Monday, June 11, 2012

#whyidontwrite

Recently, my friend Erin Ehsani, who when she isn’t working on her exquisite memoir promotes the work of the New York Writers Coalition, asked me to help the organization’s current cause: to make writing—more specifically #whyidontwrite—a trending topic on Twitter for a day. (Here’s Erin’s piece on both this effort and the NY Writers’ upcoming fundraiser.) 


I’m in, I told Erin—not really understanding the point. I mean, it’s counterintuitive, until you consider that writing about not writing is still writing.


Anyway, the day is here. Between Facebook, Twitter, a doctor’s appointment, welcoming Daughter #2 back from Bonnaroo, hounding Daughter #3 to clean her room, paying bills, caffeinating, planning a graduation party, keeping a secret, and listening to movie soundtracks (instead of old house rumblings), I give you the more current activities that have allowed me to muffle the call of the keyboard:


• Alphabetizing the books in my three office cases (Ikea Billys, of course)
• Breakfasting with Daughter #1 prior to her return to school and following our eggs Benedict with a trip to the Verizon store for a BlackBerry repair (and, as it turned out, replacement iPhone) 
• Erging, lately my preferred form of exercise. The machine, a Concept 2 model D, was purchased to entice #1 and #2 to join the high school crew team, which both did although they learned to despise erging in the process. There are months when the contraption sits untouched, but for now it spares my knees from running. 
• Spectating a soccer friendly between Daughter #3’s squad and a local boys’ team and enjoying how middle school flirtation can take the form of neat tackles and sweaty handshakes
• Combing the shelves of the Montclair Public Library for goodies. My latest haul included Thinking Like Your Editor: How to Write Great Serious Nonfiction—and Get It Published by Susan Rabiner & Alfred Fortunato (thank you, Elizabeth Redden for the tip) and A Field Guide to the North American Family (an illustrated fiction) by Garth Risk Hallberg, which was Erin’s suggestion.
• Re-watching The West Wing (any episode) and adding the new HBO series The Newsroom to iCal #lovethataaronsorkin 
• Prioritizing feelings of guilt over shoulds I may never get to, such as sending thank yous for recent kind gestures and minding the wild thatch of rosebushes attacking my garage
• Otherwise throwing not unimportant (but nor are they usually immobile) objects and tasks in the path of pages. 

Here’s hoping the act of fessing up puts me in a writing frame of mind. Would love to say the decks are clear for desk time tomorrow. They aren’t, but I’ll figure something out. 

No comments:

Post a Comment