Doing anything but write

Nettoyage du weekend sur une Remington Streamline Model 5

You have to believe, against the scornful trumpeting of your intellect, in the miraculous ability of form to create itself out of chaos. You have to hold the line through all the wretched days, months, even years that you spend not writing – doing anything but write: “wasting time”, indulging in displacement activities, wandering about pointlessly, biting people’s heads off, seething with anxiety and self-reproach. You have to believe that you’re preparing the ground for something to manifest out of the darkness, to present itself, to be born. Having already gone through this process countless times does not help. You forget, every single time, that it’s coming at you. The anxiety, the self-reproach are always total, unremitting, inescapable. You have to submit to it, allow yourself to suffer it, right to the end.


How melodramatic it sounds. Almost laughable. But every writer I know would recognise that description, and shudder.


So perhaps, after all, it would be a relief if it never came to me again, that sharp little secret arrow. Do I really miss it, or am I glad to be spared? Will I be spared?

I may be an old woman, but I’m not done for yet, un article rédigé par l’autrice Helen Garner.

Est-ce que ça me manquerait vraiment ou bien serais-je simplement heureuse d’être épargnée, de m’en sauver?

Petite voix

Pendant ses courtes séances d’écriture, elle avait l’impression constante d’entendre une petite voix lui dire : « Ce n’est pas particulièrement intéressant ou original, ce que tu racontes. Le monde n’a pas besoin d’un livre de plus. » Aucun ton supérieur teinté de reproche ou de moquerie dans ces mots. La voix était douce et assurée à  la fois, comme celle d’un petit être qui aurait porté en lui toute la sagesse du monde, combinée à  une envie folle de courir après sa queue.