Sharing creative space has more benefits than
drawbacks. It allows for unexpected
eddies of idea to flow back and forth across a table, across a room. While I hold pen she holds hook or
needle. Sentences tangle across my page
while woollen circles come to life in her hands.
I see the things she has made in ways other than she
intended. My writer’s eye turns them
into creatures from beneath the sea - sponges and anemones. Unlikely lichens crusting strange trees.
I see pieces that draw in on themselves and others that
sprawl, refusing to have a uniform outline.
I see ones that are dense and others that are wiling to let light
through. I realise that all of these
accusations can be levelled at my writing.
The company of her crocheted
clouds keeps me warm.
Before too long my first word doily is taking shape on my
page. I turn the paper as I work. My letters are stitches, my phrases
chains. I start off neater than I
finish. My written hand loses meaning –
the words become mere wiggled lines of ink.
And in this form even my errors start to appeal. A wonky letter or a word repeated where it
shouldn’t be – my equivalent of a dropped stitch, a loose section.
From a distance, like an overheard conversation, only the pattern
vaguely recognisable – but as you draw closer, words and perhaps meaning start
to take shape.
1 comment:
Oh, your words are beautiful, so beautiful, as ever. 'Unlikely lichens' and 'crocheted clouds' are just perfect descriptions. And yes, those points you make do apply to your writing as well - words and stitches are similar beasts perhaps.
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