
Photo from Reddit.com
I watch Blondie chase fireflies. Her first time up late and outside, she runs and giggles and squeals, “Hello there, little lightning bug! Hey, wait for me!” Few stars care to share themselves before the sun disappears, but Bo comes across Venus and Jupiter together. “The second star to the right!” Blondie tugs my hand and points beyond our world. “That’s where Tinkerbell and the fairies live. Can we go there?”
“In your dreams, Blondie, sure you can.”
“But I want to go for real.”
“I know, kiddo.” Magic’s for dreams and stories, I want to say, not real life. But she’s five. What does she know?
~*~
I am returning from the library in the next town. Biff and Bash have been living up to their names moreso than usual, so when Bo offers to handle bedtime solo, I flee.
The sun’s brilliance wanes. A thin haze rests upon the treetops. It is the first cloudless sky in days, and I wonder if I shall see some constellations before I reach home.
The stars do not bother. Too much competition.
Never have I seen so many fireflies at once. On either side of the road, from curbside to distant tree lines, slowly circling every corn stalk. Blondie would have called them dancing fairies. I would have agreed.
I find myself jealous of Creation.
Had I built this moment myself, in my head, I could stay in it as long as I choose. I could add more colors to the fireflies and the sunset. I could add a chill in the air to make it more comfortable. I, I, I. I wanted to be in control.
Stories allow that. I can revisit a scene from years ago and rewrite characters’ choices. Natures. Trim every unpleasantness away.
But where is the life in such manipulation?
At some point, I have to stop the fixes and simply let the characters go the ways they wish. I am tempted often to analyze what I’ve done: if I give it just one more go, I can get it right.
But will it really be “just one more go”?
~*~
We cannot see the ripples of consequence until after the stone is thrown. Some of us don’t have hope great enough to fill the palm of one hand; instead, we carry a pebble, a little nothing that could never touch another. Or, like me, some lumber about with a boulder that defines everything, everything we perceive ourselves to be. I aimed my boulder as best I could for graduate school, certain it would teach me the beautiful secrets of writing. Instead, I learned to hate it. It took years of postpartum depression for me to try writing again, and discover its power to heal. I can’t delete the dark thoughts I battled to reach this point. I don’t want to. Because I wouldn’t know, really know, who I am if not for those internal scars.
I still stare into that water sometimes, though, and wonder how much longer I should have held on to that damn boulder. What friendships I should have saved and not abandoned. Which hearts I should have sought and not ignored. I can stare, and stare…and miss the beauty of a hundred fireflies dance around my daughter.
So I do my damndest not to stare. Creators who watch nothing lose control of their worlds, and characters who immerse themselves in nothing can only drown. I am a mother of children who see me as the foundation of their world. I am a wife to a man who dared throw his pebble into the water at, of all things, the sight of me. I am a woman who wants to share her imagination with those who walk away from the water and enter the fireflies. Perhaps we will see each other amidst all the little glows, perhaps not. To miss the dance this year is not the end—one of the best miracles about fireflies is that they come back. Until then, we can look for stones to skip, and, when we’re ready, launch them across the water and make it beautiful. That, to me, is magic.
Writers are creators. They translate their ideas into a story and throw it like a pebble across the water so that ripples travel to the hearts of their readers. Not everyone can pick up a right stone and throw it in a way that makes it bounce off the surface many times and create perfect ripples. It is kind of magic that only chosen can do. Being literate doesn’t make one a writer.
I am certain that your characters are mature enough to live their own life, even without your “one more go” 🙂 I am certain you have picked up a right pebble and made a right swing. Everything I read in this blog is beautiful. Trust your reader 🙂
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That’s one of the loveliest things I think anyone’s ever said to me about my work. You have officially made my week. 🙂 Thank you so much for spurring me on!
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Jean, honestly, your writings are great. Many people can write, and I give them 5* because I don’t feel like I wasted my time on reading – I appreciate what they do. Your writings are like a treat – I enjoy them. It is something different than a mere appreciation 🙂
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Aw, shucks. I feel the same way about your visual art, because let’s face it–the ability to share your eye with others and reveal the beauty of the world around you is true art. And you are a true artist.
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Reblogged this on Stuart France and commented:
Meanwhile Jean Lee’s Night is full of fire-flies…
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Thank you so much for sharing my post! I know there will never be a night like this again.
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Now when I see an asterisk I will see a firefly. Which will make censored swear words so much more enjoyable.
And I am grateful for all your honesty about postpartum, as it has increased my compassion. What higher aim could writing have? Other than the second star to the right.
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Thank you. I think that, apart from balancing my mind, writing has given me a chance to send my children’s imagination to the Neverlands. God-willing, I can hone my skills in time to take them there.
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This is so beautiful. Thank you. When so lived by the sea I would just sit on the beach and watch the waves. The waves would form landscapes and I would be away.
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Thank you. 🙂 That’s how I feel when the clouds rim the horizon at sunset. Another world is out there, and I’m going…
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