On the highest shelf of a storage closet, in the furthest part of
my basement, behind a room someone painted purple—for reasons known only to
them—are three boxes. I’ve never opened them. What’s in them? A photography
darkroom kit I would have done anything for twenty years ago. Now they are just
dreams put on a shelf.
I wanted to be a famous artist, like Modigliani or Picasso, or Mary Engelbreit. I envisioned art installations at galleries with photo emulsion-washed linen—fifteen feet high. Anyway, I’ve never done an installation, not one. And my gallery sales to date: two paintings. I could say I’m a failure at becoming a famous artist. But then, there’s something about the writing life that flourishes in failures.
So to all your storytellers out there who constantly dip your pen into that inkwell (and don’t always feel like the Olympic-sized winner you really are) I wanted to explain why I love being a failure. Possibly, you have a similar list with vague intentions to use those castoff failures somewhere or other: There was the time I failed at being a banker, but I know that that bank vault scene in my middle grade novel is truly accurate. Or what about the time I failed at being a secretary, a janitor, a nanny, or a preschool teacher? they could be professions for my characters’ parents. Then there were those failed friendships, a marriage, ten consecutive summer gardens, the time I tried to sew pants. Okay, so maybe all of you haven’t failed at as many things as I have. But you might be thinking that life is fodder for art, or writing, or something like that. Right?
Let me describe my process. Here I am writing my first novel, or third (or at least the one I promise not to throw away this time). I feel totally confident from all my Master’s level classes: I’ve got Plot from Marsha Qualey; Point of View from Phyllis Root and Jackie Briggs Martin (I can still hear them talking about ducks “Oh, no, mud!” they are saying in very duck-like voices); I have endowed objects, and talismanic words in my dialogue just like Ron Koertge said I should; I have Eleanora’s third leg of the three legged stool—Setting; and I have asked myself WWJRTD? What would Jane Resh Thomas do to find out what my character truly desires; and I’ve even tried to build a world which follows find Anne’s heroic monomythic journey. I’m left alone to face something worse than the blank page, reams of really bad free writing. That’s when the beauty starts.
One of my favorite authors, E.L. Konigsburg sums up the process of
calligraphy writing in her novel, The View from Saturday, and I think loving our
failures as storytellers works pretty much the same way:
"You
must think of those six steps not as preparation for the beginning but as the
beginning itself."
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Polly McCann is a 2011 graduate of the Hamline MFAC program. To learn more about her writing and illustrating, please visit her website.
Thank you. I needed to hear this.
ReplyDeletePolly, let's you and me be failures together.
ReplyDeleteI've never tried to sew pants, so you're one up on me.
Thanks Melinda, you always make me laugh or want to grow trees. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI have read the beauty and poetry in your writing, Polly. Your artistry definitely shows through your work. You paint lovely word pictures now.
ReplyDelete