The shape of stories

One of my short stories, ‘Something about Weddings’, came out last month in a collection called Lipstick Eyebrows, released by the Welsh publisher Honno. I won’t lie: it was very exciting receiving my complimentary author’s copies in the post, and flipping through to see my name printed on page 81.

This short story, which I sent in response to a call-out earlier this year, is one that I started writing in December 2016. I was a PhD student in Creative Writing at Cardiff University, still at the start of my journey, and I’d been invited, along with the rest of my cohort, to go to Gregynog Hall, in mid-Wales, for a writing retreat. Two and a half days of writing workshops, of lovely food, of exploring the grounds and taking advantage of our free time to write.

I had been to Gregynog once before, but it was different as a PhD student, less regimented. As an MA student, I sat in a classroom for long stretches of time, being taught various things and encouraged to write and experiment. As a PhD student, I took a walk with a friend and watched the horses in the nearby fields. I explored hidden nooks and corners of the old house, found tucked-in places to write.

Gregynog Hall a year later, in December 2017.

I began the first version of this story sitting at an old wooden table, in a common room which smelled of pine. The flames in the fireplace cast dancing reflections across the polished floors. That night, at the open mic organised for staff, PhD and MA students, I read out the opening section. It was an unusual feeling, being pleased enough with a story to throw caution to the wind, and expose its raw, unformed shape.

There are still traces of what I read then lingering in the collection published by Honno, but the overall shape of the story is quite different. Over time, and with each rewrite, things emerged and others disappeared. In my initial draft, the protagonist, Claire, was more melancholy, and her relationship was entirely hopeless. The story was darker, more fatalistic. In a workshop, some years later, my friend – the brilliant US poet Christie Collins – suggested that Claire could have more agency. ‘I’d like her to take things in her own hands,’ she said in her gentle, tactful way.

That was a turning point for me. I went back to the story, thought and thought about it, and it transformed. Claire escaped. Instead of staying trapped inside, she went out. She made a friend. She came into her own. Other characters disappeared, family members who played minor parts, whose sole purpose had been to add a sense of realism.

Letting go of a story can be a bittersweet experience, but it wasn’t the case here. I feel truly happy that after all these years, this tale has finally spread out its wings and taken flight.

Opening the Trap Door

I haven’t posted anything on here for nearly two years. I have wanted to post; I have even written drafts of things, but it didn’t go beyond that.

I’ve been thinking recently about the pressure to do things – a pressure I put on myself, but which is certainly encouraged by the world we live in, by capitalism and the whole ‘time is money’ dictate, the need to be productive, to increase your input, all of that terrible, damaging shit. Usually, it works like this: the more pressure I put on myself, the less I want to do The Thing. I will find as many ways as I can to avoid it, do the dishes, water the plants, go shopping, organise a coffee meet-up with a friend (it’s called productive procrastination). Then, of course, I feel guilty. When I go to bed at night, when the light is off and I’m alone with my thoughts, The Thing I still haven’t done sits there, glaring at me, red, pulsing.

Eventually, it gets to the point where the pressure is such that I can’t avoid The Thing anymore – it’s like a boulder blocking every way out. So I do it, begrudgingly, half-heartedly, and I don’t feel good about it, because I know I could have done a better job.

It’s not always like this. Over time, I have learned to talk myself into doing things, especially ones that I know I will enjoy. I have learned (or, well, am still learning) to feel good about them even if the output isn’t perfect (spoiler alert: it never is).

But with this blog, for example, it’s like each day of not posting is a little stone added onto a trap door. In order to post again, I have to push the trap door open. Ten little stones? Not a problem, the trap door is still easy to lift. Three hundred and sixty stones? That’s a different story.

So I guess I’m trying to think of ways to let go of the pressure. To throw the little stones into a lake, rather than letting them pile up. After all, this is my blog, to do what I want with. Who’s to say how often I should post on it?

I am harder on myself than I am on anyone else. It would be funny, if it weren’t so sad: with my friends, with my family, I am the most compassionate, the most understanding of people. Oh, you forgot my birthday? Well of course, you have a tiny human to look after – it’s no wonder you’re exhausted and can barely function. Don’t worry. I don’t mind. I’m sure that sometimes, setting high expectations can be a way to achieve a lot. It’s also important to recognise, though, when the expectations start doing more harm than good.

So I’m not going to set goals. I am not going to make myself post every week, or every month. I will ‘go with the flow’ (as the tarot card my husband drew for me this morning, from the Dark Wood deck, suggests). Even it feels unlike me.