Writer
You haven’t given me any choice.
There
are far more lucrative careers out there --
pretty
much every career is more lucrative --
and
yet, you didn’t give me a choice. You won’t let me go.
Even
when I excuse myself with good reason, tell you I’m doing it for us --
visiting
unfamiliar cities and countries, gawking at art, daydreaming in the woods,
gorging
on delicacies, bending my ear to listen to the words strangers choose,
cleansing
myself by the water’s edge --
You
shout until I return. You yell at me to get it all on the page;
you
don’t believe I’ll remember the details.
It’s
true, I don’t usually remember –
But
I also lose notebooks, I lose texts, I lose the little pieces of paper you
demand
be
written on and tucked into pockets, into purses, and forgotten --
You
weed your way into every project. If I find something to do that requires nary
a sentence,
you force me to write an outline about it in advance –
which
turns into a handout, an essay, a new writing project about the thing
I’m
doing to get away from you --
I’m
not even particularly good, not even clever. It’s too much work.
I
spend hours slogging away to shape an idea into something
a
reader might recognize with their heart, only to discover I’ve scrapped
together
nothing
more than a misshapen skeleton --
a
cripple without flesh, without a heart of its own, and so must fill in all the
things
I
wasn’t smart enough to add the first time. And the flesh is enough, let me tell
you.
Flesh
has to be new, different unique, surprising –
Fine,
I’ll keep going, keep revising, keep reading, dreaming, listening, visualizing.
But
the heart! When you call me back to install the heart within that fragile,
lifeless skeleton,
that’s
when the tough stuff starts, isn’t it? That’s when the real work happens,
and
maybe I’ve already been working on this thing for years. Years!
You know a skeleton can consume a year or more!
But
it has no life until the heart is placed –
placed
and fed oxygen, oxygen in the form of feelings, feelings from me,
feelings I don’t want to feel, feelings I’ve never felt, feelings I can only
suppose another human
in that skin might feel --
and
it hurts, and it drains me, and did I mention I’m not even particularly good at
it?
And
the risk! The gamble! The fool’s prayer! I know and you know there are
millions,
literally
millions of books published every year. The sea of literature out there ensures
that what I’m dedicating to the
page
will have to fight with its every last ounce of pulp to be read by a scant few
–
Book
buyers are shrinking, book sellers are shutting down, publishing houses
closing,
and yet the book market ratchets up past last year’s saturation point. If it
was fruitless before, the gamble feels too great for the pain –
And
yet, there you are, calling me, calling me, CALLING ME,
keeping me awake nights with scenes playing out in my head
that
won’t stop developing until they’re on the page --
and
they grow so huge and colorful and detailed and complex and harder to capture,
capture
like I see them in the wee hours behind my wide-open eyes.
And
so I’m defeated. You win.
I
haven’t gotten as good as you would have expected for all we’ve created
together, have I?
I
go around calling myself a “writer” because that’s how I spend my days –
Thank
God for the works I’ve published because it sure doesn’t feel real.
Even
when I sit my ass down and give you everything, even in the bloody
concentration
the
train goes off the track –
Oh,
I see you standing out in front waving your arms,
but
I’m trying too hard to finish the scene before I need to pick up the kids
and
I can’t fathom what it is you want me to see,
so
you make me get up from the keyboard --
and
walk, pray, meditate, push chocolate chips into spoonfuls of almond butter --
but
you only want me to do it for you.
Because
when you call me back in the light comes on. I see what you were getting at.
And
it has to be written, right then, or lost forever.
And
then I’m late to pick up the kids.
And
when I get back home I rush to your page –
only
to shush my own family, ask them to wait, wait, wait for me to finish
this
one last sentence.
Rayne Lacko
Rayne Lacko believes
music, language, and art connect us, and she explores those themes in her
novel, A SONG FOR THE ROAD, and DREAM UP NOW: the Teen Journal for
Self-Discovery. She’s helped writers and teens cultivate creativity
in Writers
Digest, School Library Journal, DIYMFA.com,
ParentMap, and GERM. Her short fiction appears in Gravel, Mixtape Methodology and Skyline. Her story, “Like Father, Like Son,” won Best of 2015
for its category at Wordhaus literary
magazine.
love this work and love that the editor choose a non-literary image to denote writing which does not have to be strictly literature. the solitude and grace in the picture is also a hallmark of creativity.
ReplyDeleteWow, I feel vindicated, like I belong to the club. Such truthful words written in such creative way!
ReplyDelete