looking through me

Tag: writing

open hands

Someone asked me about my writing process. It seemed like such an odd question. I just write. There’s not a lot of process to it. I sit with my laptop and type.

But I realized that’s not entirely true.

Usually I have a tiny idea. No more than a seed. I’m not sure it has the potential to grow much less what it might turn into if it germinates. So I write the seed. I describe it. And then, if I hold it loosely enough in my hand, it begins to grow. As it does I keep writing, describing its transformation.

I’m surprised to see what it becomes. I hold it in an open hand; slowly turning it and studying it and being willing to ruthlessly prune off the runners, tidy up the displaced dirt, weed out the false starts . . . often the thoughts I loved best need to be trimmed or cut out entirely.

It’s organic—a process of discovery.

Yet if at any stage I close my hand, it’s over. As soon as I think I’m on to something and try to grab it and hold it, I squelch it. When my fist forms—whether from confidence, excitement or frustration—I stifle the growth and lose my words.

It’s a process strangely like prayer can be.

When I come before God with the people and issues weighing on me held loosely—cupped in open palms—my prayers often take courses I couldn’t have anticipated.

It’s not that I come without an agenda, but I come with the understanding of my weakness to affect situations by my own initiative. I come with passion and desire but no power.

And as I hold them in God’s presence, I offer them up with my inadequate words and His words He brings to my mind. At times I’m astounded to hear what I’m praying: He reveals avenues of hope and peace for the journey.

When I come with closed hands, clenched fists, the conversation ceases. I cling to what I want to happen, I spend my words holding to my ideas and am unable to grasp the thoughts of God. I’ve left no room for Him to turn the issues over and show me the facets I’ve missed.

Even so, I frequently find myself staring at a blank screen or reiterating the same thoughts. Don’t I know better yet? If I uncurl my fingers, relax my tensed hands and describe what’s before me . . . He will faithfully guide once more.

 

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reading my writing

Reading my own writing is bizarre—like looking in a Picasso-esque mirror. It’s such a fragmented image of me.

In reality each piece is a snapshot, a moment in time, how I was processing a particular aspect of life on a particular day. Often they are thoughts that had been bubbling, inarticulate, unformed just under the surface for long stretches. And then in a gracious moment of clarity they congealed enough to fit into words. I’ve simply preserved them as reminders for myself in the hazier moments.

I fear I seem much more put together and a far deeper thinker in writing than I really am. They are my words—my thoughts—but they are an incomplete picture. The vast majority of my thoughts remain haphazard: a nebulous, amorphous jumbled blend of sentence fragments and vague images.

So when they do come together and fall into a logical shape I want to preserve them. Not because they’re in any way remarkable, but because I am frighteningly good at getting lost in the foggy moments. When it’s dark, I forget the light. When my visibility shrinks, I need to be reminded my field of vision has been greater before . . . and it will be again.

That’s why I write. It takes away my excuse to live narrowly. It takes away my deniability. It holds me accountable for lessons learned.

But who I am is both much more and much less than the words trailing behind me in print.