Flip-Flop, Rain-Drop

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I’m not sure if I’ll venture out before the shuttle comes.  It’s raining and I’ve lost a third of my rain gear, once made up of a  jacket and pair of flip-flops.

Holed up in my hotel room, I’ve been thinking about changes this trip will bring — how last night, my teacher thanked me for coming.  I’m wondering where “this” will lead.  Knowing that “this” depends upon me.

My teacher sensed what I did not confess:  I had risked by coming to Iowa.  Putting myself  ‘out there’ has never been easy.  Instead I flourish within an everyday security blanket of a few people back home.  This is what I like to say.

But this had been good.  It helped to get away.  Alone.  To be myself without props.  To see who I am.  Alone.

Alone and not alone.  Wanting to write but not wanting to write.  Fears of being good but not good enough.  Good enough for what?   Is it the publishing thing again?  Do I want that?

There are so many great writers.  I sat with a few in class this week.  Their words amazed, their speed at writing amazed more.  They shared their work with ease.  I too shared, but only when called upon.  And then not always.

I am not ready to recite a litany of what this week has given me.  I don’t yet know.  But there’s expectation, if not in myself, at least within others, that there will be change.  Imperceptible.  But there — like all those things we can’t quite “put our finger on.”

The words came into my mind just now — the other shoe must drop. It sounds corny, but given that I lost one of my flip-flops around town yesterday, I’m wondering about that lone flip-flop that remains in my purse.  Where will it land?  What use does one lone flip-flop have?

— FOOT NOTE —

After finishing this entry, I had two hours to spend.  I decided to go out.  What the heck, I thought, the worst that can happen is I’ll get wet.  Out the glass door, I rounded the corner and stopped.  Lying on the ground near a trash can was a flip-flop.  I leaned down, shook my head and smiled.  Claiming what was mine, I weighed the rubber sole in my hand before dropping it in my purse.  Then putting on my hood, I stepped into the rain.


Paltry Amens

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My Teacher and Me

It felt like church this week.

Holy time.  Seven days of creating words on paper.

I am spent.  But also thankful.

I’m thankful to my husband who gave me time apart.

I’m thankful to have been surrounded by interesting classmates — gifted and generous with time and encouragement.

But is there a most of all?  Well, yes.  Usually, there is.  And this prayer’s most-of-all goes to two teachers who made my week possible with their wisdom in the art of writing.

It is a paltry amen for this week of gifts.  But like the widow and her mite, it’s all I got.

In the Shadow of Greatness

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There is something about Iowa soil conducive to growing sweet corn and writers without combining the two.

I haven’t experienced sweet corn.  But I cannot escape the literary presence.  It’s everywhere.  Bookstores, of course.  But it’s the writers themselves who make their presence felt.  In coffee shops.  Before open mikes.  In talks at eleven o’clock.  In front of a class of eager students.

Evidence litters the central avenue downtown, in sidewalk etchings of words left by others.  Reminding me of  paper tucked inside fortune cookies, the words come from writers.  And others who would not dare name themselves so.

…it is thinking makes what we read ours.  Locke

…a wicked book cannot repent.  English proverb

…keep a diary and someday it will keep you.  Mae West

…a good book is the purest essence of a human soul.  Carlyle.

Yesterday, I stumbled upon this one by Flannery O’Connor.

“Everywhere I go I’m asked if I think the universities stifle writers.  My opinion is that they don’t stifle enough of them.”

In the shadow of greatness, I saw my own shadow dance across words that once would have cast shadows over me.  I walked away unharmed, light on my feet.