On the day
I reached 124,055 words of the first draft, at the point of crafting the finale
(and a whisker away from completion), I experienced a truly strange
flash of revelation.
I was
standing in the kitchen, holding a tea-towel.
It was
subtle, intense.
The towel I
held was green and white and I was drying a pan. What happened next was
unexpected: I didn’t go looking for it; it just came to me from nowhere. And it
was real, and it was right. I knew its inherent truthfulness. I understood in
completeness something so very, very important as I approached the final
chapter – as to why this book was so dear to me.
(Disclaimer:
I originally wrote this blog on 9th November 2021. I started writing
the novel at the end of March 2020.)
The ‘pandemic’
months/years, for a vast amount of us, were like been fast-track along a street
called desperate, in a town named despair, with back-drop of constant
apocalypse. Each and every day, part of the world was outside our reach. The
sun grimly shone, and every evening the moon was our silent companion.
Our minds, and
our bodies were fighting against the unspeakable, invisible assailant. Life
opened up to us our own personal paths of anguish that we often frequented
alone… sometimes, fearfully alone. Well-meaning people tried to help, but were coping
with their own emotional, social and physical traumas. Their occasional words were
like a postcard from a distant relative, from a far-away land, arriving
battered and bent – and for all the best intentions - with writing smudged
beyond all comprehension. It was a good message that our heads could neither
embrace, nor perceive; far gone to accept the healing words of hope - day after
gruelling day, isolated in the lockdown.
Writing
this book is my own way of dealing with the pandemic.
This was my
tea-towel revelation: I had to do something to get through. The book was
‘that’ essential, something.
To be
honest, I don’t think I had a choice. It had to happen. I had to write it. Another
example in my life of: do, or die.
I can’t
tell you how much this book saved me in the last year and a half. It was a vision
of hope, but I’m absolutely fascinated about how and why it happened, or how it
even came into being. This is the truth. I felt so ill on the day I conceived
the idea in my mind; awful in fact. Looking back; it was a case of beauty from
ashes – my self-help manual written and acted by myself.
To quote
Arthur Kingsley McFadden from Mis-fit, Misplaced, Miss Shelly Clover:
‘The beauty
is in the process, not the prize. It’s about the passion, not the patent!’
This novel
was conceived in pain, delivered with joy… and when I look back, and it was my
hiking boots, compass, water bottle, crooked stick and fleece through a dark,
treacherous mountain pass; this and so much more.
When I hold
a copy now and flick from front to back, and really look at the words
dancing by, it 100% brought me through so much: Christmas alone; my neighbour
dying (I can see her walking to the ambulance even now); my key-worker letter
spread out on the passenger seat of my car, should I get pulled over by the
police; the truly horrific abuse from a hacker in an online ‘live’ lesson (“I
know where you live.”); the confusing physical pain; the one-way blue arrows in
the corridor, and despite government denials, the unequivocal anger that the
next lockdown was incoming.
Do you know
what? I’m super grateful I got to write this. I really am. I thank God for it,
I really do. It’s made the last three years mean something. And to have
meaning in life – in whatever capacity – is what it should be all about. To
think, if I hadn’t used Google Earth, and scrolled down on the beck on that
fateful morning…
Take care,
folks. All the very best for your creative lives; please don’t neglect it.
James
Steven Clark
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