Creative Christmas Magic

It always surprises me, how often I will simply fall into a piece of writing. How my creative self leads me without my even being conscious of it most times.

At the moment I am winding down physically and relaxing more. Partly this is due to impending Christmas celebrations, and also because due to a rather annoying injury I sustained at a trampoline park while bouncing with my children, I have very little choice but to take it a bit more easy until I am healed. Yet while my body is chilling and doing little of anything strenuous, my brain is working overtime and coming up with far too many ideas, more than I can realistically keep focused on. Instead, I am doing my usual of punching notes and ideas into my notepads and ‘phone, and apparently using my free time to write about writing, rather than just, you know, writing!

Our family does not do Elf on a Shelf. However, we have, for many years, had a small and amiable elf come around our house from the start of December to leave chocolate coins in hidden places, along with rhyming clues for my children to find them. It has become quite an elaborate ruse over the years and “Merry the Elf” has quite a back-story. He even has a favourite book which he talks about with the children sometimes. This year he got himself an Elfpad and an Elfmail. The children send him messages every day and he replies. Also this year he sent them a chapter of his much talked-about favourite book, and they absolutely loved it. They asked for more!

And so, it would appear, that despite the many writing projects and ideas that are currently buzzing around in my head and clamouring for my attention, I am now writing an elvish fantasy for my children, sending each chapter via email every evening for them to read each morning. It is a genre I have never approached before and in which I feel rather out of my depth.

It is wonderful! I have no plan. I didn’t even sketch out a basic idea before I jumped in head first and started telling the tale, and yet even if it ends up being the roughest, messiest, most random piece of work, it will also be one of my most cherished. It is something I am doing solely for my children. I am sharing my creative self with them, and pouring my love and ideas and joy of writing into every hurriedly-typed chapter, (which I also have to do rather sneakily in snatched moments, so they do not accidentally see what I am writing!)

Perhaps I will edit it eventually, put it together as some sort of book. Maybe I can get it “published” in some manner just for them. I’m certain that they know it is me who is writing it, they are both plenty old enough not to believe in riddle-writing, chocolate-bearing elves any more. Yet we keep up the pretence without fully acknowledging the truth, immersing ourselves completely in the joy of the moment. This bond that we share, their thirst to read the story that I have created just for them and my desire to create it, makes it feel like maybe, just maybe, there really is such a thing as magic.

Writing when you don’t have time to write

(A checklist to help you when you don’t have much time to read either!)

Finding time to write can be difficult, but it’s not impossible.

Ask yourself – Why do you want to write? What are you writing about? What are your goals? Who is your intended audience?

It could be that you simply want to write for your own personal enjoyment and will never share your work. That is a perfectly valid choice.

When do you get “free” time and how can you use it? Get into the routine of making writing time and sticking to it.

Write. Every. Single. Day.

Can you spare fifteen minutes a day? How about twenty? Thirty? An hour? Daily writing is better and more productive than trying to do a big chunk at the weekend. Think about how you spend your day and where you could free up some time just for yourself.

Could you get up ten minutes earlier? Could you snatch fifteen minutes at the end of the day? Also consider when you feel the most productive and least likely to be tempted to procrastinate or find your focus pulled away from you.

How many words do you want to pin down a day? A good goal is at least 2000 words to get some continued progress, but every single word you write is one more than you didn’t write yesterday.

Set yourself achievable and enjoyable goals. Remember, it can take up to thirty days for something new to become an actual habit. Exercising your creative muscles are no different to exercising your physical ones. Small steps can yield giant results.

Find yourself a space where you can write and feel comfortable in. At a desk, in the garden, in the bath or in bed. As soon as you enter your writing space, start writing. Where possible, don’t let anyone else use your writing space. Avoid distractions or the temptation to procrastinate.

How are you capturing your writing? Notebooks, tablets, mobile phone, laptops, sticky notes, or even on the backs of envelopes. Leave whiteboard markers or bath crayons in the shower. Put chalk board paint on the inside of cupboard doors, or hang whiteboards in the kitchen. Put a notebook and pen in the loo!

Consider other apps and software you can use – Dragon Dictate, Apple Dictation (free), Google Docs Voice Typing, and Evernote (free) are all speech-to-type software you can use to capture ideas on the fly.

Recognise that you are shovelling sand to make sand castles – your first pieces of writing will not be your best – the first draft is just you telling yourself the story.

Don’t delete anything. Re-write and edit and re-work things, but keep your originals. It’s good to see how far you have come and you never know if that “failed” story could become something else one day.

Progress not perfection. Finished not fabulous. Keep going and do not worry about whether it is a finished, polished piece. It just needs to be finished for that time. Editing is a whole other process, but you need to get the bones down before you can trim the flesh.

Share it and get feedback, if that is part of your goal. Be brave and put yourself out there. Criticism can be as wonderful as praise if you let it. Don’t let anyone put you down, however. Sure, you’re probably not the best writer in the world… yet!

Additionally, don’t take criticism from anyone you wouldn’t take advice from.

Read a lot, and if you can’t read a lot, listen to a lot of audiobooks and inspirational podcasts. A good writer is an avid reader. Explore all genres, even those you wouldn’t normally indulge in. The best way to become a great writer is to be an avid reader.

Sign up to daily writing challenges or use daily writing apps to get your creativity going. Don’t wait for inspiration to arrive or until you “feel like” writing. Show up, show up, show up and eventually the Muse will show up too.

Enjoy it. Every word. For it is your creation and they are your thoughts. Be proud of your achievements regardless of how big or small they are.

Love all your writing.


I would dearly love to credit the artist of the header image used, but my Googlefu has failed me. If you know who made this, please let me know so I can credit accordingly.

Of silence, the land, the wind and the sea.

Real silence can be a strange experience for some people. Even when alone, they seek to fill it with noise – television, or music, or simply their own voice – they can never really enjoy the silence. Perhaps they find it uncomfortable, or empty. My children are in another part of the house, playing with LEGO I believe, and I can sit here at my desk, watching the massive bumblebees launch themselves at the flowers in the garden, and at the glass in the window panes, and just enjoy the small, ambient noises of the world waking up, the loudest sound right now is the click of my keyboard as I type. If ever I want to, I can remove or turn off my hearing aids, immerse myself in almost total silence on a whim. Just for the peace it brings me.

I went swimming yesterday, in the ocean, in the rain. I cannot wear my hearing aids in the water, so I must always swim in almost complete silence. That combination, it was a life’s first for me, and was absolutely amazing.

It occurred to me, swaying and drifting in the water, that I never really truly felt like I belonged anywhere in the UK, even in Whitby, where I was born and grew up. Here, and now, feels like I am exactly where I should be. I don’t sometimes feel displaced because I am not from here, I sometimes feel displaced because I feel like I should have been here many years ago and I am only just catching up with myself. That realisation, although completely wonderful, also slightly scares me, because sometimes it doesn’t feel real, or maybe it even feels too real.

The author, William Gibson, talks about jet lag being your soul catching up with your body, and sometimes it can feel like I have simply been experiencing an extremely long period of jet lag. It is not tied necessarily to my physical space, however, it is linked more to how I feel and who I am now. I was born 12,000 miles away from here, and yet equally I was born right here, because here is where I have found myself. It wouldn’t have mattered where in the world we had ended up, it was the process, the journey that was important. I needed that shake-up, that complete change, to pull me out of stagnation and see what was real. I have an Old Life and a New Life. I know I got on an aeroplane, and I know I travelled here, but sometimes the only way I can remember it is if I look at pictures, the disconnect can be so strong. Perhaps that is a good thing. Perhaps it is New Life papering over the cracks of the Old and allowing me that fresh page.

Sometimes I feel like I have been brought here for a reason, that the sea has brought me here, and it might be a while before that reason is revealed to me. Perhaps I am only a passage, a vessel for my children, or for my children’s children, my reason is only a stepping stone. For now, though, I am simply happy to be here.

I have found it a very important and enlightening process with regards to fitting in and settling here, to research the culture and ancestry of New Zealand. I understand that this emotional relationship with certain places is what Māori call tūrangawaewae – places where they feel a strong, spiritual connection to the land. It is connected to their Iwi – their people. I am not Maori, I am not even properly Pakehā, my ancestry comes from the Celts and possibly the Norse. I cannot, and do not want to, claim such a feeling, but I think maybe I do understand a little of what it can mean to them, and I think I can feel the energy of the land. How that energy rises up and reveals itself. It is an understanding and appreciation of how the land is precious and sacred, and that nature, and what it gives us, should be respected. To Māori I believe it means kinship and a right to stand in such a place – it is land where they feel empowered and connected to their Iwi. It is their foundation, their place in the world, and their home. It is a beautiful thing.

Please do forgive me and educate me if I have misinterpreted or misunderstood in any way.

For me, a white woman, an outsider and what some might call tauiwi, I want to find a way of expressing how I feel without any appropriation. Right now I hope I can settle for “being” yet also acknowledging that I am here only on my merits, that I will always be walking on borrowed land, and that is how it should be.

So, back to the silence.

I think the two loudest sounds here are the wind and the sea, although obviously the sea is only truly loud when you are close to it, while the wind comes around your house, knocking on windows and rattling doors, demanding to be acknowledged. Wind is obnoxious, even on a calm day. It has many forms, but it always feels like the most intrusive of the elements. With other forms of weather there are ways to avoid it or hide from it, but wind seems absolutely determined to find you.

“Hi! Hello! I’m here again!” It seems to say, as it grabs you by the ears with both hands and leans into your face. It can be like a demanding toddler, or a sedate old man. It can run and whoop and swirl, or it can meander and caress. Either way it seems impossible to hide from it completely. In that way it is the partner of the sea. Both are unstoppable and will do exactly as they wish. Both have great power and strength, the ability to ravage and destroy, but they can be equally calm and restful. They do as they like and have no consideration for what gets in their way. You must learn to accept them and work with them, or accept that you will always be fighting against them. A fight you will never win.

Those two sounds, the wind and sea, serve to make Wellington the wild and wonderful place it is, and it makes it feel in many ways that the people who live here are forever skirting the edges of that wildness They know they must work with the elements, or the elements will make life so much more hard and less enjoyable. Not with malice or with any real intention, but because that’s just what they do.

“Why fight us when we are so much greater than you? That’s simply how we are.”

I feel like too many people fight the wind and the sea in their lives, perhaps without realising it. I know I did. They still believe that they can tame the elements without appreciating or understanding their immensity. They see the wind as a nuisance to be overcome, the sea a force to be tamed. That is not true. To wilfully ignore, or worse, challenge, these elements in your life, ultimately never ends well. Life does not, and should not, always have to be a battle.

Here and now, I am not afraid of the wind or the sea, even though I am fully aware of the destruction they can cause. I prefer to celebrate how impressive they both are. The wind and the sea, they stop for no-one. Fighting them is pointless, embracing them is the only true way to acknowledge their strength. You can keep your calm days, give me instead the power of the wind and sea, the roar of both in my ears. A calm day may be beautiful; the sea, gentle, the wind, a mere kiss on the cheeks, but at any point the weather may change, and there is absolutely nothing you can do about that. Embrace the power and the wildness, or spend your days always railing against that which does not care about your emotions, your plans or your ambitions, and can flatten you without a thought.

Yesterday, floating in the ocean as the rain spattered down on the waves, making rings and ripples in the water, I felt completely at peace. Without my hearing aids, I experienced almost complete silence, and yet somehow the sounds were there, in my head. I could feel them around me. I could feel that energy. I completely relaxed and was at one with the elements, allowing them to move me, in so many ways. In that moment, I felt like I did not ever want to get out of the water and rejoin the land again, that the sea could take me wherever it wanted. Then I remembered the danger, how the tide could so easily take me, and sweep me out to a place where I could not get back from, even if I wanted to.

I swam back to the shore, grateful to feel the land underneath my feet again.

Becoming Open

I’ve been inspired by another writer friend, whose work I absolutely adore, to write about what the creative process means to me.
Content warning: mental health, depression, grief
Also, this gets quite long.

BECOMING OPEN

I write a lot about writing, and the positive benefits to my mental health when I write, but I recently realised that I haven’t spoken much about where my ideas come from, where they take me and why writing for mental health is so important to me.

I carry my thoughts with me for a long time before I commit them to paper, or laptop. At any one time, I can be thinking about, and working on, one, two or even seventeen different creative pieces. Mostly these ideas are just snippets of inspiration that have come to me – a single line or an interesting image. They can be a reflection of something I have felt or seen that day, a reaction to a situation or an emotional stimulus. Sometimes they come from moments of active observation: people, nature, or current affairs. Other times they might come to me completely randomly, like when you wake up with a song in your head. What I realise now is how my behaviour and approach to writing has increased the frequency of these sparks arriving.

I tend to see inspiration as a snapshot, a single, fleeting image that quite often arrives without warning and can leave just as quickly if not captured. I call these ideas Thought Butterflies. Almost every time an idea will start with a line that just appears out of nowhere. It grows and swells, and entwines itself all around inside me until I am able to give it my full attention. I imagine the Thought Butterflies lifting, soaring and landing upon me, leaving little pieces of inspiration in their wake; and I can be inspired by anything!

A twisted piece of driftwood which looks strangely like the shape of a horse; a song lyric heard on the radio in a shop; a doll in the window of a neighbour’s house; the daisies on the lawn I keep meaning to get rid of. I take hundreds of pictures on my ‘phone of things I see and places I go, and I know at least one of them will ignite a spark, sometimes days, months or even years later. The more attention I give the Thought Butterflies and stay creatively active, the more inspiration and I fulfilment I receive through my writing. This is, however, quite a new experience for me.

I finished my first and only novel in 2016, but have hardly touched it since. I haven’t even contemplated the editing process, which it so desperately needs. I wrote it to prove to myself that I could, that I was capable of committing over 80,000 words to a project, but when I look back at it now, it needs a lot of polishing and in fact, I have accepted that I will probably scrap most of it and rewrite it. That does not mean it is all bad, I still think it has good bones. It was something that, at the time, needed to be done. I was struggling with my emotional and physical health, unhappy with where I was living and the direction my life was taking. A random meeting with an author who I had admired for many years gave me the inspiration, and the metaphorical kick up the backside, to sit down and write again. Not only that, to actually finish a project. It gave me a focus and drive, and even though I doubted myself and any talent I might have, it was addictive and brilliant fun. I lost myself in that novel, and as a consequence, I found myself too.

Then life moved on again and took me down many different paths, and my writing routine was changed once more.

It always amazes me how many of my friends have said to me, “oh, I used to write, but I don’t have the time now,” and I fully understand what they mean by that, because just over seven months ago I was exactly the same. I didn’t give any time to writing. I ignored my brief creative urges in favour of passive entertainment or, perhaps even worse, household chores. Less than a year before that, my family and I moved 12,000 miles to the other side of the world, and rather than use that amazing experience as inspiration, I completely shut down. It was, altogether, Too Much.

I suspect that one of the hardest parts of being an immigrant is not feeling like you are allowed to talk about how hard it is. There is an underlying feeling that everything that happens, good and bad, is entirely because of your own choices. The understanding that “you made your own bed, now lie in it.” You are torn between wanting and needing help and support, and feeling like you also have to prove to everyone how tough you are, how capable. There are a lot of ups and downs and tests of your emotional stamina, not to mention a whole lot of firsts to discover. I had to focus on what was in front of me before I could give any of my energy elsewhere.

In January my husband bought me the most beautiful notebook. Gold and red, embossed with an image by Alphonse Mucha – one of my favourite artists. It was almost too beautiful. I couldn’t bring myself to write anything in it until the end of April, I was so worried that I would ruin it in some way. Eventually, I woke up one morning and simply decided the time was right. I couldn’t even say what prompted this feeling, other than it was a particularly sunny and joyous morning, and as I sat with my first cup of coffee looking out at the intensely blue sea from the back window of our house, feeling so incredibly lucky, I felt moved to write something.

My first entry on the first page begins:

“I have been waiting to write in this notebook, but for what I’m not sure. I think, perhaps, for nice things, lovely things, beautiful things, to match how nice and lovely and beautiful this notebook is. But when you wait, for the circumstances to be right, for the planets of inspiration to align, for the muse to descend and bring the spark, then you could be waiting forever. And with each period of waiting, as more time passes, the task becomes more daunting and intimidating. I believe that writing in a new notebook is almost always a parallel to your life. Will you wait until you feel that your entry can be perfect, your handwriting neat and all spellings correct, or will you simply throw your heart and soul into it, scribbling your adventures as you discover them?”

It was the start of something, an awakening I had been waiting for without knowing it. Like a deep breath I had been holding in, without realising that I had been doing so, and now I could finally exhale. People talk about the floodgates opening, about ideas tumbling and surging when the creative block is finally lifted, and it absolutely was like that. I refer to it as “curing my creative constipation”, not a unique description I know, but it was as if that simple act of finally putting something onto paper began to flush all the emotional crap out of my system. I felt the beginnings of rejuvenation, of the enjoyment in being inspired.

And then a good friend passed away.

I was floored. They had lived in the UK, and I was in New Zealand. I couldn’t be there or do anything physically, so I tried my best to connect with people online but it wasn’t the same. I felt so sad and so angry and I missed her so much. At the same time my health was worrying me, and the health of my eldest child was worrying me. I missed my family and my old friends, and I felt like people were abandoning me because I was no longer present with them. The time-zone difference made communicating hard. I didn’t have the same support systems I had back in the U.K., and only a few New Zealand friends I could discuss how I really felt with. One supposed friend abandoned me without warning. It was winter, and I hated how cold I always felt and how damp our house was. I could see I was losing my connection with my best friend in the U.K. due to distance, but I struggled to talk to them because they had so many of their own problems which were taking up their time. I made mistakes, I put my trust in the wrong people, I forgot about being honest with myself about who I was. I stopped writing joyously and started writing through sadness.

The stereotype of the “tortured artist” is well known and well spoken of, and many of the most wonderful poets and authors have written about loss and grief and trouble times. It is an essential part of human nature to experience both good and bad emotions, but, for me, writing about feeling sad is not fulfilling. It does not nurture me, nor offer me escape, it merely compounds my sadness and makes me focus on the terrible, without acknowledging the good. I forget about the many positive things that still surround me, regardless of how big or small they may be.

Depression and anxiety are not new to me, I have experienced both since my teens. I understand the shame and stigma some feel at admitting this, why it is frequently portrayed as being weak or bad, and I actively try to challenge and change this way of thinking through talking about and writing about mental health, to help others overcome their fears. For me it is just another ailment no different from my deafness and Diabetes. It is a part of me but it does not define me. I sometimes have to recognise it and give it a bit more of my time, but I also know it will never beat me, because it never has yet. My depression has cost me relationships in the past, with others no doubt seeing me as unstable or difficult. Now I have become marvellously adept at hiding my very darkest periods from anyone other than my closest family, I also recognise that I have cycles which ebb and flow and as long as I keep myself safe it will pass.

My writing between June and September is very, very bleak. It shows the desperation I was feeling, and the losses I had experienced. How everything compounded into a massive ball of Too Much which I did not feel equipped to cope with. It shows very clearly the unique ways that depression and anxiety affect your mind and twist your thoughts, and convince you that the darkness is all that you deserve.

Yet I was still writing. As horrible and as sad and as empty as I felt, something, some little part of me or the energy of the universe, was still encouraging me, leading me, allowing me an outlet to get those feelings out. I wasn’t writing things to share at that time, they were thoughts for myself not for others. I immersed myself completely in how I felt, I let the darkness in and danced with it, yet I found as more time passed I began to speak more kindly to myself.

By September I was writing every day, sometimes just a few lines, other times I would start drafting short stories. I entered a writing competition. I resurrected my old writing blog. I realised that a Facebook group that I had created not long after arriving in New Zealand could be put to better use as a support group for writers, using writing as a tool to encourage better mental health for women. My writing became less dark and more hopeful. I focused less on loss and more on new beginnings, about embracing and celebrating all of life. I remembered all the wonderful, creative and fearless things my friend used to do, and vowed to do more of those things myself.

At the end of September I decided to create another Facebook page, this time just for my own creative ventures, a place where I could share my written and artistic works. I think at first I was hoping for more feedback, more interaction between artist and audience, but as time went on I realised I didn’t need that feedback as much as I thought I did. It became obvious that I was still writing very much for my own enjoyment and peace, that the opinions of others – praise or criticisms – were irrelevant.

A lot of writers worry that they aren’t “good enough”, that they should leave the creating to those who have more talent or skill, but I believe that’s complete rubbish. If you want to write or create, do it. If you feel the calling to make something new, just have a go. Admittedly, there are a lot of courses and classes you can immerse yourself in and learn the nuts and bolts of writing, but I truly believe that anyone can write if they simply allow themselves the opportunity to. A writer friend of mine often speaks of listening, of giving yourself the permission to write, and she is absolutely right. The ideas are there, and the ability, you just need to find the right environment to coax them out. Do not concern yourself with how “good” or “bad” they may be. After all, art is subjective, what one person finds exquisite, another may abhor.

The most important thing for me when writing is to write every day. Every single day. Without fail, without excuses, without trying to make things perfect and complete, but just filling the space with my thoughts. My creativity is a muscle which I need to flex and exercise. If I don’t use it for a while, it doesn’t disappear completely, but it definitely becomes impaired. My thoughts come slower, my writing feels more difficult, I’ll be more inclined to give up and leave things unfinished. If I write every day, even if I consider the standard of my writing to be very poor, at least I’ve provided my brain with a workout. This mental workout is also very important to me from a medical perspective, as I am concerned about the possibility of suffering from Alzheimer’s as I age. I fall into an “at risk” group, and multiple scientific studies suggest that doing something to keep your brain active is just as important, possibly even more so, as keeping your body fit. It is also one of the reasons why I wholeheartedly enjoy learning; developing new skills and challenging myself through unfamiliar experiences.

The second most important thing for me is “progress not perfection.” It is a mantra I was made aware of by my husband, and finally, after many, many years of trying, I understand it. It is surprisingly easy to fall into the trap of believing that if your work is not as good as you want it to be, it must be pointless, and rather than try to improve it, you abandon it. My notebooks, phone and laptop are filled with unfinished pieces – one thing I never, ever do is delete anything I’ve written – and it could be depressing to realise just how much time I have “wasted” on these fragmented ideas, but of course, nothing that brings you joy or motivates you in some way is a poor use of your time. I have found myself revisiting some of these older works and stealing lines or characters from them, weaving them into something new. Now I always make sure I finish something, even if finished does not always mean complete. I often revisit recent poems and restructure them, or rewrite them from a different perspective. Lines I have scribbled down intended for one thing might end up somewhere completely different. They might merge together and form new verses, or perhaps they might simply serve as a stepping stone, a jumping off point from where I can ride the river of thought and see where it takes me.

Now mental health forms a large part of my inspiration. I write about it, draw and paint about it, and talk openly about it. On days when I am emotionally exhausted and demotivated, I might only manage a few lines of writing, short shower-thoughts or in-the-car ideas. On heavy, black days I write of the darkness; spitting out harsh, sharp, bitter thoughts, born from a place of emotional hurt. Sometimes, when I can feel things changing, I focus on the good and the positive and being grateful. I can manipulate my emotions in this way, turn the metaphorical wheel and steer away from any negativity for a while.

Writing for mental health is not the same as writing about mental health. Granted, it can be, and sometimes exploring the darker or more complex side of your emotions is an important and useful strategy in establishing a positive mental space, but I think it is simpler than that. Writing for the pure enjoyment of writing, brings focus. Pouring a part of yourself into something you create is both liberating and invigorating. It allows you to take time to explore your thoughts and emotions in the way you need to. It gives you connections and opens new doors. You just have to let yourself Open.

Being Open for me, initially, was raw. I had to peel back a layer of myself, to expose and explore what was underneath. It took time for me to be honest with myself about what I wanted to say. There were thoughts I wanted to share but didn’t know how and I had built up many, many protective layers over time. I tried to go too deep too quick and realised that I needed to take a step back and just write as I breathed – slowly, calmly, and without even really thinking about it. Once I allowed myself to Open, the words came more easily, and it felt natural and peaceful. Being Open gave me the time to be more grateful, to appreciate everything I had accomplished and achieved. I made me thankful of the opportunities I had been given and the unique experiences I had lived through. Being Open did not mean that the darkness wasn’t there any more, or that everything was suddenly all positivity and joy, but it meant that I was more able to shift my focus, to see beyond the immediate situation and seek out ways I could learn or grow from each experience. Feelings did not consume me in the ways they had before. More than anything, it improved my writing immeasurably.

My writing group, Well-Written, is a safe space aimed at helping women in Wellington to support each other, to guide them towards the creative tools they might benefit from to heal or grow. One in six New Zealand adults have been diagnosed with a common mental disorder at some time in their lives. This includes depression, bipolar disorders and anxiety disorders. The statistics are even higher for women, and while women may be more willing to seek treatment and to talk openly about their experiences, these numbers show no signs of getting better. I want my writing, and that of others in the community, to be part of a powerful driving force that helps things improve. A way of recognising how we can use our creativity to overcome the things that hold us back or prevent us from being our best selves.

It sounds terribly melodramatic to say that writing saved my life, but it did, and it continues to do so every single day. It presents to me a unique pathway to find different ways of understanding and accepting how I feel. I do not doubt myself or my ability any more. There are no “rules” of perfect writing, or if there are, I don’t follow them. I can write to feel good; to explore my feelings and reflect on my emotions; to remember people, places and things I have done; to exorcise any negative thoughts; or simply to grow, bloom and be thankful.

Now I am Open I understand that becoming a writer begins with a simple but important belief: You are already a writer; you just need to write.

T.L.Wood

November 2018

Lines


These lines on my face do not worry me

They are not imperfections which I feel the need to hide

These lines are the roadmap of my journey

They are creases in the pages of my story

They are tiger stripes earned through courage, strength and determination

They are cracks in the glaze of a shattered mask I no longer choose to wear

They are the outlines of my joy traced by the tiny fingers of my children

They remember the kiss of the glorious sun and the curse of the biting cold

They are the echoes of past smiles and angry exchanges

They are reminders of my persistence, of my privilege to age

They are reflections of my maternal history, a spiderweb of anchoring threads

Which link me to my mother, and her mother before her,

Beloved and belonging

We share these features as we share our blood and bond

These lines are crevices in a gorge of greater understanding

Valleys of bountiful experience, a rolling riverbed of love

They are stitches in the tapestry of who I am,

Grooves in the printed record of my memories,

They are deep cuts, healed, scarred and made new, made more strong

These lines on my face do not worry me

They are not the strokes of sketched mistakes which I could erase

Or change to fit and please

They are the unfettered movements of a dancing leaf, drawn in the morning dust

They are the edges of my everything,

Of my life.

Being a Triangle

A lot of things change when you make the decision to emigrate, and in some ways the actual move can be the least hard. Culture shock, and it’s ongoing effects, influence so many areas of an immigrant’s life, and it can feel like no sooner have you established yourself in one phase, another challenge will come along.

An immigrant friend of mine made me aware of the idea of “becoming a triangle”. In the broadest terms, this is what happens when a person from one country moves to another and undergoes strong changes in how they live their life. A Circle from Circle Land can move across the world to Square Land, but they will never be a real Square, regardless of how long they stay and how well they integrate into their new society. Instead, they retain certain parts of their circleness and absorb some attributes of the Squares, eventually changing to become a Triangle. Even if they were to return to Circle Land, they will never return to being a true Circle. Their experiences, both those good and bad, will have changed them in far too many ways. The exception to this rule is when a young child moves to a new country. They tend not to become Triangles, but instead take on aspects of their Circle past and Square present, plus those of their Triangle parents, to become Stars.

Becoming a Triangle isn’t an instant change, in fact it can be ongoing for many, many years, and it is not always obvious to those becoming Triangles that it is even happening. They might recognise that they don’t feel like a Circle any more, but they are also very aware that they are not a Square. This is not necessarily a negative feeling, more a very acute understanding that they are in a state of flux and change. Many people push too hard in this phase, desperate to be affiliated with and accepted by the Squares, to shed their Circleness as swiftly as possible. Others may shun this process, and work at trying to change their environment to suit them, they attempt to make their life in Square Land as close to how it was in Circle Land.

I can feel that I am a Triangle already, in fact for me it happened very quickly. Perhaps because I was not happy with my life in Circle Land, and because I was fully ready for adventure and change. I suspect also that there is a part of me that just fits in Square Land which I had never found in my home country. The pace, the attitudes, the negativity I experienced is simply not there in Square Land. It would be naive to think that there is none of that in my new country, because of course that is not true, but even now the honeymoon phase has passed, I am still completely in love with the good things my new home is offering me.

I think one of the very hard parts of adjusting is feeling the emotional flow of what is happening, and understanding how you are changing as a person. I felt like in the first year I was still very temporary, that at any point someone may come along and tell me I had to return to Circle Land. I felt a mixture of emotions from the people “back home”, which is how I still referred to it. It was interesting to me to see how people responded when they knew of my plans, how at the time it felt like very few were truly and genuinely happy for me. There was a focus on grief and loss and how my presence would be missed, and less on the wonderful experiences I was about to have. Jealousy, selfishness and anger seemed quite common. The idea that I was deliberately leaving people and that it was somehow a personal affront. Some friends even stopped talking to me before I left. Perhaps it was my own worries and uncertainties affecting me, but it also felt like some people wanted me to fail. In contrast, those who were happy for me really were very happy. They focused on the positive changes, the amazing opportunities, and the beauty of the adventure. These are the Circles I still keep in contact with.

You expect the culture shock feelings in the first year or so, that period of initial fitting in and settling down, so it has been a constant surprise to me to find that those elements continue to influence how I feel. Right now I am in the phase where I have accepted that there are some people who were extremely prominent in my life who I am unlikely to ever see again. The logistics and financial impact of travelling back to Circle Land just aren’t feasible, and, if I am truly honest, there is a reticence in me to return. So I feel grief and loss myself, yet in a strange way, because those people are still there, it’s just they are no longer fully present in my life.

Thanks to the internet we are able to keep contact with almost anyone, and before I moved I felt like that would make things considerably easier to keep in touch. I believe now that it has made some things much harder. I can follow people on Facebook or write emails to catch up, but the presence is not really there. I feel like an intruder into people’s lives, and, perhaps weirdly, I feel like they are intruding in mine. I have entered another phase, where I am becoming aware of what friendship really means to me, and also recognising that a number of the relationships I have fostered in Square Land are already more fulfilling and healthy than some I maintained in Circle Land. The people I now choose to associate with are often those who have had similar experiences to me; they may be immigrants who understand how it feels to be a Triangle, or they are Squares who are passionate and ambitious, who have an overwhelmingly positive attitude.

My husband talked of one of the differences in attitude between Circles and Squares. Ask a Circle how they’re feeling and they’ll likely say “Not bad”. Ask the same question of a Square and they say “Pretty good.” It might seem like a tiny thing, but it has an impact, especially on emotional health. It is perhaps that difference that I noticed so keenly in the communication I kept with many Circles. Not all, but many.

It becomes exhausting, that emotional tug of war; of feeling the guilt that you did leave people behind, but the joy in fully embracing your new life. At wanting to keep past friends in your life because they are important to you and you love them, but also feeling like they anchor you to the past, when you want to live totally and completely in the present. When you realise that some relationships were actually incredibly toxic and were holding you back, and now you are free from that.

Family give another different pull once again. Being so far away from them and losing that network of love and support is very, very difficult, but also in doing so you realise that friends, neighbours, co-workers and local community, can all become your new family of sorts, that your support network can be as big or as small as you let it be. You just have to work at it, to make the family you need for yourself.

I do not miss any aspect of my life as a Circle, in fact my only regret is not becoming a Triangle much sooner. The experiences I’ve had and the widening of my world view has been invaluable. I came from a tiny village two miles away from Whitby on the North East coast of the U.K. to live in Wellington, the capital city of Aotearoa, New Zealand, 12,000 miles away from where I was born. This is not the place where I have lived and loved and grown up. It is not the land of my family, nor that of my ancestors, but my heart knows I feel at home here. I am a Triangle, and I am completely happy with that.


Credit – with sincere thanks to Naomi Hattaway and her article ‘I am a triangle and other tips for repatriation’ September 2013, for being the inspiration for this post. https://www.naomihattaway.com/blog/2013/09/i-am-a-triangle-and-other-thoughts-on-repatriation