Ups and Downs by Sandra Horn
This is a well-worn topic, but then I’m a well-worn writer.
I have spasms of sending ‘stuff’ out. Sometimes new stuff, sometimes stuff
that’s been the rounds before – on the little flickering wings of hope that
this time, this time, it would find a home. Here, dear Editor, is my precious
child, a drop of my heart’s blood, a small shining piece of my soul. Take it
and cherish it. What?? It doesn’t fit your publishing needs? Thanks but no
thanks? Not even that, but silence? I look again and see, now, the taint in my
heart’s blood, the deformity in my precious child, the smear across the piece
of my soul. How could I have thought anyone would want it, let alone love and
cherish it? I am a deluded fool. I will slink off into outer darkness and never
show my sorry head again. Thought I could write, did I? Hah!
Black hole of despair (Fingal's Cave, really)
Or...what was the matter with the idiot who failed to see
the worth of my precious child, the life-pulse of my heart’s blood, the star in
my soul? Don’t they like dear old badgers or mice who live in grandfather
clocks? Did they even look at it? Surely not. Blindworms! Assassins! Destroyers
of all hope!
You may gather from this that I’ve had a rejection from a
publisher. I have no idea why I persist in sending out children’s stories these
days, when it is quite clear that nobody wants my stuff. Typical Sussex
pig-headedness, I suppose. I can’t quite shake off the thought that somebody
out there – there must be somebody – will love my precious child, revel in my
heart’s blood, listen when my soul speaks. Surely, and all evidence to the
contrary notwithstanding, there’s somebody?
Nope.
On the other hand (how lucky that there is another hand) The
Writers’ Cafe has published my FGM poem, The Blue Nib will publish three – yes,
three of three poems submitted – in the next (March) issue, and I got to the shortlist of 10 in
the National Memory Day poetry competition. Blimey! Stunned delightedness!
Then shivery apprehension.
Why are the downs so much further down than the ups are up,
I ask myself. Rejection casts such a long shadow and acceptance always has that
twinge of anxiety about exposure and what kind of reaction it will get. A writer’s life, folks!
Comments
Neither am I, Bill - I think...