This morning, I woke up with a vague fear of abandoning my poet self. I thought about how I would feel 20 years in the future, if I stopped writing poetry, stopped submitting poetry. And then I wondered what led to this early morning quasi-panic.
I feel like I haven't been writing poetry, but that's not
strictly true. In April, I did a lot with poetry for my seminary class project. I've been continuing to experiment with my
collection of abandoned yet evocative lines. I can't write the way I once did
because I have a broken wrist--or to be more accurate a wrist in a cast which
limits my use of my dominant hand.
I've had time periods before when I didn't write. I'm
thinking of the summer of 1996 where I wrote exactly one poem. That time was
followed by a time of fertile poetry writing. I've had times where I didn't
submit much because I got so discouraged or because I was busy. Submitting
takes much more time than writing, and it's been a busy time period for me
doing other things. Plus, there's the
question of expense. I'm not earning money the way I once was so those
submission fees can feel a bit indulgent.
I don't feel the same kind of anxiety when I think about how
long it's been since I wrote a short story. Maybe that's because I haven't
gotten the same kind of approval for my short stories as I have for my poetry.
I used to write novels in my spare time, but I don't feel guilty for wasting my
spare time instead of writing novels. I do feel a strange sense of guilt when I
think about how long it spends since I wrote a poem or how long it's been since
I had a streak where I felt like I had some poetry superpower
I spent some time this morning thinking about the issue of
identity. Once I thought of myself as a runner, but it's clear I'm no longer a
runner. My blog sites still say that I'm an administrator, but I'm really not.
Why haven't I changed that language? I have no intention of going back to being
an administrator, at least not in academia, at least not any time soon. So why this reluctance to change the language
that describes me as an administrator?
I think of other types of identity that are tearing the
nation apart: gender, sexual attraction,
political affiliations. I think of religious identities that shape a person in
deep and abiding ways. I don't spend much time reflecting on these identities
and what they mean to me. Is it strange that the writerly identity is the one
that wakes me up at night with worries of losing it?
It is good to be reminded of what is important. After I got
up, I spent some time working on a poem. And now I can go on about the day,
working on my other identities that will emerge this summer: ex- Floridian, full time seminarian, and . . .
1 comment:
I tend to fret about not writing poetry, too. I’m in a fallow period now, but I put it down to not feeling well physically for the last few months. I’m tending to my garden and walking my dog when it’s not so brutally hot. For now, that will have to be enough. I appreciate reading about your preoccupations. You’re not alone, if that’s any help.
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