FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Ike
To My Tina
by
Carrie Friedman
PAGE
TWO:
These
stories include, but are not limited to, the following: Oliver Stone
wrote 13 screenplays before his first got bought. Danielle Steele's
first 10 books were rejected by all the New York publishers until
the 11th. After that, apparently, all of their previously rejected
work sold.
And
today, while I lie on the cold kitchen floor, my husband reminds
me that most of Van Gogh's work was celebrated and revered posthumously.
I pause
and look up at him. "Is that supposed to help?" I ask.
"Maybe I should kill myself now so my work gets noticed."
How's that for dedication?
The
exceptions to the rule aside, how can a person have hope in this
fickle business? How does one continually return to the blank screen,
when nothing before has proven that anyone cares, that anyone will
ever start to care, will want to hear your voice, your stories told?
If you worked at a job for 10 years without a single paycheck as
compensation, you'd quit that job. If you dated a man for 10 years
who never told you he loved you, never put out, repeatedly rejected
and hit you, you'd leave that person. So what gives? Why keep doing
it, when it is continually Ike to my Tina?
Because
the satisfaction is supposed to be in the work. Just keep writing,
everyone says. Do it for the love of it, the thrill of creating
something out of nothing. The external rewards shouldn't matter.
The actual creating has to be reward enough.
Well,
I hate writing. And from what I've heard, anyone who enjoys
it probably isn't doing it right. I find it profoundly excruciating,
agonizing when it's going awfully and just plain painful when it's
going well. I live that Gene Fowler quote, that "writing is
easy: all you do is sit staring at a blank sheet of paper until
drops of blood form on your forehead."
So
why write then?
Because,
I suppose, I can't not.
As
the painfully shy middle child in a boisterous family, I was always
interrupted, and so, wanting my voice to be heard, I retreated to
my room and wrote stories. I told the page all about school that
day, or a friend who was mean, or the science teacher I had a secret
crush on. I'd write my unspoken rebuttals to bullies who teased
me because of my headgear, or roasts of the awful popular girls
who stole my diary and divulged my crush to the whole science class.
I wrote stories where things happened that I was afraid to execute
in real life.
I've
written some form of fiction every day since I was nine years old.
It was always there, like the best kind of best friend: it helped
me through bad times and reflected my happiness in good times.
Until
one day, three years ago. It was May 1st 2003, the day Mr. Bush
landed on the aircraft carrier and declared the war a mission accomplished.
I remember this because I shouted at the TV: "Yeah right,"
then got in the shower, to get ready for a blind date. When I emerged,
my laptop was gone.
I remember
coming out in my towel and looking at my desk -- stark, naked, the
oak wood showing instead of my computer. The immediate shiver up
my spine; how terribly underdressed I suddenly felt. After the police
arrived and searched the place for the robber, I realized he or
she had taken the carrying case as well -- the carrying case that
held all my backup disks, full of work. Two whole novels no one
has ever seen, the ten screenplays, a collection of poetry.
For
a year after that I cried at least once a day. I felt as though
I had lost my mind, and in so many ways I had. I still held out
hope I would find it. I trolled downtown pawn shops every weekend,
searching, and had crazy nighttime dreams that the robber might
read one of the novels on the computer and realize what he or she
had stolen and maybe return it with a simple note like: "Sorry,
I had no idea what this must have meant to you. Here ya go. P.S.:
nice job! Overall good stories, but the humor felt a little forced
in places."
Sometimes, even now, I'll walk somewhere and stop, recalling a phrase
or a sentence that sounds familiar. I smile as if seeing an old
friend for the first time in years, and run to write it down because
I know it's from the old laptop, my own mind.
I was
most troubled by what the robbery meant. Sure, perhaps it was a
random act of violation, but I assumed there was more to it: was
God telling me to stop writing? To give up? To move on to something
else? Or was this another hoop to jump through, to triumph over?
If
He was telling me to give up, I didn't listen -- couldn't listen.
Eventually, I started to write again, on legal pads. For a long
time, I couldn't bring myself to buy another computer because it
felt like a betrayal of the old one.
Why
did I do it then? Why and how did I restart when all was lost? Why
keep doing it?
I've tried to stop, about a thousand times. But there's always something
bringing me back: another story that begs to be told, a character
screaming in my head. I've tried to refocus -- tried to return to
my second love, teaching -- but none of it satisfies me as much
as the act of telling a story.
When
the writing's flowing out of me, even though it's a laborious process,
I can feel my chest untense. It's not a hobby, or even a career.
It's my way of life. Literally, my way of living. It's all I'm trained
to do, all I want to be doing when all is said and done.
So
I enter the acceptance phase of my grief, in which I sit up on the
cold tile floor, then stand -- one leg, then the other -- my legs
weak at first, and walk back to my desk to get ready for another
day of work. An opportunity, I suppose, to create something out
of nothing.
But
first I practice my author photo in the mirror. For hope's sake.
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