I'm
so pleased that my year ended with the publication of
an essay that surprised me a bit. Since I wrote it, I've wondered: Where do essays come from?
I've
pondered the question before and will again, and the answer is: from many
sources. Some I will into existence (when I've accepted an unsought assignment),
others emerge from the deleted sentences or passages of another piece of work. Sometimes
I have an idea that asserts itself and I must pay attention; sometimes a memory
trigger brings me a new idea, unbidden but clear.
I'm
convinced, too, that a very few pieces wait, fully formed, lodged deep in my brain,
until the right moment. I know only that there's a niggling in the back of
my brain about….something…that has to do with….something. Then, a moment of
recognition, a swift gravity plunge, from the brain's dusty attic, through my
fingers to keyboard to computer screen.
I
tell people that good work doesn't really materialize that way. That waiting for The Muse to visit,
sprinkling writer fairy dust, is silly. Write, revise, rewrite—that's the ticket. That when
someone says a piece "just wrote itself," they're exaggerating,
lying, or forgetting the thinking, drafting, revising process.
But
not always. These things occasionally do
happen—rarely.
I'd thought before of writing something about my elder son's struggles as a small
boy with audio issues—more than the three paragraphs I gave it in a long essay
eight years ago. But it was a vague, quiet idea, always out-shouted by noisier,
more insistent ones. Eventually I "forgot" about it.
Last
summer, I saw that Synaethesia Magazine was planning a themed issue on Sound. I
made note of it (on my office white board, where I write, and then sometimes
erase, possible submission goals). Then I "forgot" about it. Except
that I did look at that board every day, wondering, do I have anything to say
about sound? My brain was quiet.
Until
one morning, something (I can't remember what) clicked: sound…audio…my son… I
sat at the keyboard and in about 20 minutes had the essay, written
instinctively in second person. Where did it come from? My fingers were only a
conduit, connecting nearly subconscious thought with memory, with the screen. (In itself unusual, because I typically start new essays in longhand.)
To
check my theory that the piece "wrote itself" (see: exaggerating,
lying, forgetting, above), yesterday I looked at my electronic files (I date and number drafts), and the paper file (I print out a lot, and keep my hand-scribbled notes). Only two drafts: the original, and one with very
minor revisions.
Here's
an excerpt from "Sound and Fury, Signifying"
…You
begin to listen. What does a goose's
honk sound like from a two-foot high perspective anyway? Why is the neighbor's fishpond pump glugging
like that today, when yesterday it
glugged a bit more softly, less rhythmically? What drives human beings to seek out (or just endure, when we have the
choice) the frightening booms of fireworks, crashing decibels of hard rock
concerts, the annoying din of crowded parties in small rooms.
There are no answers. There is
listening therapy, exercises, practice, role-playing,
de-sensitization, speech
therapy, exposure therapy, more.
There is your small child, your
little boy, your son, your adolescent, your teenager, your young man, your
college student, and he is coping, modifying his behavior, learning to understand
his limits, his boundaries, his tolerance….
I
hope you'll click over to Synaesthesia
Magazine to read the whole piece (as essays go, it's on the short side),
and also page through this visually beautiful journal to see what others have
to say and show about sound.
With
a year of writing looming ahead, I wish I knew for sure that I'd get to watch
myself write another "gift from The Muse" essay, but of course I
don't. And yet…
2 comments:
Wonderful!
I relate to this so much. Though my son didn't specifically have auditory processing issues, he does have sensory processing issues. We couldn't enjoy fireworks, had to leave some amazing parties. It's good to know it works itself out as they become adults. You've transformed the experience into poetry.
Gwynn
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