Monday, February 18, 2013

This No-Writing Life


I stopped writing when I stopped sleeping all night.  Up until menopause I was the perfect sleeper, as soon as my head hit the pillow, unconscious until dawn or longer.  I assumed this was my great luck, just like my perfect health.  With the onset of this female condition that no one ever talks about, even when there are multiple aging women fanning themselves in the same meeting, I now wake up several times a night to flap my bed coverings, and unstick my sweaty body from where it was glued into the bed.  Over the years, these symptoms have diminished (though not ended), but my brain has given up sleeping for eight hours in a row and I have entered the long twilight of insomniacs. 



Then I lost my job and worry became a new excuse for sleeplessness.  At the end of each fruitless day I  detail all the things I had not done to better my situation and all the things I would surely do better the next day, and after hours of lists, I fall unconscious in disgust.  Then I get a job which entails an early and late commute that I begrudge so much I never get to bed when I should, and when I do, there are still the thrice nightly time checks that I seemingly must do, just to prove the night is both terribly long and short.  After awhile, I get used to living tired.   Which leaves no room for inspiration. Or dictation of inspiration. 



But I’m always trying to do better.  Recently, I sought writing therapy with a workshop with Kim Stafford.  There were two days of effortless words.  Then nothing.



 So this is me, writing about doing better.  Right before I go to bed early, to try and break the chain.

3 comments:

  1. I know how you feel. I was worry stressed about my husband all the time. It caused me to be up and down a lot and loose sleep because of caring for him. I also would have to go down during the night to help when he fell so I lost much solid sleep. He died Nov. 10th. He had septicemia and ended up developing heart problems, had a stroke, got brain damage from the lack of oxygen to his brain due to the septicemia and then got double pneumonia. I had come home Monday, Nov. 5th to find him unconscious and unresponsive. he was talking that morning.
    Apparently he had sepsis already but I had no idea cuz he said nothing. If I'd had help it would have probably been discovered in time.
    But cannot go back. I did the best I could in caring for him. And I loved him.
    It has been hard but I am starting to move on. I
    wake at night still thinking I hear him, sometimes going to help him before I realize he is gone.

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  2. After reading Rose L's comment I feel the sadness and gravity of all the many reasons why people suffer from sleep deprivation. I still hope you can break the chain. While I'm at it, I hope she can too. But I'd just like to point out that while the words may not be flowing, the pictures are. Your photographs are exquisite: full of life, full of energy, chlorophyll, and all that you're so great at imaging.

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  3. So when you lie there wakeful, appreciate the feel of a soft, clean bed, with a solid roof overhead. Inhale, exhale, appreciate lungs that work and a heart that pushes your blood along so reliably. Stretch your long legs, then let them relax and appreciate how wonderful it is to be able to get up and walk without pain or extra equipment. If worries plague you, stuff them into a box and ship them off to Paris Hilton. And go back to appreciating how very wonderful your life is. When you wake in the wee hours, consider it a chance to practice being happy. Meditate on your blessings. Let the worries go bother someone else. Inhale. Exhale. At the very least, your body is resting, even if your busy mind insists on running its hamster wheel.

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