Excerpt from one of my untitled, unpublished
short stories:
If you asked her, Andy would say Little Derek was an
accident—a blessing, but an accident nonetheless. She would say that she felt so hot and cold
about life that she didn’t know whether she was coming or going. One minute she fought to find a place as a
civilian, a wife and a daughter, the next minute she wanted to sleep until
there were no more tomorrows. She would
say that the only time her life made sense was when she was with Derek, that
when she spent the weekend with him in Longview, Texas, she wasn’t thinking
straight. That she didn’t know she was
ovulating and didn’t know why she was so horny she could have humped a
pole. She would say she didn’t know why
she had sex with Kenneth the night after she returned home and that the thought
of Derek’s seed in her womb was the farthest thing from her mind. But she would be straight up lying. Andy planned Little Derek as sure as she
willed her father to live the day she found him unconscious in the garage.
Picture the thing you love most in the world—the
thing that makes you feel loved, accepted and complete; the thing in which you
can lose yourself; the thing without which you cannot imagine living. If
you do not have children, you probably pictured a person, more specifically a
lover, a life partner or a spouse. It is probably not hard to imagine having
a child with this person. Whether this child is adopted or brought into
the world biologically is irrelevant for this exercise. What matters here
is your love and commitment for this child. That love and commitment will
be or is, to some degree, an act of transference. Via the child, the love
you feel for your significant other grows exponentially. As the child
grows, your bond with him/her will grow. Then that love of transference
will take on a new dimension whereby you love the child both as a part of you
and your significant other and as an individual.
When I write fiction involving a parent and a
child, I picture the thing I love most in the world: books. All books
tell a story, even textbooks and instructional manuals. I respect every type of book that exists. I respect what they can inspire, which is change
and action. Words are the most beautiful, powerful things in the world to
me. I can lose myself in them. When I write, I feel loved, accepted
and complete even though few people ever read my work. I cannot live without writing. I would not cease to breathe if I ceased to write, but I would
go insane, and I would probably…no, I am certain I would kill myself.
I went through a two-year period of writer’s
block. For me, it was an unconscious closing off of my creativity.
Sure, I wrote. I wrote shopping lists, checks, birthday and thank-you
cards, reports for work, etc. I even journaled, but I did not write
creatively, so all that creative energy sat bottled up inside me like
combustible energy. I felt castrated and worthless at first. Then I
started fantasizing about rear-ending the faceless person who cut me off on the
highway. Since my parents raised me to be a kind, loving person, I
couldn’t allow such deviant thoughts to persist, so I shifted to imagining my
car spinning out of control, flying off the highway and bursting into flames
after crashing into an abandoned building. I have never been more
suicidal and destructive as I was when I had writer’s block. I felt like
I was suffocating and, in a sense, I was. I was dying a slow mental,
emotional and spiritual death.
During that period of writer’s block, I
journaled about how much I love writing, how much I missed it and how much I
needed it. I pined for it the way normal people pine for a lover. I
begged him to come back to me. I swore that I was not angry that he had
abandoned me. I promised I would do whatever he wanted. I promised
not to put demands or restraints on him if he would just give me a book.
While I waited for him, I slept with a book tucked beneath my pillow each night.
I carried one in my purse just in case I found myself waiting in the doctor’s
office or in a long line at the grocery store. I listened to audio books
in my car. I was never without one of my adopted babies. They were constant
reminders of my love and commitment to words.
But let’s be real. Who the hell is gonna read a
book about somebody loving books? Maybe .2% of the population.
Wanting to write books is only part of the equation; wanting people to read
your books is the another part. Every path in life is an effort toward
deeper self-understanding whether we realize it or not. One cannot
understand oneself without witnesses. There must be an exchange, a transference
of experience and becoming.
Whenever I write the words: child, baby,
daughter, son (or the child-character’s name), I am really
thinking book. That’s how I
conjure the emotionality. That’s how I
make the reader believe I know anything at all about what a parent feels for a
child.
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