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Tag Archives: creativity

I’ve found there have been an unusual amount of visitors lately, which is delightful and I’m very grateful! And I’m sorry there’s not much here that’s new.

Historically, I’ve been largely writing into the void. I took a long break from any writing at all—a break that spanned years, some of them quite difficult. As I’ve returned to writing, this site has been pretty quiet and the unfortunate consequence of this is that it got sidelined in favor of other backed-up projects.

The return to writing – mainly pertaining to the characters in my fantasy mythos but other things as well – was either the trigger for my bipolar episodes to resume or the reaction to their theatrical resurgence. Honestly, I’m still trying to figure this one out.

I missed the guys so much, especially Rushak. Once they reappeared, I was both overjoyed and apprehensive. And they brought friends! With weird symbionts! I just can’t trust my psyche. I didn’t know what was going to happen. Hypomania, crushing depression, paranoia … It’s effin’ rocky. Now that I’ve got years behind me, I understand stuff, though, and am piecing together what it means.

There are aspects of this journey I very much want to share in the hope they might resonate and offer comfort, ideas or help of some kind.

I have a lot of ideas brewing once more, challenges and solutions to explore, and I will be throwing a lot more effort into posting material with relevance and at least a semblance of consistency.

Upcoming topics:

Fear of failure

Victory

And probably related fiction and/or poetry (oh joy)

So, thank for visiting, for being here, and I hope to see you again.

I have moved to the floor out of respect for an older woman who has arrived, a friend of the hostess. The cool of the brown carpet chills me, though at my back the woodstove throws heat which rises up and over me. The long, lustrous brown table, cluttered with fruit and nuts and wine and books and breads and beer, separates me from the man who brought me here. He is sprawled upon the couch opposite, the only male among the gathered poets, the whites of his eyes glowing between the dark curls of his hair and the bushy mustache, darker still.

I look around at the assembly, women all, of every age and description. Some are old and well-read, some seasoned writers; the young ones bring imagination instead of experience to their art. The smell of their wine is something I cannot escape, acute and heady like strong scented flowers. It makes me slightly dizzy.

I have not been to a gathering like this in too many years. Farm life has dulled the edge of my wit. Happiness and acceptance have made me a poor critic. I cannot impress these people, I think, nor even present myself as worthy to be among them.

It has been a long time since I gathered up words like branches and tossed them into huge, tousled piles for the sheer joy of their design, their many textures and shapes making a rat’s nest of forms and colors: iridescent purples, shrieking magentas, dried-out grays, with knobby joints like an old man’s knuckles, or skewer ends sticking out everywhere.

The young girl, who feels the need to clarify that she is not a Rastafarian—perhaps because of her vivid sweater of yellow and orange and green and red—heaves words together with luxurious abandon, bathing herself in in the sound and flash of light, in a glory of enthusiasm and innocence. They mean almost nothing to me, but the sensory experience of them thrills. She belongs here, with the word artists.

The older women, with their carefully written lines, convey in images and strong voices ideas so well-formed that I feel inarticulate. Ideas spark more ideas, criticisms spark inspirations, agreements, disagreements, leaving everyone full and helped. I say little.

Oh, I am keenly interested, but am rendered wordless. I am inspired, but I don’t belong. I write “that stuff–no offense.” I know long before my turn arrives that my visions have no place here. I would like to transcend my genre, but I feel I have to apologize for it. I feel like I need to defend it. I feel like these narrow-minded scholars could benefit so very much from fantasy, if they would only listen.

Like in Amadeus, “too many notes” becomes the accusation against me, but I laugh it off. I know there is a tendency in my work towards abundant description. I am not defensive about it. When I finish, they exclaim and clap.

When can I read this book? What happens, what does he do with the infant?

He names it, of course. If he doesn’t there would be no story, Karla observes. Karla is no dummy.

And here I am, explaining it. Alice wants to know how I can write that stuff. “This came to me when I was only ten, that is why it is the way it is. I write it because I have to.” Why do I write that stuff? “If I don’t, I go crazy.” Natural answers to reasonable questions.

That stuff. The label that sticks.

The heron is a significant bird.

When I’m left alone, there’s nothing to distract me. No creativity. It’s all gone again.

Sometimes it seems to just be buried beneath the surface or scratching away at a wall.

I can’t see the herons. The boundaries are closing about the lake, the world of the fish. Soon they will have nowhere to go and the herons will eat them.

Maybe the water that covers my soul is going away too, and my soul will flop struggling to the surface, stranded on the shore. Gasping not in death, but in awakening from a pool of death. And swallowed in the rebirth of a heron. I hope.

mgmasoncreative.wordpress.com/

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