You ever just look at something, a scene or an object, or maybe just the colors of light crawling through your window and get a feeling? A big feeling?
I can't really explain it, but in an attempt to capture what it is I'm feeling, I write poetry. Sometimes poetry doesn't make sense, people may think. It's "obscure," or "cryptic," or "hard to follow." For me, though, poetry is a way to conjure a feeling in me and in others... And sometimes those feelings are neither logical nor linear.
A good part of my academic writing career was spent trying to untangle it all, to make phrases and terms more everyday, to put a story or narrative to it (the feelings), but what I have allowed myself (post-college) is to just... write. I have silenced the committee, somewhat, and learned to trust what I write. But this isn't just poems.
A couple years ago, a barista friend of mine from Starbucks asked to use my friend and I as her thesis project. She came over, made us doodle or color or paint, all the while allowing us to just be, just emote. Before that moment, I had rarely given myself the chance to draw or paint from me—instead I copied and mimicked the world around me.
Now don't get me wrong, I have loads of respect for those who can paint as detailed and realistic as a photograph, but this is the very thing that kept me from painting and doodling more. I wasn't pressured to create an exact replica, but permitted to explore my own creativity. Wow!
I can only assume this is what happened with my writing. Once I was able to transcend the lines of reality (along with my own version of it) words became completely unfettered for me. It seemed boundless.
I can trace the world around me with a sharp pencil, memorize inches and hues, or I can take all that lightning in my chest and use it to shake the world, make it my own.
I hope you do too. I hope you wrangle your own storms and stop trying to chase everyone else's.
mt
I enjoyed this quiet reflection, written with honesty and poignance. I "discovered" this through the DeLallo website, believe it or not! I'm very home-sick for PA (I used to live in Penn Twp., next to Jeannette, and in Irwin), and wanted to see something familiar and comforting. I'm soon releasing a novella (Johnny Flash) set near Greensburg--a mix of The Big Lebowski and The X-Files.
ReplyDeleteAnyhow, I'm glad I found this. A LOT to read, and written well. Thank you!
All Best,
Bill Grabowski
Thank you so much, sir. You're homesick, huh? And I'm dreaming of flying off...
DeleteAdvice?
I'll have to check out your flash fiction, as it's a genre that really interests me.
Thanks again for reading... And hey, I hope you're feeling lighter and not too sick from missing.
Best,
mt