Judith Arnold
When
I was a teenager, I spent a summer living on a commune on Cape Breton Island. I
lived in a tent. No plumbing. (I bathed in an icy stream—every day.) No electricity. (I had a flashlight.) No kitchen. (Our
group built a fire pit for cooking and stored perishable foods in mesh bags in
that icy stream.) No computer. (I had a portable manual typewriter.) The guy
whose property we occupied wanted the land to be used as a summer community of
artists, and when I told him I would write a novel while I was there, he
invited me to join the group.
I
did write a novel that summer—my very first. It was pretty bad. But I wrote it,
and that alone made the experience invaluable to me.
The other residents at the commune
were an eclectic lot. We had a painter, a poet, some musicians and a lot of
people who claimed they were interested in art but never created anything. As
long as they took their turns cooking, fishing, weeding our garden or making
runs into town—six miles away—to pick up mail and supplies, they were allowed
to stay.
One of the residents, Rich, had
undergone extensive psychotherapy. I had never been in therapy, so I respected
his superior wisdom when it came to matters of psychology.
On a mild July afternoon, I found
myself sitting with him on a bluff overlooking the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The
air was clear and sun-drenched, the grass we sat on was scattered with wild
roses, and below us the water was a dark, rich blue. I was thinking about our
trawl line in the gulf, wondering whether we’d snagged any fish for our dinner,
when Rich abruptly said, “You know what your problem is?”
I hadn’t been aware I had a problem,
other than the usual woes about boyfriends, finances and the size of my butt.
But Rich had been through therapy, so I figured he was an expert when it came
to such matters. “What’s my problem?” I asked.
“You think in words.”
I frowned, unsure of what he meant.
“You can’t just experience the
world. You can’t become one with it. You have to translate everything into
words first. You can’t look at this flower—” he gestured toward one of the wild
roses sprouting from the soil in front of us “—without thinking: Pink. Stem. Scent. You can’t just look
at the flower and comprehend it. You have to turn it into words first.”
I considered his accusation and
realized he was right. That was exactly the way my mind worked. I thought in
words.
I was devastated. How could I ever
become one with a wild rose if I first turned that wild rose into a sentence?
How could I know the things around me
when a barrier of words stood between me and those things?
I worried about Rich’s assessment of
me for weeks. I worried about his assessment in words. My mind chattered with
them: I can’t experience the world
correctly. I have no immediacy. Everything has to be structured into language
in my mind. I am a failure as a human being!
But eventually the word no took hold of my brain. No, I was not a failure. No, there was
nothing wrong with me. No, this was not a problem. It was simply who I was, who
I’d always been. Who I was meant to be.
I think in words. I use words to
process what my senses present to me. If I am facing a dilemma, I mentally sort
that dilemma into sentences so I can analyze it. If I’m upset with someone, I
filter my distress into words that will help me deal with that person. If
something wonderful happens, words spark and blaze and dance inside me like
fireworks.
I’m a writer. Of course I think in
words! Rich might have been correct when he’d pointed this out to me, but he
was wrong when he’d labeled it a problem. It is not a problem. It’s simply who
I am.
Judith Arnold is the
author of 87 novels, many of which she has reissued as ebooks. While she awaits
the release of her new novel, The
April Tree, she’s offering another of
her books, the award-winning Father Found—the first book of her “Daddy School” series—for
a special discount price of only 99 cents at Amazon, B&N,
Smashwords and Kobo.
You can visit her web site for
information about all her releases.
Thank goodness you didn't listen to him, Judith! Thanks for the great post and gorgeous pictures.
ReplyDeleteI think in words, too, Judith! Only I never noticed it until just now....
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed with your ability to write without electricity, plumbing and a kitchen! Thanks for sharing this, and I love the cover of Father Found.
ReplyDeleteJust to tell you that I'm very glad you found the word...no.
ReplyDelete87 novels later... :) Wonderful post, and what a fun story!
ReplyDeleteThanks, all! (Yes, as I read your comments, my mind formulated the words, "Thanks, all!" )
ReplyDeleteHah, not just words, but if 87 novels speaks anything, it's that you think in LOTS of words! Kudos!
ReplyDeleteTerrific post, Judith. I'm very glad you think in words, the world is 87 novels richer for it!
ReplyDeleteI am impressed with Judith's way of expressing so much in such a little space, and I can really relate to this experience, and I always know when I am truly dumbfounded, because the "words" don't just flow from me. I am curious though... How old does teenager mean? I would never send my teenager out like this, and I can't see my teenager doing this, unless she was almost NOT a teenager anymore.
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