I’m thinking about NaNo again this year, which of course kicks off in only a day or two. I’m unprepared with little or no extra time. I have no story, and possibly worse yet, I haven’t written much of anything now for a week or two. My poor imagination, drier then that stretch of skin my dead Grandpa Simon once called the back of his neck.
This time last year I was getting ready to move back into the house, with just about everything imaginable in some form of transition. I’m in the house, but other then that, I’m not sure much else has changed. The dirt still slides beneath me, my footing unsure, and most of the time I am flat on my back, trying desperately to slow the descent, grasping at anything and everything, trying hard not to panic. It’s only money, I tell myself, pretending not to wonder why so many of our dreams are built upon the stuff.
My dreams, at least. The stability of home. Freedom to create without worry. The best of my childhood memories, gathered together and played out once again on a grander scale for my enjoyment. Farm, animals, chores, ground beneath my feet, spreading out in all directions. Buildings to maintain and organize. Equipment to work, vibrations of the past working through my hands, pulling memories from places grown dusty and unused. The rumble as diesel comes to life. An arm, tired from pulling uselessly on the cord of an engine that is dead.
Children. Dogs. Cats. Birds, landing on branches outside a window. Goldfinches, browner each day as they race to blend with the approaching bland winter, then suddenly robins, bright red breasts, arriving by the hundreds each Spring just so I’ll notice how green the grass has become. The seasons, marking off the time. First the cool mornings, then the cold. Sunshine cutting through fog that holds in quiet better then any hope or dream. Rain then snow, frozen gravel crunching under each step. The swing of a gate, hinges rusted, the small chain that keeps it in place hanging on a nail pounded in long ago by hands I’ll never know. And paint, peeling off of the rough-hewn boards of the barn’s walls, passing by me just like seasons, only slower and somehow less deliberate.
There was no NaNoWriMo when I was a child, yet somehow the idea of it fits in well with my other memories. That rushed feeling that something must be captured before it escapes, once and for all, and is lost forever. The idea that writing is somehow like finding oneself in an empty, abandoned house, with nothing more to go on then an old, faded photograph you’ve found on the floor of a closet. A child, posed on a swing beneath a giant oak, staring at his feet, thinking of something that somehow becomes your job to know.