This is my attempt to recreate the post that was eaten by my computer last night . . .
“The most glorious moments in your life are not the so-called days of success, but rather those days when out of dejection and despair you feel rise in you a challenge to life, and the promise of future accomplishments.” ~ Gustave Flaubert
Things I accomplished yesterday:
- Finished addressing Christmas cards, ready to go to the post office today
- Finally packaged my friend Mari’s birthday present along with her Christmas card in a mailer, also ready to go to post office
- Did not eat an entire one-pound bag of peanut M&M’s whilst doing the above
- Cleaned off most of my desk in an attempt to find the Christmas stamps for the cards; did not find stamps on desk as I had put them in a very safe place (always risky)
- Also managed to find paperwork that I had put in a very safe place, just not the same very safe place as Christmas stamps
- Did not put fist through computer monitor when I lost blog post that was almost finished
- Realized that I am not supposed to try to accomplish two major tasks in one day as one of them most certainly will become an epic fail
Felt rather pleased with myself right up to the moment when I went to save my post, was redirected to the WordPress sign in page (for some unknown reason), and then returned to blog post only to find that nothing, absolutely nothing that I had written was there save for the quotes.
“There is something about words. In expert hands, manipulated deftly, they take you prisoner. Wind themselves around your limbs like spider silk, and when you are so enthralled you cannot move, they pierce your skin, enter your blood, numb your thoughts. Inside you they work their magic.” ~ Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale
I’ve been having very vivid dreams lately. One that was particularly disturbing dealt with my mother dying. My Aunt Ronnie, who died earlier this year, was walking me through my mother’s house, pointing out things. I remember feeling very comforted that she was there with me. Woke up crying after that one.
But two dreams in particular have stuck with me, and both of these dreams dealt with words and my relationship to words.
The first dream:
This dream was very long and detailed. I was back in college as an undergraduate. I sat down in the common area of the Arts & Letters building, and the person next to me turned and spoke to me. I hadn’t realized that I had sat down next to one of my creative writing professors (it was him, but he looked different in the dream). He asked me if I was going to show up for his class that night. I replied that I had only missed two classes because of my illness, not dropped out, and reminded him that I had submitted the work that was due.
He said that the work was substandard, which really surprised me. Then he told me that the final exam was that very night. I panicked and began to hyperventilate. I told him that I couldn’t possibly take the exam because I wasn’t prepared. I begged him to let me take the final later, but he refused. I went to the department chair’s office and explained the situation. I reminded him that I had doctors’ letters explaining my health issues, and I asked him to give me some leeway since I was a member of the department.
The chair spoke to my professor who asserted that I wasn’t sick; I was on acid. I argued that I wasn’t on acid, that in fact I had never in my life taken acid. My professor again said that I was a drug addict and that he wasn’t going to do anything for me.
I sat down in the common area and put my head in my hands. Two female professors from the department walked by and said loudly enough for me to hear that they thought that my writing professor was only doing this because he hated women (not true in real life). I didn’t know what to do. Suddenly, I was surrounded by people who were enrolled in the class with me; several of them were holding papers—newspapers, pages torn from magazines, cards. One person said that I had to do something extraordinary to prove to my professor that he was wrong about me.
I asked him what I should do. He said that I needed to take the pages that they had all collected for me and create something. I began to look through the pages, and words started to stand out. I began ripping words from the pages and arranging them on the floor. I was creating a poem from the words. Someone gave me scissors, so I began to cut out more words.
My writing professor walked up and observed what I was doing, but he said that he wasn’t impressed, but by that point, I no longer cared about him or his class. I was creating for myself. I couldn’t collect the words quickly enough. The poem soon grew to be about five feet long and just as wide. It was massive, and I wasn’t finished. I needed more words.
I looked up and realized that below where I was working on the floor was a gap and that trains were moving through the gap, but instead of coal in the cars there were small colored rocks, larger than sand, but much smaller than coal—vivid blues, bright yellows, greens. I realized that I needed to get to the other side of the gap to collect more words, so I jumped down onto the first car, which contained blue rocks, My feet began to sink into the rocks, and the blue began to swirl about my legs. I jumped from one car to the next until I was on the other side. When I reached the other side, I suddenly realized what Van Gogh’s “Starry Night” really meant: It was his poem about life, only with paint. I smiled to myself and went in search of more words.
The dream ended there.
“The smell of ink is intoxicating to me—others may have wine, but I have poetry.” ~ Abbe Yeux-verdi
Second dream:
I was working in the newsroom again, but this time, I was a clerk responsible for typing and filing. I was speaking with a reporter with whom I had a good relationship, telling him how glad I was to be back in the newsroom again, even if it meant that I had to do grunt work.
I remember the hum of the actual newsroom in which I worked while I was an undergraduate. An undercurrent of creative energy was always suffused in the air. I felt that in my dream. I looked about me at all of the reporters and editors, and commented that I wished that I could be out there in that pool of people and not stuck in a clerical position.
The person with whom I was speaking asked me why I didn’t apply for a position. I told him that I didn’t think that I was good enough, but I remember thinking to myself in the dream that that was not a true statement, that it wasn’t a matter of being good enough but rather, a matter of being afraid. He told me that I should apply.
Many people who I had actually worked with walked through this dream. Some stopped to chat, others just walked by and nodded. I inquired about the City Editor who had been in charge when I worked there, and my friend told me that he had died. Soon after, I awakened, feeling very calm and reflective.
There is a saying that people who work for newspapers have ink in their blood. I know this to be true. The slow death of printed newspapers saddens me in a way that cuts to my very heart as I wrote my first pieces for publication for the local paper.
“Unclose your mind. You are not a prisoner. You are a bird in flight, searching the skies for dreams.” ~ Haruki Murakami
I have rerun in my mind both of these dreams several times, and what strikes me is that my psyche is sending me a message: I need to return to my writing full time, or rather, on a daily basis, which is full time for me. Obviously, I have words within me that need to be released, to be massaged into something concrete, and I have not been doing that of late. I must recapture the passion with which I first began writing this blog, and I must return to the discipline with which I so carefully honed my writing method: working at it for at least two hours each day.
The brain is but another part of the body that requires regular exercise lest it atrophy. By not working on my craft, I have regressed to my former state of writing only when the creativity hit me, rather than forcing myself to cull to the surface the creativity which resides within me.
In fact, I have been very lackadaisical when it comes to writing daily, and I know this to be true however painful it is to admit. But something inside of me is quietly rebelling at the passive approach to writing that I have been taking. Something—my inner muse, inner self— is sending me signals that there are words, phrases, sentences, paragraphs all waiting to be created, and that if I ignore these signals, then I am doing myself a disservice.
My birthday is next month. I will be yet another year older and no closer to achieving my dream of having a book published. I have no one to blame for this but myself as no one else controls my mind, my thoughts, my muse.
My love affair with words goes back to my childhood, to the time that I composed my first poem when I was five. Believe it or not, that poem had rhyme and meter: a quatrain with six beats per line. From that moment, I knew that I wanted to do something in my life that involved words, just as some people know innately that they want to work with numbers.
As any of my regular readers know, I have a passion for quotes; I have always had this passion. I have collected quotes for as long as I can remember, mostly because they inspire me. I used to use one quote repeatedly in cards that I sent to new graduates: “Only the dreamer can change the dream,” which is actually the title of a book of poems by John Logan. I don’t know when I picked up this quote, but it has always been very special to me.
My dreams about words were a reminder that only I can make possible what I want to achieve, that I am responsible for my path, that I must do all that I can do to make my dream become a reality.
Thanks to Crashingly Beautiful for the Marakami quote. More later. Peace.
I know that you have probably seen this video, but I love it, that and the fact that any videos of TSO in concert are bootleg, and the quality isn’t great. I did find a concert on Good Morning America in 2005, but it’s not the same in a small venue, and the light show really needs to be seen in person to be appreciated; otherwise, it’s just blobs of light in some parts. I give you the Trans-Siberian Orchestra: “Wizards in Winter”
I enjoyed this post. The one you lost wasn’t near as good.
Interesting that you are talking about dreams/work.
Now that I’ve been looking for work since February, I have more time to sleep and dream. I used to hate sleeping, I always felt it was a waste of time. That changed after Feb., don’t know why.
Now I try to remember my dreams, and have often wondered if I should write about them. Somehow, it makes me feel vulnerable…hmmm. A peek into my mind? Scary.
I often dream about work and work situations. Nothing too unusual since I send out resume’s every week.
I remember that right after being ‘downsized’, I kept having one recurring dream. In this dream, I was back in my cubie, working away, when suddenly I realized that out of habit, I had just gotten up and went to work. I was embarrassed, angry, and confused. That ended the dream.
It mirrors my real experience. I put everything into that job, working 7 days a week for years. I was replaced by someone younger, no doubt for less pay.
I was embarrassed, angry and confused.
I like to write, but haven’t found motivation lately.
Maybe I’ll try writing about my dreams.
Funny that you should mention your work dreams. Since I stopped working full time after going out on total disability, I still have work dreams, but they fall into categories. I dream about the real estate firm mostly because that was a very stressful job. I dream about Dillard’s, where I as a sales manager, when I am thinking about old friends, but I have only dreamt about the job from which I had to leave because of my disability–with George Washingtin University–twice, and by far, that was the worst situation. I am thankful that I don’t dream about that place more as it would drive me crazy. I did not want to leave work, and I would love to be able to go back to work, but I don’t know if I will ever physically be able to do that. Forced unemployment such as yours and my husband’s is incredibly stressful. Maybe if you write about it you might not dream about it as much.
Hi Lita,
Well done on getting all your tasks finished. I am still feeling quite lazy and not doing much at all!
I wish I could dream as vividly as you and remember my dreams.
You WILL write a great book and have it published, maybe not today or next week but you have the talent and ambition to make that dream a reality.
Hugs
Maureen
Maureen,
I think that the post that I recreated was actually better than the post that I lost, but it was still a pain to try to remember everything that I wanted to say. I am glad, though, that I got the cards out and the package sent.
Here’s hoping that I get off my butt soon and begin look for an agent to help me. Something about that fear of rejection though that keeps me from doing it.
Hugs,
Lita