I don’t even know if I remember how to do this.
It’s been months since I’ve written anything. More specifically, it’s been 5 months and 12 days. Not that I’m counting, of course.
5 months and 12 days. When I’ve made the time to write, I haven’t had anything to say. When I get an idea, it’s usually when I’m in the middle of something else — pumping gas, folding laundry, in the shower. Attempting to abandon whatever I’m doing to grab a pen and scribble it down is like trying to carry gallon of water in my hands to a cup across the floor. Whatever thought I’ve had is up in the ether before I can disentangle myself from a freshly laundered fitted sheet.
I’m a writer that doesn’t write.
I’m a writer that doesn’t write.
I’m a writer that doesn’t write.
I don’t know if I want to display myself any more. I don’t know if I want to share everything that’s been going on. Exhibit my triumphs and my failures. My momma said these are my thoughts and feelings and I don’t have to share. And yet, even as I write this, I know I’m gonna share it.
Why am I not writing? Nothing’s happening. Everything sounds the same. Trite, boring, unremarkable. I’ve lost what makes me special. Did I ever even have it? Ugh, don’t do that! Don’t be a. . .don’t be a . . . What’s the word? What’s the word? Why don’t I have the words?
I don’t have the words. They are loose change that dribbled out of the hole in my pocket when I walked down the street. They are the the chapstick you leave in your best friends car. They are the Starbucks sitting on the roof of your car as you wheel out of the Target parking lot.
I drink coffee and it makes my brain itch. I don’t think my neurons are on speaking terms. Or maybe they’re speaking a foreign language? Mother tongue that I’ve forgotten? Oú est la biblioteque?
I need to disabuse myself of the idea that I will write the combination of words and sentences and paragraphs so compelling, it your hurts chest not to read it again and again. Something like that requires actually having something to say.
I’m mute.
I got nothing.
My fingers are poised over the homerow keys, ten sprinters at the ready in the blocks. They’re waiting for the crack of the gun.
Waiting, waiting, waiting.
Let me see what’s happening on Facebook real quick.
I’m slowly disconnecting from social media. I’m posting less. I’m commenting less. I’m checking with less and less frequency. Quiet as it’s kept, I’m unfriending names from my newsfeed and ghosting from groups. It feels like the part of the novel where affairs are being put in order before a great change.
Maybe I just need to cut my hair.
Instead of jumping into the deep end of the pool, I pivot and dive into the corridors of Pinterest. I work on my office, curate the space to uncork whatever is preventing the creativity from pouring out. I rearrange the shelves and organize my books according to genre, then color, then size. I pick out storage boxes that make me smile to look upon them. I go a little crazy on Etsy picking out prints for the walls. I am creating in a different way, but I don’t have the words to tell you about it. All I can say is that it looks like Kate Spade threw up in here.
I like it.
Sometimes I want to lift my brain out of my skull and give it a good shake, Magic 8-Ball style. Reply hazy, try again later. The good ideas are in there, I know it. I just can’t see them for all the clutter of pop culture references, random bits of info, and factoids I was assured would be used daily as an adult (looking at you CPCTC).
When my Headspace App tells me to breathe deeply and release my mind for a moment, I imagine my brain detaching from its tether and just floating peacefully on the current cerebral fluid its nestled in. I can almost physically feel a detachment, like tiny belch of release. Sweet relief.
The tv is on.
The laptop is slowly roasting the tops of my thighs.
The phone is in my hand, my thumb scrolling, scrolling, scrolling.
I can’t focus.
I can’t pay attention.
I think I’m getting more dumber-er.
I read books — self-help books whose margins I destroy with armies of exclamation points and arrows, novels whose prose I bite off the page and hold in my mouth to savor, essays and short stories that leave me both destroyed and renewed.
In my desk are pages of ideas. There notebooks with plot summaries, character profiles, and a thousand different ways to say “nice”. What would happen if I just shred it all? What would happen if I just open to a clean page and picked up my pen?
I’ve got a flop sweat going on and my armpits are tingling.
What would happen if I just picked up my pen?
Let’s find out.