November 14, 2019
NOTES ON A WRITING LIFE | 5
Reading at Mrs. Dalloway’s Bookstore in Berkeley, California. (The store’s name derives from the first line of Virginia Woolf’s 1925 novel, Mrs. Dalloway: “Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself.”)
Dear All,
I’ve been back a week or two from doing readings in San Francisco and Berkeley, meeting with my agent and editor and generally enjoying an unusually warm and sunny golden week in California, and I’m now back in my little studio in Key West, to hunker down again into actual writing – which also involves dreaming, trying things out, looking out of the window, but essentially being present.
I remember once in my early days, someone said to me, rather brutally I thought, “It doesn’t matter what happens to you, you can always use it in your writing. It’s like having a third leg.” Third leg? She meant, that on two legs you can be knocked over more easily than on three, that the third leg – writing, any form of art – creates a stability that most people don’t have. So, when we writers and artists encounter some of the problems and challenges of life, whether health issues, money problems, family problems or angst about the world, we always have something else going on, on the side. For a writer, the story runs alongside life, sometimes faltering, sometimes out of reach, yet always somewhere there, waiting to be found. In the small hours of the night, we can switch our minds to our characters’ problems rather than our own. We can play around with plot ideas, imagine scenes, fall asleep again and even wake with new ideas.
“Now, I’m back in my studio, the room I inherited from Robert Stone that sometimes seems to me to hold some of his charisma in the old furnishings that are still there, along with his box of paper clips and a few empty notebooks and defunct pens. The desk I work at when at home was bought in a garage sale from Annie Dillard when she moved house decades ago. Who knows what we writers pass on to each other? ”
Now, I’m back in my studio, the room I inherited from Robert Stone that sometimes seems to me to hold some of his charisma in the old furnishings that are still there, along with his box of paper clips and a few empty notebooks and defunct pens. The desk I work at when at home was bought in a garage sale from Annie Dillard when she moved house decades ago. Who knows what we writers pass on to each other? But most of all, it’s in the books, the words, the pages of the books that I take out from my shelf here – Bob’s, Annie’s, Michael Ondaatje’s, my Scottish friend Andrew Greig, the poets Jane Hirshfield and Harvey Shapiro, the essays of John Berger… We sustain and nurture each other, across distance, defying death, passing over illness, talking to each other in the language of beauty and hope, exactness and inspiration. Sometimes to read a page is enough, and I return to my own, restored and set alight again.
People ask, “Isn’t writing a very lonely occupation?” I’m always surprised by this. Not only do I write with all these other writers in my head and on my shelves, but with other artists in the same house, a writer and a painter. We greet each other, wave hello, sometimes meet for coffee, but usually acknowledge that we’re here to work, so – keep it short. I go home at lunchtime, it’s only a five-minute walk, and usually eat with my husband. I return to meet up with him again in the evening. Friends call, visit, write, meet me in town. So no – hardly lonely, rather the reverse; but I can’t emphasize enough the delight of aloneness when you have an idea to pursue, a story to net and develop, a poem to write, a new idea to put on the page or screen. Then, to be alone is wonderful. It is what you have longed for and tried for all your busy life. Gleeful, you begin again and know that some new thing is emerging, something will exist by evening that was only a flicker of idea in the early morning, and you have time to see it on its way. Nothing else matters. Nothing else intrudes. During this time, no interruption is bearable, you are outside of time until – yes, time to move on, stretch, eat, talk. In my room in the studio house we share, I don’t have a phone, internet access, or any other distraction except books. It feels like an inviolate space. It feels like the one place I most want to be, with the door shut, my two sentinel gumbo limbo trees outside the window, and if not exactly silence – Key West is full of leaf-blowers, home-renovators, tree-cutters, garbage trucks, planes and sirens – then at least the inner silence of the uninterrupted mind.
So yes, the third leg helps. The story running alongside our own lives keeps up its own momentum even when we falter. For some reasonI come up with the image of the stopped train in the movie “Lawrence of Arabia,” Arab horsemen galloping up to pillage it and let imprisoned horses free, and Peter O’Toole in his white robes striding along the roof of the train. Why? I’m not sure. Perhaps it’s all those beautiful horses of the imagination, galloping free.
Affectionately, Ros