Golly was it nice to read David Gessner’s essay “Sick of Nature.” He
said so much of what I have been thinking and feeling lately, and he said it in
human, conversational language. My patience with lofty, elevated language is
running thin. Consider this a warning that a rant is to come.
I’m so
goddamn sick of this snow. If it doesn’t stop I’m going to destroy something. Like
take a bat to it.
Annoyance
and anger carry me into the graveyard. I’ve felt so stifled lately. My go-to
simile is that I feel as if two large hairy hands are gripping my brain and
slowly adding pressure. I don’t give a shit about the writing today. I lack the
energy to transform visions of the same shit into something supposedly
meaningful.
Two deer are near the entrance. I don’t
see innocent beauty. I see two dumb animals about a hundred feet from being
pummeled by a speeding vehicle. I run toward them, and they trot away.
Deeper in now, I arrive into my
space of openness. I stand still, as I have done. At least the sky is blue and
the sun is shining. I like the sun. But I like it because of what it does for me, how it warms my skin. I, like Gessner, am a great narcissist. And my approach to
nature writing thus far has only increased my narcissism. When I look at the
cemetery, at the snow, I think—how can I relate this to me? What can I learn from
this sycamore, these footprints? How does this scene inform the struggles I face?
I hate this mentality. Goddamn does it reduce the world. The
world, this graveyard, doesn’t give a shit
about the fact that I feel stifled and am anxious about graduating and am barely
finding time to work on my novel amidst all my other classwork, even if the
novel is the main reason I’m in this program. No, the world just is. The tree says nothing about my
frustration. It’s just a tree.
Ken Kesey was a smart dude. He
said, “We’re always looking for,
never looking at.”
These thoughts in mind, the world
opens. The moment shines with clarity, and the snow glitters. My dumb
narcissistic thoughts have moved temporarily aside.
This thinking, this relating, is
new to my life. Before my MFA experience, I did not see something amazing and
think of what it meant for me. I just saw it. The peaks and waterfalls of
Yosemite, the lakes of Glacier, the mountains of Olympic—I just saw them, and
goddamn did I marvel at them. When my
friends and I passed around a flask in a cave of boulders at Joshua Tree, near
a precipice overlooking a grand desert expanse of craggy Seussian trees, I didn’t
try to condense it into a distinct quantifiable phase or moment. It just
happened, and I loved it. Now, my friends and I look back with admiration, simply
because it occurred.
The more I try to relate the nature
I see to this particular point in my life, the more I get trapped in my own
head. We can only learn of an experience’s
true significance over time. We can never predict all that will result from an
event’s transpiring. The more we try to understand it immediately, the more we
suffer at the realization we cannot.
I want to go back. Back to that time where I wasn’t
trying to form everything into something it’s not. Cause that feels like lying,
and it hurts my brain to do it.
I’m not blaming anyone or anything.
It’s the way I’ve been approaching
writing. Only I can control that. And I’m changing it. Too concerned I’ve
become with expectations of teachers and journals and employers and yadee
yadda. I have not been listening to the voice inside my head. I’ve been trying
to form it into something it’s not.
The birds are chirping. This sounds
nice to me. I’ll leave it at that.
It's like you pulled the thoughts out of my brain.
ReplyDelete"I want to go back. Back to that time where I wasn't trying to form everything into something it's not. Cause that feels like lying, and it hurts my brain to do it."
It's an interesting concept we put ourselves in. We are writers. We like writing, but being told what to write about, how to shape things into something more beautiful, more readable, more pretty, more ugly, more truth. We pay for the curriculum, the exposure, the guidance, the immersion into a creative writing community, but damn, sometimes it just makes me feel so stupid. It hurts my brain too.
I'm glad you brought up narcissism in your rant. "How can I relate this to me?" is the flip side of "What do I see here that is important in my opinion?" The minute our writing leaves our notebooks for the eyes of others we are expressing the importance of our perceptions of the world.
ReplyDeleteI think we all feel the internal conflict about meeting, "expectations of teachers and journals and employers and yadee yadda." Your essay points out very well that we are very often outside looking in.
You kept this well controlled and the arc was excellent.
Sometimes a bit of rantiness can add a vibrancy to a piece. Yours certainly did here.
ReplyDelete