Showing posts with label My Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Writing. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

On Greatest Fears and Knowing Where You Are

When I was younger, perhaps eleven or twelve years old, I was very lonely.

I remember one night I was over at someone's house after the sun had gone down. There was a lingering pinkness showing through the trees in the west, but the stars were already coming out above me. I was lying on my back on their trampoline, at a weird angle to avoid the hole in it. I could hear the other kids screeching off somewhere in the woods, yelling directions as they tried to catch an armadillo.

The stars were so clear that night. I remember seeing Cygnus the Swan almost directly overhead. My heart was aching like it was being squeezed by a great, iron-clad fist, and more than anything I wanted someone, anyone, even an adult, to come out and just lie there next to me on that trampoline. I had been alone all afternoon. I had watched the sun go down from someone else's kitchen window while their parents weren't home and they themselves ran wild at a faster pace than I could manage.

I was whispering to the sky, because I was a weird kid who believed it would hear me. I don't even remember what I said, but it was pathetic and probably really sappy and embarrassing. But I was talking to a bunch of gas-balls millions of miles away and finding a very small and uncomforting comfort in the romanticism of it.

I never really got over my loneliness.

It's my greatest fear, you know. Like Fezzik, my idea of hell is being alone for ever. I don't need to speak, I don't need to move. I can live in a box the size of a coffin for all eternity, as long as I have someone crammed into that box with me. I used to wonder why Satan never attacked me with demons like he did my friends. I know now that it was because he knew it was worse for me without them.

It's gotten better. I have friends now, close friends that are brave and true and better to me than I could ever be to them. One friend in particular; small and sweet and with a mouth that speaks of love and hope and courage. If the coffin gets too small all I have to do is cry out and someone will crawl in to spend the night with me.

But sometimes the coffin's too small for them to fit, and then the dark reaches out with cold fingers and my lungs no longer breathe; then my brain short circuits and all of a sudden I'm in a white room at midnight, and no one sees me and no one knows me and I'm not sure I even know myself anymore.

And sometimes that white room turns into a hallway, twisting and branching and dipping deeper and deeper underground with each step I take. And the further I go the more I forget about how I got here in the first place; the more I forget about who I am.

I wonder how often that happens in real life. How many times does your average person stop in the middle of their work because suddenly they don't know where they are? How often do they see white and have to shake their head and reach for the nearest bit of color?

* * * * *

I wrote this post well over a year and a half ago, but for reasons that are probably obvious, I never published it. How badly I wanted to be heard and pitied for problems I could have just taken to the Lord! My heart was aching for so much more than I had, despite my having everything I needed within my grasp. 

What I said in the 7th paragraph is true - it's gotten better.  

God has worked in my life in amazing ways. I still get lonely sometimes. But no coffin is too small for my Lord, and with a breath He can fill my white rooms with sound and color and a Lifeblood. I don't have to wonder where I am when I'm in His arms. 

Being lonely is no longer my greatest fear. 

Monday, April 4, 2016

Like An Adolescent Unyielding


I have talked before about being both a child and an adultabout how I want my life to be tender with wonder and strong with experience. But there is, as always, even more to what I want to be.

I want to be bold. I want to be brave. I want to march to victory without thinking of what would happen should my cause be lost. I want to know what I want and I want to shout it aloud.

I want to be like Frodo, taking the Ring to Mordor, though I do not know the way.

I want to be like Buttercup, working towards improvement against the return of my Beloved.

I want to be like the countless young men and women throughout the centuries, loving my God and my family and living and dying that they might live and die.

I want determination, and emotion, and fervent fire building and burning in my veins. I want to walk through the angry mob unharmed, solid and covered with a certain admirable Grace, and standing on a Rock that no earthquake can move.

And this is yet another of my Odd Resolutionsto be an adolescent unyielding, holding firm in my faith and refusing to belong to another. 

Saturday, March 19, 2016

On Writing Epics and Dropping Stones

The skipping stone leaves ripples, but ripples fade. The stone sinks, but it continues to shift and sink into the earth.

Well, it's time to write.

I am conspicuously armed with my essentials: My favorite mug full of some cheap berry tea and my writing hoodie (acquired at an Army-Navy store in Tennessee) engulfing my mussed form. My favorite playlist is playing on Spotify, and Pinterest is up in another tab just in case I need some quick inspiration. I'm ready for this.

The problem is, I have no idea what I'm doing.

I've been writing for five or six years. In that time I have produced the beginnings of four novels, one completed short story and fourteen unfinished ones, twenty-odd poems that I would shudder to show anyone, and a lot of bad fanfiction. Like an artist trying to paint a masterpiece, I've been trying to write my epics and pretty much failing.

So I took a break for a while.

I didn't write for five months, except for blogging. I focused more on things like school and free reading and wandering around outside. I actually didn't miss it as much as I thought I would.

The truth is, I love writing. I'm working on a book that, with the grace of God, might actually work out. I love the romance of words and the ache my heart feels when I read a fairytale. But I'm not meant for an epic. I'm not meant to be a classic author, a second Tolkien or Chesterton or Kafka.

I used to think that meant I wouldn't make it as a writer at all. I mean, what was the point if I didn't touch someone's life or failed to create a character someone could relate with?

But the real point is this: The masters weren't the only ones who found joy in putting pen to paper. Writing is not about the people reading. It effects them, but it is a secondhand effect. The person who is different because of writing is the writer.

So this is my odd resolution for now: To no longer want to be a master, a writer of epics. I want to be a simple teller of fairy-stories. I want to paint watercolors on notebook paper, and leave the ceiling frescoes to some modern Michelangelo. 

Monday, December 21, 2015

Like a Child in Love

Remember the wide-eyed wonder and simple exclamations? The wows and the pleeeeeaaases and the mouth opened wide and round? Remember when you--a teenager or college student or single mother or creaky grandfather--were a child shopping with your mother, begging her to buy a soda or look at the train a little bit longer?

How long has it been since you gaped in awe at a butterfly fluttering near you or laughed like the bubbly schoolkid you were at some extremely dumb and cliche joke? It's been a long time for me. 

It's strange, really. I see these things, and I love them. I think butterflies are beautiful, and I love puns, even when they get cheesy. But I don't feel them the same way I used to. I want to be struck dumb when I see the wonders instead of taking a picture and exclaiming over the perfection. 

I want to watch, and remember, and tell about it in a hushed, reverent voice that still can't believe the beauty. I want to live this world like a child in love, a child that holds in cupped hands something it is afraid of shattering. I want to be awkwardly awe-ful, and blessedly full of cheeky smiles at such simple, common pleasures as ice cream and leaves blowing down in a shower. 

I want to be like a child wandering through her life, finding beauty in earthworms and the great expanse of sky and city and empty space that surrounds us.

(And this is my odd resolution for now. To be a child, more of a child than I already am.) 

Monday, November 2, 2015

Pieces of Today, Nov. 2 2015

1. A bit of nostalgia as James Taylor plays on the radio.

2. So, so you think you can tell...heaven from hell...(otherwise known as rockin' out with a bum-bum-da-dum-duhmmm)

3. Culture and history studies and the odd facts they bring about. (Did you know that Norway has the highest gas prices in the world despite being one of the top oil producers? Approx. $9.95 a gallon in USD.)

4. Currently wanting to go on an adventure...preferably back to Robbers Cave to see what it's like in fall as opposed to the spring version I saw:


5. This is a song for you...far away, so far away from me.

6. Anticipation of great things coming up. 

7. A bit of beauty in dark times: 
Poetry by Lewis Carrol (c)

8. I'll be okay, so please don't cry. / But do not leave me here to die. 

9. The feel of carpet imprinting itself into my ankle and rubbing roughly against my jeans. 

10. BLUE BELL IS BACK! Oh, the joy of ice cream running over my tongue! Oh, the delicious coolness of the bowl cradled in my lap! Oh, the strangers in Walmart who saw it in the cart and exclaimed their joy at its return! 

Monday, October 12, 2015

Pieces of Today, Oct. 12th 2015

1. Group chats and confusion.

2. Saints and Soldiers. 

3. Random notes on the guitar.

4. Those short little poems that make you want to cry.


5. Warm plastic beneath your hand as you douse your throat in bottled water. 

6. Something I wrote a few minutes ago for a prompt: 
Click to see full-size. The prompt was to describe the eyes of your beloved. 

7. A smile and I love you from someone important. 

8. The realization that I never knew someone I didn't like, and that I should have tried. 

9. A new Discover Weekly playlist on Spotify. 

10. 'If you dip into any college, or school, or parish, or family—anything you like—at a given point in its history you will always find that there was a time before that point when there was more elbow room and contrasts weren't quite as sharp; and that there's going to be a time after that point when there is even less room for indecision and choices are even more momentous. Good is always getting better and bad is always getting worse: the possibilities of even apparent neutrality are always diminishing.' {C. S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength}