Still Writing: The Pleasures and Perils of a Creative Life (15 page)

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Authors: Dani Shapiro

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Writing

BOOK: Still Writing: The Pleasures and Perils of a Creative Life
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You are no longer yourself—in all your intimate fallibility—

reading your own chicken scratch. Instead, you are a lucid, kind-hearted stranger—open to the possibilities. You are someone else: optimistic and ready to be surprised.

Dumb

We can have high IQ’s and all sorts of impressive degrees.

Some of us can conjugate verbs in three languages, or understand particle physics. Maybe we went to Ivy League schools, or are members of Mensa. But being wicked smart won’t help you when you’re following a line of words on the page. In fact, being that kind of smart can turn out to be a problem. I know a few writers—intellectual, erudite people—whose work suffers for their brilliance. Though there is no such thing as too smart to be, say, a rocket scientist or a neurosurgeon, it is indeed possible to be too smart to be a writer.

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When it comes to storytelling (and it’s
all
storytelling) I often tell my students that we need to be dumb like animals.

Storytelling iself is primal. It’s the way we’ve always come to understand the world around us—whether recited around a campfire, or read aloud in an East Village bar. And so it stands to reason that in order to tell our stories, we tap into something beyond the intellect—an understanding deeper than anything we can willfully engage. Overthink and our minds scramble, wondering: Should we go in this direction? Or that one? Words can become so tangled that our process can feel more like an attempt to unravel the mess we’ve already made. We create obstacles, then strain to get around them. Our minds spin webs that obscure the light.

We second-guess. We become lost in the morass of our limited consciousness.

But when we
feel
our way through a story, we are following a deep internal logic. The words precede us. We hear them. We sense their rightness.
How did I do that,
we ask ourselves, once we’ve finished, once the paint has dried, once we’ve worked through draft after draft after draft. Of course, part of the answer is that we’ve worked hard. We’ve kept ourselves in the chair. We’ve created an environment in which we can focus.

We’ve read and researched and learned and explored. But there is something else—something we can’t explain, and can’t under stand, and that makes us all feel a little bit like maybe 150

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we’re cheating, except that it isn’t cheating, it is the thing itself.

How did I do that?

We are animals, our ears pricked, our eyes wide open. We put one hoof down, then another, on the soft and pliant earth.

The rustle of a leaf. The crack of a branch. A passing breeze.

We do not stop to ponder,
What’s around the corner?
We don’t know. There is only this: the bird’s nest, the fawn, the snake curled beneath the gnarled root of an ancient tree. There is only the sound of our own breath. Our pulsing bodies. We are here. Alive, alert, quivering. We are cave dwellers. With a sharpened arrowhead we make a picture. A boy. A bear. The moon.

Breaking the Rules

Inevitably, I will be in the midst of giving my students some basic, creative-writing-101 type of advice (use adverbs spar-ingly, keep exclamation points to a minimum, ditto for ellipses) and they will diligently (whoops, an adverb) hunch over their notebooks, scribble down my words as if they’re the gospel, and I will begin reeling off examples of books I love that break those rules. When Andrew Sean Greer wrote
The
Confessions of Max Tivoli,
in which his narrator grew younger 151

Dani Shapiro

and younger with each passing chapter, he wasn’t adhering to conventions of narrative structure. When Marion Winik wrote her tiny, exquisite memoir,
The Glen Rock Book of the
Dead,
a jigsaw of elegies to people she had known who had passed away, she was breaking rules. Everyone’s dead? Then why should we care? When Joe Brainard wrote
I Remember,
a memoir in which every sentence begins with those words,
I remember,
he didn’t have the voice of some writing teacher in his head, suggesting that he avoid repetition. And when Colum McCann composed
Let the Great World Spin,
he didn’t ask whether readers would be willing to follow the story lines of his multiple narrators until the threads connected. No. If any one of these writers had allowed their inner censor to swoop in, they may not have written those books. And the world wouldn’t have them.

My favorite recent works of literature take risks. Unpredictable, unexpected, populated by characters who do the wrong thing, not according to plan. The plan pretty much never goes accordingly in life. Why should it, in literature?

Give me a spectacular mess of a novel any day over an overly careful one. Give me kinetic prose, or deeply flawed, complex characters who surprise me. Give me sentences that go on for pages, leaving me breathless. Or, in the case of Jennifer Egan’s
A Visit From the Goon Squad,
a chapter written in the form of a Power Point presentation. Or a series of blank pages, like 152

Still Writing

those we come across in
When Women Were Birds,
Terry Tempest Williams’s meditation on the journals her terminally ill mother asked that she read only after her death; journals, it turned out, that were themselves blank. When we reach that first blank page, when we turn it to find another, then another, we enter Tempest Williams’s experience of what it must have been like to encounter her mother’s empty journals. It’s a breathtaking moment—and a bold one.

These instances of creative daring are moments of grace.

They are moments when we get out of our own way. They break the rules, and break them beautifully. They arrive with no fanfare, but there is no mistaking them. They glide past our hesitation, our resistance, layers of reasons why we can’t, we musn’t, we shouldn’t. They are accompanied by an almost childlike thrill.
Why not,
the whole universe seems to whisper: Why not now? Why not you? What’s the worst thing that can happen?

Of course, maybe it won’t work. Maybe the blank pages, the PowerPoint, the repetition—whatever the impossible thing you’re doing—will fall flat. But if you don’t embrace the danger of it, that knife’s edge, that exquisite question—can it be done?—you will never know the pleasure that comes with throwing all those workshop rules, along with your copy of Strunk and White, out the window. You—and consequently we—will never know what could have been.

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Spit

At a recent Kundalini yoga class, the teacher asked the assembled group to do a breathing exercise. We all cupped our hands, making small bowls beneath our chins, and then
.
.
.
then we spit. We inhaled, then spit. Inhaled, then spit. For what seemed an interminable time but was probably five minutes, we inhaled, then spit. The teacher instructed us to dredge up every single painful thing we could from the recesses of our memory. Every bit of grief, regret, shame, guilt. “This is going to be messy,” she said. “But I promise—nobody’s watching.”

A few dozen of us sat on our mats on the floor of the meeting house, the late afternoon sun streaming in through the west-facing windows. Chins wet with drool. Cupped hands slimy and damp. The room filled with the deeply strange and disconcerting sound of communal spitting. “Don’t stop!”

the teacher urged. She was an improbably beautiful, serene-looking blonde woman who was dressed for class in head-to-toe white. “Whatever you do, don’t stop!”

Spit, spit, spit.
I felt sick after a while. Nauseated. I kept my gaze trained on my cupped hands. Grief, regret, shame, and guilt pooled there. I saw my mother in my hands, not as 154

Still Writing

the vibrant woman she was for my whole life, but as the frail, balding, tufted creature she became in the months before she died.
Spit, spit.
I saw my father, lying in a coma in the ICU

after the car accident.
Spit.
I saw my half-sister from whom I am hopelessly estranged, her expression quizzical and dismissive.
Spit
. My son as an infant having seizures.
Spit
. Every funeral I’ve ever been to
. Spit
. The married man I slept with.

Spit.
The friend I betrayed.
Spit
.

“Thirty more seconds!” the teacher called out. It felt impossible to keep going. Was I the only one who felt this way? I resisted the urge to take a look around the room. When she finally, mercifully, told us to stop, my stomach was churning.

The room seemed to be tilted. I felt simultaneously sickened and cleansed, my insides scoured raw.

What clenches and curls in the marrow.
Why would any sane person put herself through such an exercise? For that matter, why meditation, why therapy, why all the endless self- scrutiny?

A room full of people spitting, for gods sake! Aren’t there better things to do on a sunny afternoon? But somehow—though the whole thing was embarrassing and didn’t feel exactly good—I had the sense that what I was doing was—as my writer friends and I sometimes say, good for the work.

“Know your own bone,” Thoreau wrote. “Gnaw at it, bury it, unearth it, gnaw it still.” Of course, the beginning of this powerful piece of wisdom is: “Do what you love.” In order to 155

Dani Shapiro

do what we love—whether we are woodworkers, legal aid attorneys, emergency room physicians, or novelists—we must first know ourselves as deeply as we are able.
Know your own
bone.
This self-knowledge can be messy.
Spit, spit.
But it is at the center of our life’s work, this gnawing, this unearthing.

There is never an end to it. Our deepest stories—our bones—

are our best teachers.
Gnaw it still
.

Cigarette Break

Back when I smoked, whenever I got stuck midsentence, or needed a breather, I reached for my pack of Marlboro Reds.

That pack of cigarettes was never far from me. I kept it near my right elbow, on my desk next to a ceramic ashtray swiped from the Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc in Cap d’Antibes. That ashtray was pretty much always overflowing with butts. In my borrowed room on West Seventy-second Street, I wrote and smoked. Smoked and wrote. The two seemed linked together in a way that did not allow for the possibility that I would ever be able to write without the option of smoking. What would I do when I hit a snag? How could I possibly unstick myself without the ritual of tapping a cigarette loose from the pack, placing it between my lips, striking a match, lighting it
.
.
.
the 156

Still Writing

tip glowing red? Without blowing out the match, leaning back in my desk chair, inhaling, exhaling, aiming smoke rings at the ceiling? Even as I write this, more than twenty years after my last cigarette, I can feel the welcome harshness of the smoke in my lungs, the feel of the cigarette between the second and third finger of my right hand.

By the time I had finished a draft of my first novel, I had quit smoking. My father had died, my mother was in a wheelchair.

One afternoon, a tiny Yorkshire terrier puppy in the window of a pet store on Columbus Avenue caught my eye. I went inside, telling myself I was just going to play with him. An hour later, I left the pet store with a crate, puppy food, bowls, a leash, a collar, and a puppy. I named him Gus— Gustave, because I was reading a lot of Flaubert at the time—and every morning I took him to Central Park. One morning, as I sat on a rock warmed by the sunshine, smoking while Gus romped in the grass, the words
I want to live
went through my head and I stubbed out what would turn out to be my last cigarette.

I want to live
.

But when I went back to work on a second draft of that novel—now no longer a smoker—I was in trouble. I wanted to live, but I also needed to write. Those cigarette breaks had provided me with a ritualized dream time. Smoking was good for the writing. That tapping of the pack, lighting of the match, leaning back, and smoking, allowed for a 157

Dani Shapiro

prescribed amount of time—three minutes? five?—in which I was doing nothing but smoking, gazing out the window at the courtyard below, and allowing my thoughts to sort themselves out.

Writers require that ritualized dream time. We all have our tricks and tools. Some of us still smoke. I have friends who chew on pens. Or doodle. Friends who pop jelly beans from jars on their desks. Or take baths in the middle of the day.

My husband and I recently discovered the power of pistachio nuts: the cracking open of those shells is curiously satisfying.

Whatever keeps us in the work, engaged, and able to resist the urge to go do something—anything—else.

As I sit here writing this—at a café not far from my house—

that urge is part of nearly every minute. Discomfort is kicking my ass on this particular day. I know better—but knowing better sometimes isn’t enough. In the past hour, I have checked my e-mail three times. I sent a note to a friend about a magazine piece she’s helping me with. I received a photo from my husband with a picture of a car he thought I might like. I have gone on Facebook once. I have received two texts.

Well, that’s okay, you might be thinking to yourself. What’s the harm in taking a couple of minutes to check in online?

After all, isn’t a quick glance at your e-mails, Twitter feed, the Facebook status updates of all your friends kind of like a twenty-first century version of the cigarette break?

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Still Writing

This may be the most important piece of advice I can give you:
The Internet is nothing like a cigarette break
. If anything, it’s the opposite. One of the most difficult practical challenges facing writers in this age of connectivity is the fact that the very instrument on which most of us write is also a portal to the outside world. I once heard Ron Carlson say that composing on a computer was like writing in an amuse-ment park. Stuck for a nanosecond? Why feel it? With the single click of a key we can remove ourselves and take a ride on a log flume instead.

By the time we return to our work—if, indeed, we return to our work at all—we will be further away from our deepest impulses rather than closer to them. Where were we? Oh, yes.

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