Photograph: Jar with birds-of-paradise at Siem Reap, Cambodia, 2009 |
My distant cousin William Wallace Tabbot, who found me when I posted something about one of my ancestors (Sally Jo Hance, perhaps?), "likes" everything. He is giving my first cousins a run for their facebook money. I am almost as fond of him as of my cousin who writes me letters and tells me what's going on down South without me.
Must say that I don't really mind... I mean, I like being silly. I like silly things. For example, I like chickens. I haven't had a post about chickens in a long time. Maybe I'll talk about chickens tomorrow. Or maybe I won't.
* * *
While I was drinking tea this morning—meditative drink, tea is—I realized that the arc of my life as I approached my mid-thirties slowly turned away from everything valued by the world I grew up in. It’s as if I had to undo everything that I had done and was “supposed” to do in order to be what I am. Even though I began thinking of myself as a writer when I was still a child, I was distracted and absorbed by many things.
When I received
tenure, I quit teaching. (I do sometimes do short-term events lasting up to a
few weeks, so I still have an occasional toe in the reflecting pool near the ivory tower.) Since I won my tenure two years early, I did
not teach all that long. My feeling was
that teaching, while exciting and rewarding, was not the right place for me as
a writer; I know others rely on it, and so I say nothing about whether it is
good for writers in general—each must decide. But I gave up my promotion and a
regular and increasing income. I gave up
a place in the world and the amount of power that goes with it. I “wasted” my education. In the end, I
emptied myself of a great deal in order to be filled up with something else.
(I suppose having three children is a somewhat analogous choice. One gives
up a great deal in order to have that increase in life, an increase that has to
be fed and clothed and educated. And one does, indeed, have more life—and many
other things besides, some exhausting and some wonderful and renewing.)
It’s akin to a spiritual act, though not the same: an emptying in order to be filled.
Looking back, I could be full of regret at what I gave
up. I could think that I had wasted life
and substance, and certainly I would now be more solvent if I had clung to my
job. Luckily, I don’t feel that way.
Sometimes what you do seems to people like the worst possible
thing you could do, and yet it turns out to be the best. And that sounds to me like a religious idea
as well. Yet I was simply groping about in darkness, not sure how to live my
life differently and choosing in some degree of blindness.