By Jodie Cain Smith
I’m aggravated. Something isn’t right. In fact, this is all
wrong.
I should be typing away at my desk, surrounded by all the
objects that motivate me: Notebooks stacked four high full of ideas for future
writing days, words of inspiration pinned to bulletin boards, the most
brilliant phrases ever thought or spoken scribbled on scratch paper resting
beneath paperweights.
But I am not at my desk in my writing space; the space I
didn’t realize was sacred until today. I am on my couch, squeezed out of my
office by a visit from my in-laws. The young woman traveling with my mother-in-law
needed space to sleep. In my 1,500 square foot apartment with only one guest
room, the only available space was my office. I thought I would be fine with
her suitcase, air mattress, pillow, and blankets filling the open spaces of my
writing space. I was wrong.
My space has been invaded, blighted, bruised. I want to
burst through the door and promise my space that soon she will be healed. I
will purge the stranger from her carpeted floor and plush armchair with
matching ottoman, remove the shrapnel of shoes, tank tops, cell phone chargers,
empty water bottles, and dirty socks. I will gently wipe the makeup particles
from her wooden desk. But instead, I sit on my couch, do nothing to protect my
writing space, and wait for the invasion to end.
My personal violation is not the young woman’s fault. The
stranger in my house doesn’t know what it’s like to create, to write. She
doesn’t understand the intimate relationship I have with my writing space. In
her mind, the room is just an office, a place where work is done and mail is
sorted and bills are paid. She doesn’t know that hidden in that space are my
darkest secrets, my vulnerabilities, and my wildest fantasies. She doesn’t know
that of everywhere on Earth, I am my truest self in my writing space. Risks are
taken, worlds are explored, and lives are created in my writing space. And in
that space, I decide if anything I create will be allowed to escape beyond the
walls of my office and take the greatest risk of all – be read by someone other
than me.
As any good daughter-in-law does, I opened my home and my
life to people other than myself. The in-laws and anyone they bring with them
is part of the “I do” package. I just never considered that they would land in
my sacred space. And until now, I didn’t realize that it would bother me this
deeply.
Yes, my room will return to its former glory soon. All
evidence of the occupier will be removed. The room will be cleaned, and I will
retreat to my space to create another world from the inner workings of my mind.
If only I could create a world where screaming, “Get out! Get out! Get out!”
wouldn’t result in a rift between my mother-in-law and myself that no amount of
carefully thought out words could fix. If only…
Any writer should relate to this post. I wrote a blog a few weeks back about finding that sacred space when first starting to write. This is a nice example of that. Thanks for opening up about it, Jodie.
ReplyDeleteBelieve it or not, you should have found another space (even carved out a space somewhere) for the guest. From your writing it seems like the "invasion of the space snatcher".
ReplyDelete