Can Writers Take Holidays? - Misha Herwin
Holidays begin with lists. First there are the things that must be done, the travel arrangements, booking hotels and flights and making sure that passports are in date. Then all the domestic stuff, who is going to look after the cat, water the garden, collect the post etc. Finally, what has to be bought, sun cream, new swimwear and books.
When it’s time to pack there are other decisions to be
made, which clothes and shoes to take and which to leave behind. At which point
the laptop/notebook question has to be addressed.
Is this going to be a holiday with, or without? Am I
going to take my work with me and have a holiday like any normal person?
On a practical level, this means that my hand luggage
will be lighter and there will be no tangles of wires to wrestle with at check
in when, inevitably, after passing through the x-ray machine, mine is the case
which is selected to be unpacked. Even though I know I am not carrying anything
forbidden, this is always disconcerting. There is hardly any space to unload my
possessions, the officials are grim faced, there are other passengers waiting
for their turn and my husband seems to have disappeared with the travel
documents, tickets and boarding passes. Added to which, in all such
circumstances, there is a residual fear that perhaps I have got it wrong and
that what I thought was an innocent piece of equipment is about to be
impounded, an unease which is not without foundation since some airlines have
recently decided that Kindles are a security threat and have banned their use
in passenger cabins.
On the other hand there is an element of the comfort
blanket about my little HP Notebook. What if I have a brilliant idea for a
story while I am away? If I have it with me, then I can get down to work
straight away and if I am in the middle of something, or have put a book aside
for a while, then if I need to I can do some editing, or a little tweaking.
“Need to.” This is the significant phrase. Part of me
is afraid to let go, to stop writing in case the flow dries up, or I finally
realize that life without writing is simpler and easier and if that were to
happen then everything I have been striving for over the past decades will have
come to nothing.
Setting aside the fear, there is another fact that has
to be taken into consideration. Being somewhere new and unfamiliar frees the
mind and stimulates the imagination. Removing the element of compulsion whether
to meet a publishing deadline, or a self-imposed one, can also be very
liberating. And sometimes you just need a rest, time to stand and stare, take
in your surroundings, talk and listen, eat and drink and experience. All things
that will later go on to feed into your writing, in ways that are not yet
obvious.
So will the Notebook come with me? Even if I decide
this year that it will stay at home I will have a paper notebook and pen in my
bag, as I always do, ready to scribble down anything that comes into my mind,
because I don’t believe that writers can take holidays. Some like Anthony
Horowitz write every day of their lives even if they are on some exotic beach,
others like me can take the odd day off from physical writing, but it is all
still going on in my head.
Jan Edwards and I try to meet up once a week for a
working coffee. We drink and discuss our various WIPS, offer help with problems
and make suggestions about marketing. From time to time, however, one of us
will stop, turn her head very slightly and listen to a snippet of not to be
missed conversation on the next table, or our eyes will follow a newly arrived
group at the counter, instinctively trying to work how they relate to each
other and if there is any story there.
We’re not being rude, I hope, or overly nosy, we are
just being writers, drinking in our surroundings and processing what we hear
and see, all of which will eventually, in some way or another find itself into
our books and stories.
Which I suppose answers my initial question. Writers can’t
have holidays, even without laptops or tablets we are still, on some subliminal
level, forever writing.
Comments
Having said that, I often find I write more easily on holiday, if we're staying in one place, because the usual interruptions and worrying about family members happen far less. It's wonderful to be sure of a few quiet hours every day. But I'm all for letting it all go and using the time to relax and sight see instead without feeling guilty about not writing. Life's too short.