Wednesday 27 April 2011

Tuesday

Posted By Tania Kindersley.

Last night, I made a noise. It came out of nowhere. It went: ah, ah, ah, ah. It was quite loud. Even though there was no other person to hear, I felt slightly embarrassed. I was brought up in the Irish tradition, I live now in Scotland, it’s all Celtic fringe with me, but I lived my formative years in England. So there is that English thing of not doing drama; the great tradition of phlegm, of not making a fuss. Don’t make a damn fuss, says the voice in my head.

The noise went: AH, AH, AH, AH. It was like the beginning of tears, but there were no tears. There was no water; everything stayed dry. My shoulders started moving up and down. There was a tremor through my body. AH, I said. I breathed out, like an exhausted racehorse. Bloody hell, I said.

At once, I thought: I must write this down. That is always my instinct. When it is written it is true; on the page it makes sense. Maybe the thing I love the most that was ever said about writing was Chekhov’s stern instruction: if you hear a gun go off in the fourth act, you must see it loaded in the first. My own little trope, the one I have used over and over again, is: in actual life, you don’t even know there is a gun.

I was always rather proud of that. I think I thought it quite clever and correct. But now I see that I am with Chekhov, after all. In my gut, I want the first act to make sense of the fourth act. That is why I love the written word. It’s not just for the prose, or the rhythm of a sentence, which, if you do it right, can sound like singing, or the sometimes cunning or surprising placement of a semi-colon. I love it because it makes sense of things that make no sense at all.

If I can write a thing, then it has a pattern, a truth, a meaning. If it is not written, then it is just life, which is too messy and random and inexplicable. It has no shape. It has no sense.

Even now, as I feel the tap tap click click of the keys under my fingers, I feel my shoulders start to come down, and the sensation of movement return to my tight body. When people talk of writing as therapy, I think sometimes they make a fundamental error. It’s not the spilling of the stuff that brings reason back; it’s the shaping of it. We can all share with the group, and I don’t underestimate that. I talked to a man today who lost his dad two years ago, and there was a huge relief in that. ‘You know all about this,’ I said, and he smiled and nodded his head, and I knew I would not have to make excuses or explain the oddity.

But the writing of it is a different thing. It is not the telling, it is the gathering into complete sentences. It is the plain, comforting fact that there is a beginning, middle, and end. It may be that I am a little freakish that I find comfort in that, but I do. There is something about the lovely, sensible, comprehensible black marks on a white page that fill me with relief. As long as I can do that, all is not lost.

Pictures:

26th April 5

26th April 6

26th April 4

26th April 6-1

26th April 2

26th April 1

26th April 3.ORF

4 comments:

  1. Tania, Thank you for sharing your struggles at this time. Sharing private grief with another person is such an intimate, yet precious thing. Even though we have never met, I am honored to be included in your life in this way. You will continue in my thoughts and prayers as you deal with deeply missing your father.
    Writing is such a wonderful way of bringing some degree of sense and organization to both the difficult and the joyful events of our lives. Your blog serves as a daily encouragement to me to record my own rambling thoughts as I too attempt to bring order to the seeming chaos of my
    life. Thank you. Viv

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  2. All is not lost.We have forgotten that about death. We used to know it once. Why wouldn't we protest loudly at the nonsense that forgetting, makes of life?

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  3. I am so reassured that you are still posting - checking in to make sure you are OK, in a neighbourly way. This post - the writing here - is at its most raw and most true. It seems to me that grief is an island that not everyone visits, and some stay for years and other just a short while. These postcards from your island are a life-line, do all the 'shaping' you need. Lou x

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  4. By sharing joy , happiness increased.By sharing sorrow, the pain decreases.All of us have some pain in life.I also have crossed this period.So, can feel your pain.Don't worry every thing will be fine.

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