I don't even know how to write in this space anymore. I don't know how to write in any space anymore. I don't know what space I'm actually occupying anymore. I don't know if I'm even a writer at all anymore. My best writer friends are always so very busy
writing. I am busy
not writing or should I say (write)
not busy writing. It's only words. I might be beginning my life as
not a writer. I didn't write for ten years when baby Sophie was diagnosed and maybe I'm on another ten-year bender that I'm hard put to blame on anyone but possibly it's the pospotus and possibly it's because there are members of my family who are still devoted to him and the republican party and possibly it's just because I turned 56 the other day and my hips started hurting in the middle of the night to mark the occasion and make a mockery of my otherwise robust physical health that I've taken for granted by
never exercising and
eating cake without regrets. I went for a vigorous walk today, though, on the second of September in the two thousand twentieth year of our lord jesus and came upon a mushroom spaceship (speaking of space) that had just landed, and a tiny door opened on the underside and I saw a tiny little creature inside and a vast world beyond, beckoning, and I almost did it, almost left.
Maybe it's because I miss Oliver and will soon miss Henry as he's off to a semester in Italy later this week.
I don't want to lose touch here, though, lose the community of beloveds. So, I'm here doing what's not really writing but was it ever really writing anyway?
See, I've nothing to write that isn't a whine. Or is it
whinge? Does anyone use the word
whinge? Reader, look it up and just
listen to how it's pronounced! God, I do love
words even though I'm not writing them.
As per the history of my fifty-six years on the planet, I'm still
reading words. Right now it's Valeria Luiselli's
Lost Children Archive (it's a slow read but good and has a rad structure that would be inspiring if I were a writer) and Darcy Steinke's
Flash Count Diary (menopause and orcas) and an amazing graphic memoir called
Good Talk by Mira Jacob.
Reading, she said,
is my only constant.
In other news, my job as Teacher of English Literature begins this week, and I am so excited. I've missed the girls over the summer and am not even
whinging about the hosiery I'll have to put on despite the dog days heat.
I should have always been a
teacher instead of
writer.