calculating, looking for missing pennies and printing off pages of reports to show why the hair stylist made a profit and why the construction contractor would soon be bankrupt.  Accounting was fun.  I met interesting people and earned enough money to pay bills and buy my first computer.  There was security in working with numbers.  Numbers lived in a world of structure.  They ordered themselves.  I was just their supervisor.  Numbers didn’t talk back.

But on light days, when work was slow, I would change the computer from accounting to word processing. I worked with numbers, but I played with words.

Being Mother and accountant suited our family life just fine.  I could be my own boss, stay home if the kids needed me, and earn a decent living.  Yet, eventually, tired of the isolation of working alone and bored with numbers that looked the same from day to day, the world of teaching beckoned me once again.  Numbers were fine, but words were better.

It was exciting to be back in the classroom.  Words expanded the brain, brought an explosion of thoughts, and created stimulating conversations and dialogue.  I assigned students journals, of course.  For eight years I responded to students in their journals, read shelves of teen literature, listened to student book conferences, and struggled again to be a good teacher.  Slowly, though, I came to accept a dawning truth.

As a teacher, English came naturally.  It was the kids who challenged me, not because they were bad, but because their needs never seemed to coincide with my desires.  I had managed to become a competent teacher who enjoyed kids, but thankfully for all concerned, life’s difficulties led me away from the classroom for the final time.  I brought memories, friendships, and books home with me.  I brought home my journal, too.

Without a paycheck today, I have no official identity.  This can be disconcerting for someone who’s had a new “career” every five years.  I’m still wife and mother.  I’m family photographer and accountant, too.  Gardener, gopher, grocery shopper, seamstress, church choir member, cook, laundress, all are duties I rush through in hopes of having an hour or two at the typewriter in my journal.

Fingers flying about on computer keys, an English teacher gone mad, I ignore form for substance, throwing periods and commas to the wind.  Capital letters are formed by excitement, not by rules.  I write words, phrases, stories, anything that feels good, a jumble of Jane on paper.

Who am I?  Are you asking me, Cecil Murphy?  Do I have to figure it out?  But a writer, no, not that.  Not I.

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A WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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In the Middle of the Heap

Tuesday, September 20, 1999

Today is the first day when I have a feeling of calm and assurance that I will have enough story for telling to make it all the way to the end of the day as a writer.  In fact, when it rains, it pours.  The words won’t stop.

I went down to have a quick breakfast.  Famished after two hours of typing, I grabbed a banana and peeled it before I remembered I had planned to do a breakfast stir fry with rice, sausage, spinach and egg.  No matter, I switched my plan to cereal.  And just as I reached above the stove for the Wheat Chex, a perfect opening sentence came to mind for the chapter on Daddy.  Leaving the Chex in the cabinet, I turned and climbed the stairs, sat down again at the keyboard, and opened a new file.  I typed in the sentence, plus two others that quickly came to mind.  Again, I went downstairs for breakfast.

I grabbed the cereal box, opened the lid and the waxed inner bag.  Right then, with my hand inside the box, I thought of a perfect example of personality differences in our childhood home.  Would I remember twenty minutes later?

Setting the box on the counter, I climbed the stairs and wrote the idea down in another Word file.  Back downstairs, cereal into my bowl, and sliced banana.  Back upstairs.  I had forgotten to tell about the temper tantrum in front of Bea Barnes, and I needed to write it down – before I forgot it – again.  Downstairs, upstairs, and downstairs…finally…I ate my bowl of bananas and cereal.

I’m exhausted, and the day is just beginning.  My mind is a salvage heap of ideas that have been thrown to the side over the past three years while I took care of life’s little details.  I know God had his reasons.  Sometimes the idea is just too big to write about when our heart is so small.

Even now, I feel each story is a test from God.  He seems to watch the temper and tone of my words, gauging just how close I am to vengeance and bad faith.  I feel a deep certainty that he’ll know just which appliance to “kill” or bottle to “explode,” interrupting my writing with immediate disaster, in the event that I twist a writer’s knife into the people from my life.

Under His watchful prodding, I reach into my writer’s junk heap and pull at strands of memories, pasting each of them into new computer files, typing and following them where they lead.  Each memory sends me back to the heap, time and again, pulling up more and more “junk,” pasting details, names and events into a verbal collage.  Bit by bit, I work to recreate the truth of life as I remember it.

My biggest problem now is that as I work, telling how Mother cleaned our bedroom with a brown paper shopping bag, I begin to have a vision of all the stories at once.  When I reach into the mess of the past and grab a story on how I lied to Diane as a young child, I look through the garbage heap and see the Christmas tree Daddy destroyed in order to surprise us, or I remember the picture of our family with Diane standing next to Jim #3 on the end, just in case we needed to cut him off the picture one day, and before I even put one word on the page, I’m exhausted with the thought of how much work it’s going to be straightening out this mess and writing it into a piece of art that shimmers with life, honor, and truth.

I should appreciate this week’s retreat for writing as God’s gift of time.  Instead, I feel nervous, anxious, and tired.  Very tired.

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A WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Goals

March, 2000

My writing goals are all set.  Yesterday at our regular Tuesday editing meeting, everyone seemed overwhelmed by my goals as I set them in the middle of the table for people to review.

This morning I understand their wide eyes.

One week after drafting the goals, as I sit and review them to guide today’s work, my stomach churns, my lungs hold still, and my brain goes numb!  Two articles?  This week?  Along with two queries to magazine editors and all the rest?  What was I thinking last week?  Today, if I write even one paragraph, I’ll be lucky.  How did I ever get the nerve to make such a bold plan?

Then, settling into the challenge, I sit at the desk pouring through the stack of note cards I made last week, one for each of the different chapters of the different books surrounding me in piles on the filing area arranged on the floor.  Fifty note cards.  Last week I was filled with nerve.  I had no time to write, but plenty of time to imagine.  And I imagined what a writer could do with notebooks filled with chapters and articles, none of which have ever seen the light of day.  Well, she could submit them, of course.  And I imagined a writer sitting down, giving serious attention to the task at hand, opening the Writer’s Guide, picking out a suitable market for an article, printing off four pages of double-spaced, and folding it into an envelope.

I imagined what a writer could do with reams of journal pages filled with article ideas, all sorts of silent articles, silent because she had never asked one single editor if he thought these brilliant ideas might work out for his magazine.

And I imagined a writer, after a stiff cup of coffee, outlining a great article and thinking of one lousy little sentence to tell exactly how exciting the idea would look on page 32 of Perfect Magazine if the editor would only say yes.  One lousy, little one-page letter, one envelope, one SASE, and one stamp.

And if, reviving my visions born of idle courage last week, if I believed my imagination and gathered my nerve, if I poured just one more cup of coffee…well…then, today I think I could really have one lousy little envelope ready to mail, laid by the door, and almost on its way to the post office before the end of the day, before Victor walks in the front door tonight, home from work, asking, “What did you do today?”

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Copyright 2013.   All Rights Reserved.

 

Ghost Book

I have come to think of Naked Comes the Writer as my ghost book.  It seems to follow me in  silence, peeking over my shoulder, commenting on each thought as it appears in my brain, mocking me, consoling me, and pushing me on.

How odd to be writing a book about writing, when it seems like my word count about writing is ten-fold the word count of my real writing.  I can actually hear the laughs of editors around the world.  “She’s writing a book about writing?  Now, that’s a scream.  Who is she anyway?  Ever been in The Journal?  The New Yorker?  Well, just what can a whiny, lonesome, short lady tell us about writing when she’s never been published?”

Well, I can tell them one thing.  Writing is about the most self-indulgent, prideful, egotistical, intoxicating, trance-inducing fixation a person can ever take up.  But just so’s we can hang onto our drug of choice, we have all sorts of ways of justifying it.  We call it inspiring, entertaining, cautionary, thought-provoking, or freedom-saving.  But all in all, it’s just our personal way of seeking stories to pin our pride and ego onto, sending them out into the world and waiting for someone to write back and tell us how wonderful we are.

I actually believe the best time to write about writing is before we have the chance to send our writing out. That’s when the “game” feels most real.  You stand at the top of a 100-foot platform, rise on your tippy toes, and then bend down, gathering your muscles into one final burst of strength, springing up into the air and outward, arms arcing over your head into the first graceful moments of physical beauty.  And that’s when you look down and notice someone’s drained the water from the pool.

Now, high in mid-air, they want to tell you should never have jumped to begin with.  Who are you to think you’re a writer?  I mean, look at that form, all wobbly and scared, and insecure.  If we had believed there was any chance you would be able to dive, they say from below, we would have put water in the pool.  But, hey, why waste good water?  You would never have left the tower, if you’d known what’s good for you.

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Copyright 2013.  All Rights Reserved.

10 a.m. Comes Once a Day

Tuesday, August 26, 2003

This is a momentous day, yet a day quite like any other.  I am finally sitting down to write.

I’ve spent the past year at the desk, writing checks, reading and printing off Internet news, dashing off e-mails, filling out forms…but nothing of writing.  Beginning with the purchase of the Blue Top townhouse last July, life began a full forward throttle of duties and errands that completely obliterated any plans to write.  Like Chicken Little, I rushed around preventing the “end of the world as we know it” by painting, meeting contractors, packing boxes, carrying boxes, arranging and rearranging boxes, moving, unpacking, washing, sorting, tossing, and giving…until there seemed little left to give.

One year later, brushing aside the dust that’s settled, it’s hard to tell if we have failed or succeeded.  We now own two townhouses that are successfully rented, we sold our huge Tempe home, we have renovated and moved into our smaller Vernon home, storing away furniture from only one bedroom and the living room.

In the process, I replaced and reprogrammed every chip of computer efficiency I had learned to count on.  We have traveled to North Carolina, Tennessee, Washington D.C., and Kansas City, and finally…we have ended the year’s storm with two weeks of peace at the cabin in Eagar.

I’m exhausted.

I’m not really sure what I’m supposed to write today.

I struggle to make sense of this past year, an endless interruption of my “calling” to write for God, a year that challenged my understanding of what God is calling me to do.  Do I write?  And then, if yes, then what?

On this first day back at the keyboard, it’s the little things that make me thankful and offer hope.  Thanks be to God that we have a home, and thanks be to God that both Vic and I are united in our gratitude that it is a small and cozy home.  Thanks that the water bill was paid each month, given the constant threat that the bill would drop by accident into some storage box and end up in the attic.  And so many thanks that each day Vic and I grow closer, sharing thoughts about how we want to spend life when it is no longer controlled by his full-time job.

I’ve got a schedule now.  At 10:00 a.m. each day, when Vic has finally left the house and all is quiet, I will write.  For two hours each day, I will put words on paper, even if they must be deleted tomorrow…but I will put words on the paper to form ideas, stringing together concepts and arguments, putting down memories, expressing anger, love, faith…and I will write.

We have taken back control of our first home, rented for the past ten years.  These next two years will be sufficient for us to finish rehabilitating its landscaping, painting, and structure.  We don’t have to do it all today.  Instead, Vic and I are able to agree on one simple job for the day, something that can be accomplished and still leave time for writing.  This morning we went through the blue suitcase I brought back from Kansas.  Giveaways, all of it, perfect for Hermalinda to take to her church and hand out, Vic put the suitcase in the van.  Then he turned and picked up a stack of wooden light switch plates removed during renovation…Vic pacing, demanding, “Where do these go?”

“Not today,” I told him.  “The suitcase was our job for the day, and we are finished. We can do those tomorrow.”  He agreed.  Amazing!  And with that, we preserved this little cocoon of writing time I’ve needed so badly.

In the wee hours this morning, I drafted papers and notes needed to sell our land in Tennessee.  To an outsider, it must look like writing.  But it’s not.  It’s business, paperwork, distraction.  I was in a race against the clock.  Ten o’clock was approaching, time to write, and the contract was still half done.  But God is on my side.  He gives me the calm to know the contract will wait.  It will have to, if I want to write.

Successes are building.  I’ve gone one week now without having a glass of wine, a bottle of beer.  Vic saved me once.  As I debated the wisdom of having “just one” glass of wine with our salmon dinner, he reminded me that one did not mean two.  Could I stay with one, he asked?  Four days later, walking by the liquor department in Bashas, I know I will have to work at this battle for a long time.  But it feels good to count seven days of success.

Yesterday, I began a fast of sorts.  I’m drinking liquids.  It is good to have this time to reinforce limits on myself.  I want to eat.  The tuna smells good.  And I sure could enjoy a slice of 12-grain bread.  But I don’t need to eat.  To want is not to need.

Little successes.  I’ve taken my vitamins every day without fail for one week.  No wine.  One day without food.  One home repair for the day…and only one.  Discipline builds confidence.  And finally, just on time, as planned for months now, at 10:00 a.m. I sit at the keyboard with two hours ahead given only to one thing.  I write.

________________

As I contemplate the hard won battle to preserve two hours each day for writing, I tackle the next war on the horizon.  What will I write?

Like the sight and smell of foods I want to eat, every writing project I conjure up seems enticing.  Being back in my journal is cozy like an old sweater.  And cozy is a sign more certain than any I know of that I must pull back and take a hard look at what this time at the keyboard means.

If not writing, I could use this time to mend wounds, share lunch with a lonely nursing home resident, listen to a child read, or push forward to finish painting the house three months ahead of schedule.  Writing is fun.  It’s leisure.  Expression.  Thinking.  Telling.  But most of all it’s responsibility.  I’m responsible for offering this time to God as my best effort.

Perhaps this means that the single most important discipline I’ve reinstated this week has been my morning prayer time.  God speaks only if we invite him in.  In despair, over the past year, bemoaning the interruptions of each day that prevented me from writing, I gave in to the notion that there wasn’t even time for God.

I made sure there wasn’t, avoiding my own responsibility for making the time to be available to Him.  How many hours did I waste playing computer games, telling myself I deserved this mindless rest to unwind from the pressures of the day?  God was waiting.

I’m glad to be sitting at His feet again, reading, learning, praying.  There is so much I feel I must be doing even as I come to Him.  Still…I’m so very certain now that the only way to move forward is to put myself behind…and follow.

 

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Faster

Tuesday, September 9, 2003

Two weeks in a row, I’ve gone to Tuesday’s Children.  It’s such a blessing to know these friends.  Although I still haven’t written something to take for editing, it is an encouragement to hear other women talk about writing, sharing their struggles to write and offering their drafts for critiquing.  It offers me hope.

Even now, at home, as I hope to write significant pieces, I walk away from the kitchen stove, a small voice following me.  Jane, you needn’t response to each life event with an essay.  Relax.  Judy came to the meeting today with her idea for an article.   Slow and deliberate.   It struck a chord.  I am wound up, a dog just released from her chain, barking and running everywhere, yet never arriving, and never saying anything worth the bark.

Jesus is the Master of moving with deliberation.  Only three years to save the world, yet he had so much time.  Time to pray.  Time to speak at the well.  Sitting on the Mount, he never hurried his sermon to the needy.  Time to eat and collect the scraps.  And time to retreat, to walk on water, to calm the storm, go to the other side of the lake, and land again alone with time to pray.  Even as the people pressed in upon Him, lowered the sick for him to heal, and prompted His rage for their violation of God’s house of prayer…even during all that Jesus accomplished during His short ministry, never do I sense urgency, a quickened pace to get there fast, an impatient tone because He is interrupted on his way by the hand of a woman on the hem of his robe.

Slowly and deliberately, Christ set about to change the world, one person at a time, He shared the gift of life.  Never did he despair that his message would die with him on the cross.  Peter, do you love me?  Feed my sheep.  Calming the distress of the disciples, he assured them greater things still will you do.

Greater than Christ?  And yet, as holy links in God’s chain, each apostle fulfilled his duty, slowly and deliberately, witnessing to the miracle of salvation they were privileged to share.  Walking across the continent, lingering years in Ephesus, Corinth, Rome and beyond, they laid the foundation of faith for the disciples after them.  One faithful witness at a time, down through the centuries, whether in a full life or one shortened by martyrdom, each person doing his part, a steady procession of witness moving forward and sharing the gospel, with deliberation, knowing that the inexhaustible supply of time belongs to God.

We aren’t called to be fast.  We are called to be faithful.

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Religious Right…By Any Other Name

RELIGIOUS RIGHT

OR

literalist
fundamentalist
religious fanatic
simple
ignorant
intolerant
judgmental
bigoted
proselytizers
right-wing extremists
vast right-wing conspiracy
religious zealot
right-wing zealot
twisted misfits
conservative
close-minded
narrow-minded
born-again Christians
exclusionary
hypocrites

…uuuuh…deep breath…keep going

divisive
mean-spirited
rigid
self-righteous
violent
potentially violent
terrorists
gay-bashers
ominous agenda
blind
punitive moralists
right-wing conspiracy
hopelessly ignorant
shibboleths
hard right
eccentric
Spiritual Svengali
perennial convert
artistic censor
ridiculous
hysterical

—uuuh…that’s right…there’s more…

tyrannical
puritanical
bleak acceptance of a dark mystery
superficial
weak-minded
self-mutilators
desert dropouts
extremist
hate group
hate monger
Godzilla of the Right
KKK
politics of the mean
anti-establishment barking
Pantheism
soldiers of the right
restless radicals
reckless
armed isolationists
sexual McCarthyism

…uuuhhhhh…almost finished…or…dead from exhaustion…

puritanical zealot

…THE END!…

 

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
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I Will Write

August 27, 2003

Out of failure comes insight.

It was a mistake yesterday not to sit and write.

It’s now obvious that I have come to confuse lots of tangential activities with the down and dirty duty to direct dialogue onto the page.  Speaking is not writing.  Nor thinking, reading, planning, rehearsing, nor note-taking.  Most especially, research is not writing.  Only the tiresome blank page as it accumulates words and fills to the bottom signifies success for the writer.

Annie Dillard takes walks in the meadow and imagines the landscape behind the wall of her forest studio.  Anne Lamott inspects the mole on her back to make sure it is not cancerous again today.  And Jane, if she wants to avoid writing, can do just about anything.  But the best dodge of all is research.  I can interview people,  Transcribe interviews.  Attend conferences.  Print off web pages.  And…file it all away for later…when I plan to write it into something important.  When I have time.

My bag is full.  I have 38 pages from the Reader’s Guide to Periodicals stuffed in there with web search printouts on NOW, the National Organization for Women and all its leaders.  Two hours in the ASU library and half a day on the computer at home.  I could write a book.  Even if I can’t seem to write 300 words.

The clock struck 10:00 just a while ago.  And if progress can be measured by learning from my mistakes, I’m progressing.  I’m writing.  One and a half hours to go.  And even if I have to delete it all because it stinks to high heaven, I will write for two solid hours, each day, today, tomorrow, and on.  Until I have a decent paragraph that some editor somewhere chooses to print.  I will write.

 

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Copyright 2013.  All Rights Reserved.

 

 

 

 

Blocked Writer

I’ve never experienced Writer’s Block, at least not as most writers explain it.  I’ve actually experienced it in somewhat the reverse, Blocked Writer.

I sit down, ready to write, the words just ready to pull together into a …wait…the phone rings, the car is dead two miles away, rental car for husband, tow truck for car…

…back to writing, the ideas flow, word added to word, page builds upon page, to the climax, the phone rings, Justin is sick, the computer locks up…

…pick Justin up at school, a smell wafts down the hall, computer still locked, a good story dumped as computer crashes, the burner on the stove blows, the sprinkler system explodes, a river runs down the street, the doorbell rings….

Jill just stopped by, if I have time, her life is a mess, and she is still looking for work, while we’re standing in water running down the hallway, nothing but a broken hose on the washing machine, hours at the laundromat, phone calls and appointments with repairmen for the car, the sprinklers, the stove, the washing machine, the computer, and the sick kid.

Even if I haven’t sent out one story to one publisher to receive one rejection letter…the mailbox is always full.  There are bills for water and telephone, taxes to be calculated, broker statements showing stocks going down, going up, going down, stock newsletters in a pile covered with dust.  Who can believe it’s already 6:00 p.m., no dinner to cook, no milk, no bread, no butter or eggs, call out for pizza, vegetarian without cheese…hey, who took this call from the attorneys?

The court hearing is rescheduled…maybe…depends, hours to pour over documents that mean nothing to people who meant nothing when they signed them…

…time to write, time to write, write what, are you kidding, when do you think you’re going to have time to write, just organize, prioritize…

If you want it, make it, time to write…sell everything, the house, the sprinkler system, washing machine, phone, computer, husband, kids…then how are you going to order pizza, and without pizza, how are you going to write?  Writer’s block?  Yeah, I’ve heard of it.

I finally gave up.  And when I did, God took over.

“Hey, you down there, Ms. Big-Shot-with-Lots-to-Say.  It’s about time you gave up.  I was aiming to explode your dishwasher next.  But now that I’ve got your attention, here’s what I want to know.  What’s so important that you’ve got to sit down and write it anyway?

“I’ve already said it all.  Jesus.  Remember?  The Bible, remember?  I’ve seen you reading My Word each morning.  What problem in life can’t be settled by My Writing?  What can you say that hasn’t already been said…by Me?

“Oh, I don’t mind if you write.  I just wish you’d settle down a bit.  Splashing words on paper might be fun, but don’t you think you’re taking it a little too seriously.  I mean really, you keep saying it’s your ‘Gift.’  Just where did you get that idea, anyway?  Gift, my girl, are you looking for a gift?  Pinch yourself.  Squeeze yourself until you hurt.  Face your reflection.  You’re the gift.  You.  Love’s the gift.  I offer it to you, to your family, your friends.  It has nothing to do with words, with writing.  That’s just an occupation.  It’s fluff.  It’s stuff.  Love is the gift, and you.

“If you never have time to write one word, it will be no great loss.  There’s plenty of words where I come from.  Besides, it’s all been written before, by Me.  And who’s listening anyway?  Now living, that’s another thing.

“Jane, you’re made for living.  You’re made for loving.  You’re made for expressing My Love.  You don’t need to write for that.  In fact, if you spend all your time writing, you might forget what you were made for.  Just be, Jane.  Be Love.  That’s hard enough.  If you want to write to earn money for pizza, that’s OK by me.  But remember the real gift.  If you don’t, I’ll stand in your way.  I created words.  I own Writers Block.

“I don’t want people to know you by reading.  I want them to know you by watching.  Be Love.  Reflect My Love.  That’s enough.  And it doesn’t require words.”

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THE WRITER’S LIFE
TABLE OF CONTENTS

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