Sunday, 12 October 2008

What it means to be a writer


Me at about 24 years of age


I don't really do the biography thing very often. I don't think I'm an especially interesting guy. I keep wishing I could come up with witty anecdotes like Ken Armstrong but I guess I've either lived a very boring life or – and this is more likely the case – I have a very bad memory.

What I do remember is writing. I remember desks I've written on and the machines I've worked on. I remember the neck pain, the wrist and shoulder pain. I remember getting cramp in my leg so bad that I thought it had been broken somewhere in the past and had only just decided to start to hurt. I remember going out of my way to get fancy typing paper in a wee shop down the harbour. I remember sending my poems to Philip Larkin when I was sixteen and getting a form letter back from his secretary. What I remember is a life that always had writing in it even if it didn't necessarily revolve around writing.

For so many of those years I struggled with identifying myself as a writer, well, a poet, since all I'd written was poetry and all I expected I'd ever write was poetry. I wanted to look in the mirror and see a poet and believe that what I was seeing was a poet but for so long I felt I was playing at it all.

Anyway, I'm not going to tell you all about it here. If you want to find out a bit more then have a look at my guest post on A Book Blogger's Diary entitled, What it means to be a writer. Some of the stuff will be familiar to regular visitors but hopefully not all; I've only got so many wise words of wisdom to pass on I'm afraid. I wrote it just after a couple of people called my poetry 'extraordinary' and I was feeling very conscious of how non-extraordinary I am.


6 comments:

  1. Hey, thanks for the mention James!

    In your photo, you look like 'Bria'n, a friend of fine from Sligo. He is a kind, sensitive, highly intelligent guy - 'seperated at birth or wot? :)

    I enjoyed this guest post - but we'll cover that over there, eh?

    By the way - I hate the word 'anecdote' although I've used it myself in an earlier manifestation of my blog which lurks around the 'hinternet' somewhere. I think if one ever announces that one has an 'anecdote' to tell, then the party is over and it's time to go home. :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. A 'kind, sensitive, highly intelligent guy' - yeah, that was me, a saft smartfart.

    Sorry about the 'anecdote' thing. I, of course, meant ripping yarns.

    ReplyDelete
  3. A good post Jim, which I enjoyed reading, as also I enjoyed the guest post. Works both ways, though, this format / subject business. The format can dictate (limit, if you will) the subject matter.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You may think that you are an non-extraordinary but your readers think you are special. You are a great writer Jim, I love your words. Simple but can smite.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I tried to post this over there, but it wouldn't let me:

    Pretty insightful.

    And you're right, the word poet carries more of a stigma than the word writer. That's probably because so many people do call themselves poets who have only scribbled a few lines. There's no entrance fee to the camp, and no initiation ritual.

    Funnily enough, I am much more comfortable calling myself a poet than a writer. For one thing, it's more important to me to call myself an artist—one who works in multiple media—than by a label that limits me to one medium, one artform, so maybe that colors my choice. A lifelong battle against those who claimed when I was young that I had to choose and become expert at only one artform. I think I've proved them wrong, and I have my role models to point at, too.

    I agree with you about the Internet, BTW. It's a good thing to be able to find similar souls who want to talk about what mutually matters. It's still just a tool, though, and everything depends on how we use it.

    ReplyDelete
  6. THAT is the very point I'm on about, Dave - if I set off to write a haiku I really can't delve too deeply into the human psyche. There's no scope. I don't like being limited and for so many years I consciously limited myself to poetry which meant I had to chop up what was going on in my head to fit into the poems. Once I realised I was capable of working in other forms then I could open up.

    Khaye, I'm glad you love my words. It does matter to me that I can reach people. I'm a little puzzled by you last sentence – "Simple but can smite" – since 'smite' reminds me of the story of David and Goliath. I don't think I've ever seen the word used outwith that context. And, yes, words can do a lot of damage. I wrote a short story once with the line "Short, sharp words fired at will" because angry people don't tend to pontificate, they use whatever words come to hand. I really don't have much time for people who use words that way. People say "Sticks and stones…" but words can cut to the bone – we talk about 'cutting remarks'. I'm sure I've got you wrong though.

    Ah, INSIGHT, Art, now that's the one that comes after wisdom, isn't it? Or is that discernment? Not sure. I certainly never felt pressurised to pick only one mode of expression. As I've said, I've composed music and painted but it was clear quite soon that although I was competent at these I really didn’t have natural talent. Writing was different. As I've written already, writing was my natural response to what was going on around me and in my life.

    ReplyDelete

Comments have been disabled.

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.