Was supposed to guest speak last night at a minimum security
women’s prison facility where a friend is currently teaching creative writing.
She’d gotten permission to bring in guest authors and so I was the first, but
there was some snafu and when we arrived at five last night for the three hour
class, I was somehow still not fully vetted. Some quiet drama ensued, although
not on my part. Once you’ve taught a few decades in the public school system,
you understand that sometimes, this is what happens in institutions and in this
case, I really get it. You can’t just walk into a prison because you say you
were invited. That kind of thing is no one’s friend.
Still. The education supervisor was called to attempt to
sort things out. My friend went to teach her class. And I was instructed –okay,
ordered actually—to sit on a hard plastic chair in the heat by Control and not
move. And so I did until the supervisor eventually strode back. Honestly, it
was relaxing: it’s a pretty place, more like a junior college campus if you
ignore the barbed wire at the top of the fence—lots of trees and flowers and
plants—and there was a breeze and I had my chair. I had left my cell in the car
and so it was just me and nature and the guard behind the tinted glass and the
occasional other contract worker checking in.
Mostly I thought about the questions the inmates had written
for their instructor and which she had passed on to me—the things they wanted
to know about writing and publishing and the act of creating art in this particular
way—the ones I was going to talk about.
They were the usual sorts of things—questions about process
and revision and what editors do, and how to find an agent and what if you’ve
self-published and what to do about writer’s block and how you get paid.
But as I was on my plastic chair and they were in their
classroom, I didn’t get to answer any of those. Instead, I sat and thought
about how when my friend had received her training for this job she’d been
reminded not to reveal any personal facts to her students. This makes sense in
the setting and context. But how I wondered as I looked at the flowers and
heard the traffic wooshing by on the road just outside the fence, do you talk
about writing and inspiration without getting personal, other than in vague,
general terms? It felt suspiciously like the time one of my former supervisors
had informed the English department that it didn’t matter—not at all—what
novels we taught or if we even taught just excerpts. We were there to teach
skills. You could do that with anything.
Well, yeah. (And if that person is reading this, let me now
say what was in my head during that department meeting: No. No. No. That’s kind
of, um, bullshit. You know that, right?)
Anyway. It seemed that what was happening last night was a
sort of metaphor for what they were collectively asking. Publishing is often,
although not always, a series of amazing moments (when you get a story right;
when someone acquires your book; when there’s a lovely review; when you type
THE END) punctuated by frustration and dead ends and the occasional crushing
disappointment. (Like wanting to hear a guest speaker who is stuck sitting on a
plastic chair in the heat.)
If I had been in the room—and I know by now that you realize
that matters were not sorted out last night and that eventually, the class
ended early since the main attraction was not in attendance, the supervisor
hugged me and said she was sorry, really sorry, and my friend and I went to the
bar at the local Saltgrass for fried zucchini and a coke for her and a glass of
cab for me—here is what I would have said about writing, the part that is in
between the lines of my answers to all those many questions:
You can indeed save yourself through writing, but don’t
expect writing to save you. There will be days when you get it right and still
it doesn’t matter. There will be days when someone reads your story and really,
really gets it and you feel there is nothing better in this world than having
communicated your thoughts on what it means to be human—the good, the bad, the
mundane, the glorious, the small, petty and awful and tragic (because that is
what writing is about regardless of genre). By the next evening, you may
equally feel that you are not quick enough, not smart enough, not talented in any
way. You are too old or too young or not cool enough or too cool. (Is there
such a thing?) You are too loud or too quiet. Your language is too rough or not
rough enough.
You started too early. Or too late. Life intervened in a
variety of ways. You are not the flavor of the week. Or you are and it’s
overwhelming and you are afraid. Someone else has won the prize, gotten the
golden ticket and there you are, fingers on the laptop keys, typing as fast as you can.
You are trying to please the wrong people or the right people but in the wrong
ways.
You are stuck on a
plastic chair in the heat.
Write anyway. Write the story only you can tell. Tell the
truth on the page even if it’s hard and painful and scary. Treat it like a job
not a hobby. Study. Read. Write some more. Your story has value. Tell it.
But don’t expect writing to give you anything in return. A thin,
tricky line, that. Sometimes, you have to back away and let it go for a bit.
Find a different way. Remind yourself to keep your eyes on your own paper.
Keep writing, I would have told them. Keep at it.