Running out of juice by Sandra Horn
I’m in a terrible flat spot. I got to poem 38 of the 52
poems challenge and just came to a stop. I made notes for the next two and
wrote one verse but just couldn’t go on. For all these past weeks, I’ve just
fiddled about with old stuff – poetry and prose – but have not been able to be
creative at all. It’s a familiar dilemma, but doesn’t usually last this long.
Often in the past, walking somewhere beautiful starts the process going and
recently, we’ve been in the Lakes, in glorious sunny weather. Blue skies above
just-turning autumn leaves reflected in the water. The roar and magnetic pull
of a waterfall in spate. Saddleback blueish in the distance. Evenings around a
log fire. A squelchy walk from Pooley Bridge to Barton Church to rescue a wren
that might have been trapped in there (it wasn’t). Everything, in fact, to
gladden the heart and get the creative juices flowing. Except they didn’t.
This is a lake, not a story
At one point I put it down to that kindly-meant but
deadening thing, ‘You should write a
story about that,’ ‘There’s a story for you, Sandra.’ Etc. I have written about the Lakes walks and
other happenings, but they are reports, not stories. It’s curious how often the
difference isn’t appreciated by people who are, after all, trying to be helpful
and encouraging. It’s quite likely that there is something waiting to be
written, but it will take traces of those experiences and transform them into
something other. I don’t know what it might be yet – and might not know until
the writing is finished and I read it through and it dawns on me where that
particular passage could have had its origins.
This is a sunset, not a story
I was thinking of the difference between reportage and
storytelling last night, watching and listening to ‘My Country’, which relied
very heavily (and heavily is the operative word) on verbatim speech. It’s a
fashion in writing for the theatre too. At the risk of offending large numbers
of people who know more about it than I do, I think it’s lazy – and rarely as
challenging or engaging as it might be. We know that daily chat is often
repetitive, can be cliché-ridden and has not been thought about for long, if at
all, before it is uttered. What can we learn from it, much less be excited by
it? I think it is the job of a writer to take the raw material, listen hard,
think harder, then let the creative forces loose on it. This transformative
process is mysterious but it is crucial in the making of stories, which can then
be transformative/informative/entertaining/thought-provoking in themselves – or
what are they for?
Of course, I could just be riding a hobby-horse here, in a
state of total ignorance, but in this long unproductive spell I’m having, I’ve
had plenty of time to think about it. I have written about the Lake District
walks to friends, describing such events is not a problem. Give me a topic, and
even better, a deadline, and I’ll come up with something. With any luck it will
be readable and I can make it amusing if
need be – but what I can’t do at present is the alchemy. I can polish the base
metal nicely but it won’t turn into gold. I’m knitting instead! I’m knitting
worthily, moreover. Little hats for smoothie bottles (for Age Concern),
‘bonding’ squares for the prem baby unit at St Thomas’s, fingerless gloves for
my daughter’s outdoor craft activities. Anything absorbing but not requiring
too much skill. And waiting. Waiting for the gleam at the back of my mind, the
fiery spark, the – Oh, you know the stuff I mean. It’s elusive because, I
suspect, I’ve never tamed it by setting proper time aside each day and being
disciplined about writing. I’ve just bumbled along until something sets it off.
I have, in the past, tried that business about ‘writing something every day’,
‘write for ten minutes, it doesn’t matter what you write’. The trouble is, it
does matter! Ten minutes of uninspiring garbage is ten minutes down the drain.
Never yet has it produced anything worthwhile. Back to the knitting. And
waiting. And hoping.
Comments
I suppose daemons need time off, like the rest of us.
I think people who say, 'You should write about that,' think that stories spring from one image or event. In my experience, they come about from several very different kinds of incidents, experiences or ideas bashing together to make sparks. It could be an historical event from four hundred years ago, something you heard in the news today, an experience from your childhood and a story a friend told you about something that happened to a nephew of theirs on board a supertanker in the indian ocean. And none of these things need be used in a literal sense - it could be, rather, the mood of one or the lesson learned from another, the physical setting of a third.
There's no obvious connection between any of these things - and that, in a way, is the key. As you say, a sunset is just a sunset, however beautiful. An amazing coincidence is just an amazing coincidence. There's nothing for these things to strike on, to make sparks.
That's why we need our daemons - to find the right mix of unrelated ingredients and strike the spark.
Don't worry, your daemon is on its way back!
What going away to places like the Lakes - or anywhere away from home, really, idyylic or not - does give me is time to let the ideas I already half-have rise to the surface.
Besides, I'm not sure if you are trying to capture a spark when there's someone else there with you, which imo can be a slight burden and pressure on you? Or are the rather unhelpful comments coming afterwards?
Just keep listening out, and I'm sure the moment will come - and it may not be anything to do with sunsets. Also, that's quite a lot of poems you've written already!