And then the fun began is messing with my head. I’m still
thinking about her label blogpost. Read it. It’s good. But it’s provoked
something of an existential crisis. Just who the buggering hell do I think I
am?
I am an unemployed stay at home mum whose children are both
at school. But I’m not a housewife (as anyone who read any of My Increasingly
Frantic And Angry Cleaning Tweets earlier this week will already be aware). And
I don’t ever introduce myself as ‘Just a mum’. Fuck, no. Firstly, no one is ‘just
a mum’. And there is no way in which anyone with children should allow
themselves to be defined by what got
created by bumping uglies with someone else. I get magnificently fierce if
anyone other than The Blondies calls me ‘Mummy’. Really quite scary. My
brother-out-law asked me, in front of The Blondies if I was ‘going out for a
cigarette, Mummy?’ My response was to say to him that if you’re someone I haven’t
squeezed out of my fanjo, then don’t ever call me Mummy. Then I let go of his
collar and put the knife away.
So I’m more than just a mum.
I’m unemployed. I have been for a long time. Nearly four
years, in fact (almost certainly will be writing a terrible, pretentious wanky
blog about that in a few weeks, You Have Been Warned). But I'm not looking for work. Far too risky, when you've cocked your life up as spectacularly as I have.
I write, but I am not a writer. To me, a writer I someone
who actually has demand for their work, has dedicated readers who actively want
to read more of their creative output. Writers get their work published,
whether it’s books, magazines, online, wherever. Someone with a blog on blogger
is not a writer. They’re just someone who happens to be a little bit
selfindulgent. And maybe, like me, they find that writing things helps.
HANDS, do what you’re bid;
|
|
Bring
the balloon of the mind
|
|
That
bellies and drags in the wind
|
|
Into
its narrow shed.
|
It does help, a lot. Firstly, the act of trying to
articulate your thoughts on something is never anything other than useful. How
on earth do I know how I really feel about something, until I’ve thought about
it for an obsessively drawn out length of time? Until I’ve walked around it, taken a few
steps back, peered at certain parts, examined every aspect, walked away for a
moment, only to pelt back and look at it some more? Until I’ve countered every
argument against what I think and feel?
Then the hammering. Fingers flying over the keyboard,
stabbing away at the letters, feeling a bit like Jessica Fletcher in the
opening titles of ‘Murder She Wrote’. That’s good too, because if I care about
something enough to blog about it, then bashing the keyboard for an hour or so
gets rid of a lot of pent up emotion. I never really thought about that aspect
of it much until recently, but there we go. It’s surprising how much stress can
fly out of one’s fingers.
Then, the slow, irritating (and frequently utterly
pointless) attempt at checking what I’ve written. Does that work? Is that
sentence clear? Is that a typo? I’ve missed out a word… It’s fairly pointless,
because I know what I want to say so well, that I am blind to mistakes, so I read what I expect to be there, not what actually is there. So when you see a
mistake, that’s why.
And then I click ‘publish’, sing ‘And be damned!’ in the
voice of Hugh Laurie impersonating an upper class elderly female, and that’s
it. Over and done.
(And I write fiction as well, by hand, in notebooks, with a
fountain pen. But no one’s ever seeing that, so don’t ask. Trust me, I’m doing
you a favour).
So that’s what I do. But I’m not a writer.
Writers write. I know, because I follow a fair few of them
on twitter. And for the most part, they use twitter like quite a lot of us do.
To share pictures of cats, have a moan, celebrate that it’s wine o’clock, querulously ask where the gin is. Now and again, they’ll
mention they’re off to see their agent, or that their new book is out – just like
everyone else does, when they want to promote something that they’re involved
in. Just like I do when I’ve blogged, and want people to read it.
But, and I’ll let you into a secret here, these writers,
these Real, Proper Writers, don’t fucking bang on about it. They don’t go on
and on about a major plot twist. They don’t say ‘ooh! A day of writing awaits!’
They don’t fucking go on about word count, and, veering off course here, can I
just say that every time an aspiring writer tweets ‘Hmm, only 632 words today…
SadFace’ I want to tweet them a link to this
And say ‘No one cares. Seriously, no one on here fucking
cares about your word count. Were they good words? Funny words? Thought-provoking
words? It’s not about the number of words you write, it’s the quality of them.
Are they words I want to read? Based on the vapid and self obsessed nature of
your words on here, probably not. If you really want to be a writer, then
engage with the world. Because right now, you’re waiting for the world to come
to you, and you are missing out on the most wonderful and useful source of
inspiration you will ever have access to – people. Don’t assume that just
because you’ve written words, everyone wants to read them. One of the funniest
writers on twitter is the fucktastically sweary Scarlett Parrish. And she doesn’t
ever go on about Writer’s Block, or ‘Ooh! New chapter alert!’. Reading tweets
about #amwriting which tell me nothing about the character of the writer is
guaranteed to make me never want to read another word of theirs. JUST FUCKING
WRITE IN PRIVATE AND BE YOURSELF ON TWITTER.’
Sorry, that rant’s been coming for a while. Anyway, cough, shuffles
foot…
So what am I, really? I’m a mum who blogs, but I’m not a
Mummy Blogger. I’m unemployed, but I’m not a jobseeker. I write stuff, but I’m not a writer. I’m a
compulsive hair twiddler, but never wear my hair down. I am a singer, but I can’t
hold a note. I am a cricket fan, but have never learnt the rules. I am a
dancer, but I am a stranger to rhythm.
I am a heaving mass of contradictions, wrapped around a
thousand insecurities. And if someone would like to tell me just who the mascara arse I am, that's be a great help. Thanks.
7 comments:
You're a philosopher, my love - but don't let me label you for god's sake!!! ;)
You're bloody marvellous, you are, Sam! I can certainly fulfil a lot of criteria of the Monty Python Philosopher's Song...
You are a rebel... among other things. Sometimes it's not easy not having a convenient label to hang onto one's self, but it is probably all for the best.
eh.. you're human. We're all in a constant state of defining ourselves. That's life. Labels are what *others* use to define us.
A rebel without a cause, Marina. And yes, Meeshie, I think I'm just *me*. From now on, I shall pay as much attention to my personality labels as I do to clothes washing ones.
Which is to say, slightly less than bugger all.
Pretentious wanky blog posts are the best. Fact.
Kate, you are only encouraging me. The others won't thank you for it.
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