It is inevitable in writing that, sooner or later, we
will come face to face with a dragon. My dragon is often my grandmother’s
death; I want to write about her, but nothing I put down on the page feels good
enough. I get overwhelmed and it scares me to look the dragon in the eye. It is
so much easier to put down my pen and wait for the dragon to curl back into its
cave. I’m not ready. Maybe it’s not my story to tell. Perhaps I’ll write about
something else.
Tom Sleigh described the writing process to our
workshop group as a combination of emotions, thoughts and words. Emotion finds
a thought, that thought finds a word. We took out old pieces of things we’d
written days, weeks or months earlier and began to revise them, recasting our
sentences because that, Tom said, is the joy of writing. The lines we had
initially written were stretched and broken and changed until our emotions
found the right thoughts and the right words to portray them on the page. And
in that workshop, we watched ourselves (and each other) transform.
Eventually, we writers want people to read what we’ve
written. Why else would we keep submitting to journals or showing up to workshops?
But when we’re faced with material that is overwhelming to us, difficult to
write because it’s too personal, too tough to get out and on to the page,
sometimes we give up. Sometimes the dragon looms over us, breathing heavily
down our necks and we can’t take the heat. Our emotion found the thought—waking
the dragon—but the words aren’t there yet.
In our classroom, on the board, Tom draws a dot. “This is you,” he tells us, “and this—” he draws another dot, “is your dragon.” He connects the two dots with one very short line. “Now, you can’t fight a dragon with your bare hands, but if only you had a sword.” Tom draws another dot, redirecting the route from “you” to “sword” to “dragon” making a triangle for us to observe. “Put something between you and the dragon and you’ll get that distance you need to fight it.”
We use language as a disguise. We want the world to
know what happened to us but we don’t want the world to see through the
experience to find us cowering in a corner afraid of what we might have
unleashed. By focusing on individual words and sentences first, building up
from there and allowing our material to grow, Tom Sleigh encouraged us not to
hide from our material, guiding us to see that it’s not about what you
write—it’s about how we move through it. Orchestrating the perception of the
reader through manipulation of the line will create the thing so many might
refer to as “voice.” Tom, however, calls this “style.”
Rebecca Jensen is a second-year MFA candidate in
Creative Nonfiction. Her poetry appears in Eunoia
Review, Firefly Magazine and FishFood Magazine, and she is a nominee
for the 2016 AWP Intro Journals Project in creative nonfiction.
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