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The writer who never was

Lately, I feel like I am living in a parallel universe. I have not written a word on here for a considerable amount of time, and yet my stats have been exploding these past few months. There was minimal activity from readers on my blog at the peak of my creativity and now that I have not written for so long, I have people from all over the world reading my posts every single day and lots of them. How does that make any sense? Maybe there is a lesson in there; someone, somewhere is trying to tell me something. Could it be that I needed to go through this period of creative barrenness and anonymity; a time where my wellbeing and sense of gifting and creative flare was not reliant upon how many likes or comments I received for every post I wrote?

I remember writing previously about how even death has a purpose, how even dead leaves on the ground serve to nurture future new shrubs and trees. So, if nature is so incredibly resourceful and infinitely wise, it figures that we, the human race, as a fundamental part of the natural world, will also serve a purpose even as we die. The death I speak of is a figurative death, it is the death of the Self, of the ego. What could be more effective in generating  life from death creatively speaking than to let the creative outlet run dry, inert to the point where all interactions between writer and readers subside to a complete halt; to the point where not even the author has a desire to revisit old posts or check in every now and then? Who in their right mind would wish to revisit the source of the complete annihilation of their creative self, the grounds where once that Self excelled and shone with confidence, wisdom and craft but now there are only echoes of failure on so many unwritten pages that could have been? I am trying to understand, give sense to this period of unending draught in my writing; this heart-rending ongoing lack of inspiration, and the only explanation that makes any sense is that everything around us and in us is ephemeral or at least needs to undergo a periodical process of death and renewal in order to shed bad habits, deadweight, misconceptions that hamper and obstruct the free, organic flow that making art invariably requires. Somewhere along the way my writing got contaminated by the dos and don’ts, the what ifs, the fear of saying too much or perhaps too little. I was too much in my own head, so intent on seeking perfection and praise that I stopped sharing and showing my soul in its purest form. Trying to be all things to all people was never the optimal path to freedom and fulfilment. I should have known better!

The death of the creative Self, however, is not the only depleting force that has dominated my life as of late. They do say that when you lose someone very dear to you, a piece of you dies with them. I have most certainly experienced this to be undeniably and achingly true. The death of your own child is inconceivable, impossibly devastating for sure, but I think many of us underestimate the effect of losing a or both our parents, especially when you lose both within days of each other. Our children are where we are going, an extension of ourselves. Losing a child must be like our own life, our future has been cut dramatically short. And yet our parents signify where we came from, for many of us they simply constitute a third of our entire life, indeed, the most important part during which we form our convictions, our morals, our dreams, our standards for each and every goal we pursue for the rest of our lives. What happens to trees when you sever their roots or to a vessel when conditions turn adverse the further it sails away from the safety of the harbour? Like a grand statue that sits proudly and commanding, we lose our balance, our North, our raison d’etre if and when that sturdy, solid pedestal that holds us firmly in position and gives us a stable perspective gets taken away from us forever.

Since losing my parents three years ago (even acknowledging it was three years ago already fills me with unbearable emptiness) I feel naked to the world, exposed. My roof as well as my foundations have been pulled away from under me. Vulnerability engulfs me like a tortoise without its shell. I am sure my readers are sick of me sharing about my grieving process, but if I am completely honest, having finally resurfaced from the ashes, literally and figuratively, I do not give a damn about what people may think reading what I write. I honestly do not. I know who I am: the good, the bad and the ugly. I do not care for stats, followers, popularity or even validation of my writing. None of it matters one iota any more. Social media is the biggest farce of the 21st century which has primarily served to make the human race even more self-centred and void of empathy and altruism than it ever was. Social Media is the intrinsically flawed and irreparably doomed pedestal upon which so many of the current generation have mistakenly built their sense of identity, their dreams and hopes, and just as it happens when falling in quicksand, it will eventually overpower them when faced with the reality of this new all-consuming monster that encases and owns them, rendering them unable to tell where the quicksand begins and they end.

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The only present under my Christmas tree

The morning after is always an interesting one. It feels like Christmas morning when I was child. You get up full of adrenaline and excitement at the prospect of finding something wonderful and unexpected to remind you that you are loved and understood; you jump off the bed with just one urgent thought in mind: What’s under the tree? Yes, I admit it. What others think about me is of vital importance to me; what others think about me as a writer, that is. As with any craft and its master, I live to discover how my writing is received and interpreted by others; how it makes them feel; what emotions stirs within and thought processes it triggers, and consequently what changes in attitude or behaviour it brings about, if any. Does my writing act as a mirror to others inciting identification and change, or as the mirror they run a mile from, because the honesty it echoes is too raw, too vivid to handle?

The only Christmas present I long to find under my tree is simply a parcel. It does not matter to me whether that parcel contains coal, the rejection or criticism of my thoughts, my writing style or gold dust and precious jewels in the form of adulation and praise. It is the symbolic act of placing a parcel under my tree that fills my soul with a sense of purpose and achievement. It confirms for me that I am exactly where I am supposed to be and that, is like manna in the desert in a world where with every news piece, the sense of our sacred, untouchable habitats spiraling out of control is becoming more and more undeniable; and our souls subsequently dying by slow drought, the one and only verifiable experts’ prognosis.

A parcel under my tree tells me irrefutably that another human soul made the conscious effort, the choice, which today is no insignificant feat seeing as everyone has something to say, to visit my blog, click on the link and open the door to my life, to my soul, to the secrets hidden in the depths and the crevices of my innermost being, bubbling up incessantly at the epicentre of my soul.

That beautifully humble, empathetic, understated parcel under my tree whose gift within I am still unaware of, is for me the gift itself. I don’t need to know or care much for what’s inside. The parcel itself is the best of gifts a writer could ever hope for; it’s a moment of magical, supernatural ignition between, more often than not, two strangers whose souls have connected in an invisible dimension, even though they are ignorant of each other’s past, present and future. The fusion between the two minds is of such magnitude at that prolonged instant when the words were written by one and soon after read by the other, that it forces the two human beings like two stars thousands of miles apart in outer space, to make a meteoric journey in order to acknowledge, reach out to each other. They cannot see each other and yet at that very moment of contact, despite the emotional distance of two lives so apart, they clearly see, hear and understand what lies deep beneath their facades.

These rare moments of human love being unconditionally, freely exchanged are beautiful, extraordinary things, in a day and age of tribalism and so much hatred for anything that falls outside the perimeters of what makes up our own identity. It is bordering the supernatural in today’s existence to encounter those elusive moments of inexplicable connection, empathy and in essence exchanges of human love, where there is no need to establish who is right or wrong, who knows more than the other, who is better than the other. They are simply put instants of unconditional, divinely inspired love which act as the miraculous cure to the wounds of a very sick world.

Yesterday, I wrote an extract of what one day could turn into a novel. Every now and then I like to test the waters, feel the temperature, and see who is out there, if anyone. My comfort zone in terms of writing is philosophical reflections, personal ramblings. My writing does not get the exposure that I would like. I am not digitally competent, and so this humble blog is at present my only creative outlet competing with millions of voices out there which like mine, are desperate to be heard or at least seen.

I have attempted writing a brief chapter of an imaginary work of fiction before, but the response or lack of it is always equally devastating. Whilst my reflective posts get on occasion considerable notice within my small circle of influence, the fictional attempts painfully bounce back in my creative echo chamber. And what is most painful to the soul than finding a present under the tree that tells one that the giver put no thought or consideration when choosing it; that they gave us the gift out of a sense of obligation or in return for a gift we gave them? What’s more painful than a meaningless, thoughtless gift? Well, the most gut-wrenchingly aching moment, so much more than finding the wrong gift under the tree, is for me the total absence of parcels under that tree.

No parcels equates indifference and indifference is to the writer like the invisible virus that gains ground and devours the creative soul of joy and hope one ephemeral day at a time.

I am genuinely intrigued as to why so many identify me as a writer and give me such wonderful feedback with regards to what I write on my reflective posts, and yet even though it is that same soul and spirit that is behind the fictional pieces; even though it is that same human being with whom they had an extraordinary connection, a sense of oneness, no moment of magical fusion, of mutual recognition and acceptance takes place as a result of my fictional pieces. It baffles me.

I would gladly receive at this stage a parcel that contains a gift I don’t like. A bad gift is better than no gift. It shows at least that your creation caused some kind of reaction. The silence, however, I cannot process or comprehend. I am still the same writing voice. It is still the same spirit behind the reflective and the fictional posts, so if I am the same, everything points to the fact that at least some of those magical moments of connection that trigger a new parcel being left under my tree were disingenuous, forced, or simply given with ulterior motive. It is at that moment that I come face to face with the stark realisation that perhaps the absence of parcels under my tree is in the long run better for me as a writer.

I am all about authenticity. Anything and anyone that falls outside of that realm is like a thorn in my flesh, like a stone in my sandals that slows me down on the all important quest of getting to the place where I get to find out who I am and what I am here for. Like a prophet who has heard God’s voice and has been given a promise that will surely come to pass, I blindly and unwaveringly trust and believe that the day will come when the most cherished of gifts will be left under my tree, because it will be the one gift that has been exclusively designed to delight me, to encourage me, to let me know that the giver not only saw me through my writing but saw also the promise of everything I am destined to be and capable of becoming and overcoming.