So ends my four-day writing marathon. (It was more like four and half really). I have a word count, but I feel like it is really no way to measure what happened inside me this weekend.
I lived.
I’ve started my first real piece of fiction (I say “real” because I’ve written fiction before I’m sure, but never seriously.) Currently my characters are still only giving me the beginning of their stories—their tragic stories. I am begging them to give me a glimpse of their futures so that I can trust that their story redeems.
Being the narrator has always frightened me because for so long I was convinced that God had an “ultimate will” for me. I have come to believe, to much relief, that in fact, the joy of writing my own story is before me. As the author, I have created these characters with names and faces and fathers and fears. I’m hovering above somewhere, hiding behind a tree maybe, and I can see the torment they feel. But I don’t know yet what they will choose tomorrow. I want to interfere, to control the story. But I will not. It is their story, not mine to tell. I can only plea with them…
Thoughts on Fiction
29 Mar 10
I want to write a redemptive ending,
But I don’t know if my characters will let me.
They’re stuck
Somewhere between the ninth hole, the Baring Sea and delivery day.
And they are running from,
If not paralyzed by,
The fear
Of an ever growing roundness protruding from her belly.
My dear characters, may your joy grow with each day. We are hoping for you.
And while I am hoping for my characters, I can only pray that someone is hoping for me. I was amazed, ashamed and confused by some of the things that crept out of me over the last few days. Solitude and expression can do that. Anxiety has been overwhelming me. I’ve spent moments sitting silently; asking the screaming little girl inside what she needs to say.
She wants to be accepted. I guess that means
I want to be accepted.
Yael Naim - Far, Far
As these and other beautiful and hideous thoughts rage through my being (I swear I can feel them in every joint), I know that there must be somewhere they can be placed where some other power can quiet them and I continue on in peace.
Because peace is beautiful.
And so I end my evening with a cupa, a warm meal and The Science of Sleep. The rain will sing me to sleep tonight, like she has the past few nights and tomorrow I will wake and write again.
Live at peace,
Jenn
Wow. I wonder if it is our theological tradition has told us that there must be a redemptive ending? Or rather, if it is hard-wired in us to want that? What is the redemption comes outside of the narrative? What if the story stays stuck and yet the reader interprets it in a way that brings redemption to her own story?
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Ashley