I’ve
been reading Bonnie Gray’s Spiritual
Whitespace: Awakening Your Soul to Rest. It’s easy to read, but I’m
resisting the temptation to race through it. Instead, I’m taking it in small
chunks, reading, thinking, pondering, reflecting.
Part
of the reason I’m moving slowly through it is that I know part of the story.
Bonnie has shared some it on her blog, Faith
Barista. It’s not an easy story, and it’s not an easy story to share. Part
of what she’s doing in Spiritual
Whitespace is opening herself to long-buried pain, emotional pain. The book
may be easy to read, but it is nonetheless difficult.
Reading
about someone’s pain – reading someone being honest about pain – has a way of
opening up the reader’s pain. And we all have it, because we are all broken. We
can often work our way through brokenness, but I don’t think we ever reach a
state of “unbrokenness.” If such a thing as unbrokenness was possible, we
wouldn’t need God.
Bonnie
describes panic attacks, anxiety attacks, insomnia. A counselor helps her to
begin to deal with it, and find where it’s coming from. Your heart aches to
read what she discovers.
I’m
reading Bonnie’s story, and such is the power of what she writes that her story
becomes my story. I start thinking about writing, and why I write. I start
thinking about the disk full of fiction manuscripts, the continuation of the
story I started with Dancing
Priest and A
Light Shining. An electronic pile of manuscripts site behind those two
books, and I’m not considering them until I find some whitespace first.
Those
two books (2011 and 2012), and the non-fiction book Poetry
at Work (2013), took a lot out of me. Three books in three years. And
my job turning to chaos along with my elderly mother’s physical problems that
culminated in her death in February and, well, I feel spent. I need to pay some
attention to the first three books. I’m trying to reinvent an entire function
at my day-job. I’m writing for Tweetspeak
Poetry and serving as Twitter editor for The High Calling (with an occasional
article there, too), and I simply can’t take on any more.
There’s
another reason I’m moving slowly through Bonnie’s book and not doing any work
on my other manuscripts.
While
it’s impossible to say that there’s nothing autobiographical about my fictional
characters, a writer can’t help but put some of his or her own life and
experience into the people created in fiction. I haven’t had the same
experience as Michael Kent in Dancing Priest, but even I can see some similarities
(mostly idealized ones).
But
in the fourth novel manuscript, a character is waiting. The manuscript has
about 70,000 words (90,000 is a good length for a novel). And a character is
waiting. He’s already embedded in the story. He has a name, a history, a
family, and a life. He still has some work left to be completed; I haven’t
quite “finished” him yet. And he continue on in other manuscripts.
I
know who he is. I recognize him. He’s the most autobiographical character I’ve
created. What I don’t understand, or understand yet, is why I have created him
in the way I have. His defining experience is not my defining experience, and
yet I recognize it. I feel this
character.
“We’ve
been taught our feelings are not reliable,” Bonnie writes, “so we throw them to
the wayside. Trouble is, there is part of
ourselves we throw to the side, too. Sometimes the harder path to rest is
following your heart and holding on to nothing but Jesus. Let’s not take the
easier path.”
The
character is waiting. It will be a while before he makes his debut. But he’s
waiting. And I’m not quite sure what to do about it.
Photograph by Petr Kratochvil via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
"The character is waiting" and will be there when you get back, Glynn. It sounds like you need rest and white space - I've certainly been there, in the rest zone, and it has done me a world of good.
ReplyDeleteBlessings, my friend!
Perhaps it is a time of rest that the questions will be answered Glynn. I understand how weary in every way you must be right now. I believe the Father does gentle, good work as we rest in Him. I think you're wise to take this time.
ReplyDeletePlease don't take this the wrong way, but can I just say what a blessed relief it is to hear you say that you're a little bit burned out?? You are such a superman, Glynn! You do so, so much. And when I realized that your mom died in them middle of all that you do? Well, that's hard stuff - no matter their age or how long they've been ill - it's tough to lose that last parent.
ReplyDeleteThat pattern of doing so many things, and doing them all out and well, has also been mine. And for a long time, too (nothing compared to your load). I've learned the hard way that white space is absolutely necessary. It is life-saving as well as life-changing. So. . .as much I am champing at the bit for book 3, I truly hope you find room, real room, inside your spirit and in the pages of your calendar. You are so deeply gifted and so very kind - please, please take care of Glynn. First.