Wednesday Writing Therapy: Remember What It Was Like To Write For Someone
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My grandfather had always carried in his wallet a poem I'd written him, and he'd stop people on the street to read it to them. That he did such a thing maybe has more with my being a writer today than anything else. At the time, few people believed in me.
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I wrote another poem in those days after the funeral that my family had etched into his gravestone. (These two poems caused an odd moment at the memorial service when my great uncle confused the two, making it seem as if I'd written my grandfather a eulogy years before his death). My mom recently sent me a picture of the stone and poem, and I was struck (of course) by how awful the poem was, how embarrassing it was to have my name permanently attached to it.
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It took awhile for me to get past the poem's suckiness to that place of being that kid, walking with my grandfather along the streets of Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, he its unofficial mayor, his tugging on the passerbys.
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"Wait until you hear what my grandson wrote for me."
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What he loved about it was that I wrote it for him, and I imagine the same is true of that poem on his gravestone. How much of my very early writing was written for someone, someone to whom I wanted to express something deeply personal and heartfelt.
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I took creative writing classes in college, left in 1987, didn't really get back to writing until 2003. These past 6 years, I've learned to write for readers, workshop participants, editors, other writers, slush readers, myself even, but perhaps forgot what it was like to write for an audience of one.
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So that is today's therapy session for myself. Remember how it felt to know that of all the things my grandfather could've carried with him to the end, it was what I'd written him. Write something like that again, something for someone in particular, something someone might fold, carry always, as I do my grandfather and all that he believed to be true about me.
posted on 2 Sep 2009, 10:47 AM
I re-shall send my Grandmother the birthday poem I wrote her that was lost in the mail.
Thanks, Randall
posted on 2 Sep 2009, 12:23 PM
Ha! Glad I could evoke some guilt for you, Catherine. Grandparents everywhere are rejoicing!
posted on 2 Sep 2009, 6:44 PM
"Write something like that again... "
That is so beautiful, Randall, and gets at the heart of why we do what we do, even when it seems there is no logical reason for us to continue. These are cleansing moments to remember. I can recall stuff I'd inadvertently written for my mom, and how she carries those words with her even today, how embarrassed I was when I wrote them, how much satisfaction her pleasure gave to me. The gift that has kept on returning in kind. Thanks for this post, Randall.
posted on 4 Sep 2009, 11:03 AM
Beautiful, almost hearbreaking post. I was going to say "quietly heartbreaking" but then thought of your review of "S". I do need to work on -ly adverbs.
posted on 4 Sep 2009, 11:03 AM
Beautiful, almost hearbreaking post. I was going to say "quietly heartbreaking" but then thought of your review of "S". I do need to work on -ly adverbs.