Read Writing Is My Drink Online
Authors: Theo Pauline Nestor
Tags: #General, #Reference, #Writing Skills, #Personal & Practical Guides, #Self-Help
with the air-conditioner pumping out cool air, working my way
through a pile of library books.
Famous-to-the-Well-Read’s story had been collected into a
volume of
Best American Short Stories
. I remembered reading through the collection with a sense of wonder and profound
jealousy. I had recently turned thirty, an age when career envy
can reach a shrill high C. Everything you were going to do by
thirty mocks you, and you real y don’t get that you’re not alone
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in that. There on my sofa I read his amazing story chock full of
literary merit and grit, which had everything I hoped my writ-
ing would possess. After finishing the story, I flipped back to
the author’s bio. He’d been in the Writers’ Workshop at the Uni-
versity of Iowa, natch. Like the other writers in the collection,
he was a rock star, distant and unreachable. How he’d gotten to
where he was as a writer, I’d never know. I’d be more likely to run into David Bowie at our desert town’s Smith’s Food King.
And now suddenly, five years later, he was coming to my
MFA program. He’d be teaching our workshop next year, and
in fact, in just a few weeks, he would be visiting our class. Coin-
cidental y (or was it fate?), he’d be coming to our class the very
day my story was slated to be workshopped. What’s more, our
regular instructor thought it would be a great idea for Famous
to
lead
our workshop.
If I get very quiet and honest, I call up a memory of my hope
that Famous would be blown away by my story. That perhaps
with a few deftly delivered pieces of praise he’d raise my group
status from middle-of-the-pack to literary star. Later we’d be-
come friends—not quite equals but close—hashing out writing
troubles over coffee in crowded Seattle cafés. It is difficult to access that memory now, though, because the events that followed
diverged so sharply from that fantasy.
Did he love my story? No. Did he like it even? Nope. Did he
think the story worthy of a line-by-line scrutiny? An absolute
yes. And so that’s how I spent an hour one mid-May afternoon
near the end of the millennium: sitting in silence (the writer
never talks in workshops, just quietly sits and considers all the
sage advice shooting around her like gunfire, occasional y scrib-
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bling something thoughtful in her notebook, such as “Fuck off”)
as Famous careful y explained line by line everything that was
wrong with the story. The story was set in San Francisco during
the 1989 earthquake, and included a detail about watching the
headlights of the cars on the bridge heading north toward Marin
County. This detail excited Famous to a point of near-fury.
“If the narrator is in San Francisco and she’s watching cars
heading north, she’d be looking at
tail ights
, not headlights,” he announced to the class, as if making his closing argument to a
grand jury.
Pregnant with baby number two, I barely held it together,
sitting through the next few minutes in that overly warm and
crowded classroom. Baby, objecting to the heat and the stress,
pounded out her objection with her small feet and then pulled
an elbow across my enormous midsection. Shock and anger vied
for position, but mostly I burned with shame as my lifelong fear
of being inaccurate had just been played out in a public setting.
All the other literary crimes committed in the story—lack of ac-
tion and imagination, bad dialogue, a passive narrator—seemed
not so bad compared to the Giant Crime of Inaccuracy, of getting
taillights mixed up with headlights. And while the goal of fiction
is to make up swaths of life that feel real, I’d offered up, yet again, something real that seemed made up because I couldn’t even
accurately report what I’d actual y seen, a failing that I general y try to keep well hidden. (If an eyewitness to a crime is needed, I
am not—
should not be
—your first pick. I don’t know whether it’s that I’m just spacey or if it’s the second-guessing that undoes me, but accuracy in reporting is not my strong suit.)
A full-scale loss of face and dashing of hopes had not been
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my plan for the day; in fact, I’d been hoping from Famous for
something I shouldn’t even been asking for from anyone else:
permission to write. And now saddled, with working with Fa-
mous for the rest of the MFA program, I’d be spending lots of
time in public situations with someone in authority, someone
whose work I respected, who didn’t “get” me, who didn’t like
my writing, and who was extremely good at picking it apart. It
didn’t help that I knew that Famous’s criticisms of my work were
accurate. My narrators were passive. My stories lacked action
and certainly imagination, and sometimes I got details wrong.
In short, the moment I’d predicted when I held JoJo’s failed man-
uscript in my hands had arrived. I sucked and people knew it.
Ideal y, this story should end up with Famous being just the
school of tough love I needed and the best teacher I ever had.
It should end with my fiction making a dramatic turn for the
better, my characters turning from wimpy to active, my details
sharp with accuracy. It doesn’t. It ends up with me becoming
increasingly down on my writing and increasingly irritated with
Famous. It ends up with me learning quite a bit in spite of him
and sometimes because of him and then graduating from the
program with a shaky sense of my own ability to write fiction.
But there is a good part. Real y. The good part came a while
after I graduated from the program and saw Famous for per-
haps the last time. By then I was mostly stay-at-home mom and
I wrote when I could, taking care of Natalie and her new sister,
Jessie, most of the time. No one in the world cared whether I
wrote or not. Usual y I had an hour a day during nap time to
do whatever I wanted, and most days—when I wasn’t total y
exhausted—I chose to write. My stories were still fictional but
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gradual y becoming memoir. I started to write triptychs again.
It was weird that I’d somehow forgotten them during the fic-
tion writing program, but I had. But the triptych had waited for
me to come back. I started taking the words that my new life
had evolved into—marriage, motherhood, family—and put-
ting them at the center of the page. No matter what I learned in
graduate school, I had to keep reminding myself to be myself, to
listen to the sound of my own voice.
Almost every new writer yearns for permission to write. Ide-
al y, an established, maybe even famous writer will examine a
small sample of your writing and quickly issue a You’ve-got-it
declaration. We imagine that, like the results of a pregnancy test, the answer is binary: yes or no. Thumbs up or down. Positive
or negative. Once this permission has been received, your flight
will launch, never faltering, never touching down in the Land of
Doubt again.
Meanwhile, here on Earth, established writers are flawed,
subjective beasts who may be unable, unwilling, or just too tired
or busy to issue the permission you crave. They, for whatever
reason that may have no bearing on your talent or potential,
could
despise
your writing. Let’s say, though, that they
do
like your work and they are able and willing to toss you a crumb of
approval. It’s still not going to satisfy you. The trouble with ap-
proval is there’s never enough of it. Given approval once, you’re
not set for life—busily writing and overcoming every obstacle,
steadily nurtured by the nod you received ten years ago. No
matter how potent, once a shot of approval has faded in your
bloodstream, you’ll be wanting another one. Sounds decidedly
like addiction, doesn’t it?
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Beyond approval, I’ve also wanted from my instructors’ vali-
dation that sitting down to write was a worthy use of my time. I
wanted permission to stop my endless chain of obligatory tasks.
I wanted someone to clear the brush of doubt around me and
give me the peace of mind to write.
In Virginia Valian’s “Learning to Work,” the essay that helped
me get through my thesis, she describes her own fear of work and
that of others who’ve shared a common fear of “relinquishing
control of oneself: of being a slave, or going into a tomb, being
buried alive, being shut off from the world” and that she had to
learn that “losing myself in my work was not dangerous.” These
words hit me as hard today as they did twenty-five years ago
when I first read them as a graduate student staring down the
abyss of a one-hundred-page thesis. Today the Internet is down
in my house. I have no pressing work to do. My kids are off at
arts camp and don’t need to be picked up for several hours. And
adding to the quiet of this day, it is gray and cold even though
it is July and many people I know are out of town on summer
vacations. This is the day that I’ve said I’ve been waiting for: a
writing day. And yet, it scares me. There is nothing between me
and the page, and that does feel dangerous. I can stand perched
above it for a good long while, the same way I can stand on a
warm dock above a cool lake, terrified of the moment of contact
with the water. Terrified of breaking through the skin of the sur-
face and being in, committed ful y to swimming. And yet, I want
to swim. Why not just dive in?
Ideal y, I’d be pushed in. Stripped of my volition, I’m given
the chance to do what I long for. For many writers, a deadline
is the push. Someone’s waiting for your work; you have to do
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it. But for much of the work we truly yearn to do, there is no
deadline. The only broken promise is the one we made to our-
selves.
So here I am, beginning to swim. The guy from the phone
company still isn’t here to fix the Internet and probably won’t be
for several hours. I’ve used all my tricks to coax myself in. A pot of black tea. Background music. Looking over notes for a good
while before actual y doing the writing. But final y I do get to it, and partly I am here because of my teachers—teachers like Famous—who taught me by the example of their own work that it
is safe to be alone with my own thoughts, that I won’t be “buried
alive” when I give myself over to writing.
My need for someone to tell me that it’s okay to write, for
me to take the time to sit and follow my own thoughts, seems to
be relentless. I thought it would go away once I was in an MFA
program, then once I was published in a magazine. After that,
I hoped that maybe a published book would do the trick. But
whatever writing milestones I hit, the desire for someone to tell
me that I can spend the afternoon, the morning, or the week to
write is always there.
What does it look like to give permission to ourselves? For
me, it’s the computer not turned on. The e-mails unanswered. It’s
sitting in the quiet of a morning punctuated by only a crow’s caw
and the occasional roar of children’s voices from the neighbor-
hood park. Nothing adding to those sounds except the scratch of
a pen rhythmical y moving across the paper. It’s the unanswered
phone. It’s looking out the window and letting one thought give
rise to the next, an endless succession of waves that rise, crest,
and fall onto the shore. It’s the sound of the calico cat making its 1 3 9
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ascent to the windowsil . It’s knowing that all the other stuff you need to do will get done. Or it won’t.
It’s the stillness we both crave and repel. It’s the knowledge
that following our own thoughts is as important or even more
important a pastime as following another’s.
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Try This
1. When making your schedule for the week, pencil in a time
for writing. Ideal y, you will be able to pick regular times of
the day or a certain day each week, which will allow you to
condition yourself that these times are for writing, reinforcing
the idea that you are “allowed” to write during these times.
Keep in mind, however, that schedules work very well for
some people but actual y cause some to feel constricted and
therefore to work less.