A Literal Girl

Leaf

In Between the Crack of the Bed and the Wall

My knees are stiff from being bent in the same position for hours. My papers are spread across the couch like a dropped deck of cards. As part of my research, I started putting post-its on a map of Oxford earlier but they’ve all come off (the map to limp, the post-its too acquiescent) and now at my feet is a puddle of pink strips. I’ve been picking continuously at my right pinky all day. Earlier, I had a glorious run in the almost-sunshine, wearing shorts, which I haven’t done in so long, followed by an hour-long bath, in which I listened to classic.fm and read Pat Barker’s Regeneration, so my head is full of choral music and shell-shocked dreams. Every time I think about what I’m working on I feel a tiny jolt of panic.

“Don’t let your silly dreams fall in between the crack of the bed and the wall,” I hear, and I think, I’m trying not to, really.

In short, I need to get out of the house.

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Here in the House which was the Site of Our Budding Love

1.

I suddenly feel weary with the anticipation of a Saturday. Here I am at my desk, which is not a proper desk but a slab of coarse wood, which used to be the kitchen table, staring out at the garden behind the house thinking thoughts of Springtime, Springtime which is still just beyond our reach. There are yellow flowers and a few misty buds, but the trees are still blank, the grass still pale, the dead leaves of last year still plastered to the frosty pathway.

We’re in the time-between-seasons; you wake up one morning and here it is, Spring, and you put on a light coat, you dispense of your winter boots, but by mid-afternoon it’s Winter again and shivering you cycle home against a fierce wind that belongs to January, not March.

2.

I need a chair big enough to swallow me. I don’t want to sit at my desk with my legs crossed neatly, dangling toward the ground, I want to fold them beneath myself, I want them to have freedom and space. The thing is of course that none of this furniture is ours, but now that we’ve lived here–how long? nearly two years?–it fits us. It owns us if we don’t own it.

I think about this sometimes (I’ve probably written about it before, too). What anchors us to this house is not possession. All that we own, between us, is a bed. You could say that’s too symbolic to be true, but it is true, and the only reason we even own the bed is because some friends were getting rid of it and thought that maybe we would want to graduate from a folding futon to a proper mattress-and-headboard bed.

So we have a bed and our books. We sound portable. But I don’t think we are as portable as all that. Here is the site of our budding love. How do you take that with you when you go?–say, the memory of sitting on the kitchen floor, midnight, two weeks in, picking apart a chicken carcass from the fridge, sipping a gin and tonic; the memory of the first walk to the bus stop, the smell of early summertime and the sunlight and the way he puts his sunglasses over your eyes because it’s early and you need a shield, and a piece of insurance, something to tie you together.

Because the thing is that while we’re here, they aren’t just memories; I can actually see a two-years-younger version of ourselves sitting in the garden watching the nine o’clock sunlight fade behind the East Oxford terraced houses. I haven’t actually converted these things into memory yet. I know I need to start doing it, like a computer caches old emails (if that’s what they do), or my mind will start to feel cloudy and crowded, but. But.

3.

(A little truth about myself: sometimes I mix up Walt Whitman and William Wordsworth. And Henry David Thoreau, because of Walden Pond. All those Ws. Even though I’ve been to Walden Pond. One sticky Boston summer. I ate potato chips on the way there, bikini beneath black dress, and it was clear as anything but when we drove up to the pond the world suddenly clouded over and a few drops of rain hit our heads and then a crack of thunder, a fissure of lightening across the sky. So we didn’t swim in Walden Pond after all.)

4.

I’d like to wear a summer dress, today; or a pair of cutoff denim shorts, like I am seven again, and a fluttery blouse that lifts in the gentle wind. I’d like to see all of our clothes–his shirts, my knickers–our sheets–hanging on the line in the garden. That’s the nicest thing, here, in summer. Looking over the fences and seeing that everybody on the street has hung their washing outside.

And the days of the barbecues. Walk outside in the early Sunday afternoon, smell the char and the smoke from next door, or from your own garden. One day we spend hours outside, into the night, lying on a blanket. The boys burn old pieces of wood in the barbecue just for fun. We leave all the plates and bowls outside until the next morning.

5.

So it’s funny to think that for all that, it isn’t ours (ownership being a thing about money, not memory). Still, here we are on a Saturday, doing our laundry, our dishes, he bringing me tea while I work, Billie Holiday drowned out by the sound of the washing machine shuddering its way through another load, passing through this in-between season and into another.

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The Friday Dump

My brain, today, has decided to be very basic. I mean that I don’t feel capable of complicated thought or action. And I don’t know for sure what the inside of my head looks like (thankfully), but I’m imagining it full of words. Today those words are as follows:

eat
sleep
eat more
sleep more
run?
write
hate work
meh

Fridays are the worst. Every Thursday evening, after hours of class, after reading, after pondering the next stage of my book (which I am, by the way, totally overthinking now), I feel both intellectually stimulated and emotionally/physically exhausted. More than that, I feel the overwhelming urge NOT TO GO TO WORK ON FRIDAY, because I know that what I’d rather do is sleep in and then spend the day eating at my desk and writing. But because we have to pay this thing called rent (and indeed our bills, which always come floating through the letterbox at the worst possible times), what I do instead is wake up, stagger round the house eating cereal and trying to remember how to dress myself, leave the house, cycle halfway down Hurst Street, realize by seeing my own reflection in a car window that I’ve completely forgotten my helmet, cycle back home, retrieve the helmet, head to work.

It’s an impossible situation, really. As soon as I get to work I remember that as far as jobs go, mine isn’t half bad, and I like the people that I work with, I like that it’s a school, I like, moreover, that they pay me regularly. And I know that to a certain extent it’s good to have one foot on the ground, so to speak; last summer when I wasn’t working I was so fretful about money, and about how I was spending my time, that I forgot what the real world is like, and neglected to write as much as I could (and should) have. But I know this is not what I want to be doing, this photocopying, filing, organizing job, and I know that come September, when I have another degree and (hopefully) a manuscript, I’ll need to make some decisions. Days like this make me think the decisions will be easy; but the truth is they won’t.

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Funnily Enough, Stephen King, There ARE Exceptions

So I got up “early” this morning (read: not five minutes before I have to leave for work) so that I could write something, but now I’m going to scrap that something in favor of something else. See, I opened up Firefox this morning and saw my Google quote of the day (yeeeeah….I’m a certifiable nerd), courtesy of Stephen King:

“Any word you have to hunt for in a thesaurus is the wrong word. There are no exceptions to this rule.”

At first I thought, okay, fair enough. I see what he’s saying. If you have to search for something it’s probably not going to be the most natural word in the sentence, it might obscure the meaning, it isn’t necessary, blah blah blah.

But then I thought, hang on. Stephen’s success is undeniable, but it’s not for his, er, literary prowess that he’s famous so much as for his accessibility. Am I wrong? Am I missing something brilliant about the way he crafts phrases? Because last time I checked, I wouldn’t actually want to write like Stephen, no matter how much I’d love to reach his level of (monetary) achievement.

(And do you know what? I just used an online thesaurus to find an alternative to the word “success” (“achievement”) because, frankly, it’s earlier than I’m usually up and my brain isn’t working properly and SUE ME, STEPHEN.)

My writing process has changed over the years, though not drastically, but I’ll tell you one way in which it has: I’m a more careful writer today. Part of what I do when I write something which isn’t rushed and ranty (i.e. this) is spend a lot of time considering individual words. I will actually stop halfway through a sentence and reconsider one word because the rhythm is off, say. And in instances like that I find searching for synonyms is not so much like searching for answers as for inspiration.

So in short, I beg to differ, Stephen.

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Recently

I have a new song obsession. These things come over me suddenly, and when they do, I pity anyone who has to share a house with me (in this case, the Man). Hearing the same rhythms over-and-over-again-for-hours-upon-hours. But it makes me more productive. Or maybe it’s that I obsess when I’m already feeling productive. I don’t know which and, frankly, the whole thing is weird enough that I don’t really know if I want to delve any deeper.

(Because you asked, here’s my current favorite. Click on “Golly Sandra” to hear what my house sounds like at the moment.)

A lot of people recently have said to me, “I don’t know where the autumn went, how is it already a new year, how is it already mid-March?” and I’ve been saying back, “I don’t know, but I feel the same way.” As humans, we’re incapable of processing time in the way we think we’re supposed to. But then I looked at my calendar and I realized that I probably feel this way because I had something happening EVERY FREAKING DAY IN NOVEMBER. Sometimes poetry doesn’t explain things as well as I like to think.

Lately, I’ve been on a constant sock-and-stocking hunt. I’ve actually altered outfits because I can’t find the right garments for my feet. I don’t know where they go, exactly, but I do think I know what they’re telling me: it’s about time for Spring. Bare legs, bare feet.

Speaking of which–I’ve been seeing blossoms. Not fully-fledged, springtime-is-here blossoms, but the sweetest little buds. There are some by our front door. It’s nice.

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Who is Miranda Ward?

A writer from California. Now lives in England. Blogs about place, space, books, writing, anxiety, and other stuff too. Read more...

Miranda Ward

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You see? This is what happens when I'm allowed a beer, a notebook and a pen.I am having a beer.River.My replacement iPod nano has arrived!Just remembered that I own this. A very happy discovery!Happy new year... ...and a tiny bit of sunshine.View of the lake

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