I was recently exposed to
the idea that all good writers are ones who write about pain, about fear, about
the creepy unknown, the aloneness of nature, etc. They dedicated an entire era of literature to
this, we call it Romanticism. And while I would agree some of the best pieces
of literature I have ever read come from those emotions, I would argue that a
happy writer can produce just as effective work. Robert Frost wrote this poem called “Out, Out
–” that destroyed my illusions about early 19th century farming
America. Arguably one of the best artifacts in his museum of writing, the poem
satisfies the idea that pain and hurt produce the best work. Conversely, he wrote another poem entitled “A
Prayer in Spring” full of beauty and nature in the most cheerful season it has
to offer. Both are powerful: One about
pain and harsh realities, another about new beginnings and pure love, and yet
both move readers, both inspire scholars, both hold a place in one of the most
prized museums of written word in the world.
So why? Step outside of
romance, outside of heartbreak and heartache, step away from fear – what moves
you outside of those things? What I have learned is that the happy things that
move me, the things that jerk my entire being into the awareness that I live a gorgeously,
beautiful life are more sacred. I want them for my own. I want the memories
only in my heart. Thusly, I don’t share them as quickly. Selfish right?
I am making a movement to
stop that. I am challenging any other
writer who might read this and suffer the same tendencies in the literature
they chose to read or write to open their mind to some pleasant ideas.
It would embarrass him, so I
won’t do it, but I could write an entire blog about how it feels when my little
brother dances with me in my kitchen. It calls up memories of learning to dance
in the kitchen in our youth, the way dancing has always brought joy to our
family, and the perfect recollection of dancing with him at my wedding: the
tears I cried, the words he spoke as I started an exciting new chapter, the
pride in his voice. And all that from 30
seconds of swing dance to an old George Straight song on the radio. The
inspiration I received in this moment lead to 3 pages of personal journal
writing. Pure happiness, and some of my
best work resulted from it.
I went camping with my
husband this summer. It was wonderful.
We saw a moose that was so close to us we could make out the snot dripping
from his nostrils in the early morning air.
I think about that morning, and I taste the campfire biscuits and gravy
in my mouth. I feel the warm sun at 10,000 feet beating down on my back, and I feel
the cooling rush of the breeze as it rushes through the Pine Trees, down to the
river bank, across the road and into the Aspens, rustling the leaves and
creating a symphony in nature greater than anything Bach ever composed. I feel
the gentle pressure of his hand in the small of my back as he gains my
attention and points out a young buck deer on the opposite side of the moose,
but equally close. I hear the sound of
the camera shutter. I feel the effects of a smile creeping up my face and as he
stares into my eyes, and I know that my eyes are doing that sparkling thing he
loves so much that is achieved only in moments of complete, encompassing bliss. Those moments took up less than a minute of
my time, but they inspired hours, and hours, and hours of happy, joyful,
quality writing.
So step away. Of course I have created works of art in
moments of pain, of fear, in the depths of a trial. But I have also, with far much joy in my
life, created works of art when my heart beat full of the kind of deep, red,
happy blood it only bleeds when you are consumed by delight and suffocated with
blissful glee. Feel it, let it cultivate
the artist inside of you, let it consume you.
You just might be surprised with yourself.
Here is an artist’s
rendering of one of the most joyful moments of my life: drinking my favorite
{virgin} morning cocktail, breakfasting at one of my favorite eateries, in the
company of one of my absolute favorite people, laughing from the depths of my
guts, and storing it all away in my memory bank of happiness.