Waiting to be picked

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If you’re not enough without the gold medal, you’ll never be enough with it.

– John Candy, Cool Runnings

I did not do very well at school. Academically I peaked aged about 12. Frightened I would never keep up with the bright kids, and feeling a fraud for being in their class, I lost my nerve. So I got lazy instead.

Sport wasn’t much better. I was one of those perennial ‘reliable’ players who made the seconds, never the firsts.

For these reasons I have always hated being picked. To this day I dread sending my poems out to magazines. Even if I know the editor and have had poems in the magazine before. Even if they are my friend. Even if they have asked to see some poems. Especially then. I type them up, shamefully, and with sudden interest in font sizes, procrastinating.

I don’t know why I put myself through it. They do not even have merit. I only send them out to confirm what I know already, that they are worthless. If one is accepted it is not a miracle but a fluke.

Great waves of anxiety make their way up my arms as I hold the envelope in front of me, checking and rechecking the stamped addressed envelope, the address of the editor, the tone of my letter, have I put in too much detail? What if they have completely forgotten who I am? (They probably never knew in the first place.) Perhaps if I won a competition or two, I tell myself. . .

But I am useless at those.

Don’t get me started.

Every time I hope it will be different, and every time it is the same. Shame. Fear. Anxiety. Just like the back row of Form 1A. Feeling a Fraud.

The wonderful poet Kim Moore has reminded us of the gap between hope and disappointment this week in her brilliant blog post about not winning a prize having been short-listed for one. (An aside: Kim’s pamphlet If We Could Speak Like Wolves is stunning. You really do need to read it. If I were editor of a poetry press I would sign her up this instant. She is already a star.)

There’s a lovely section in Kim’s piece about ‘returning to herself’ the morning after the night before, wandering empty streets at 5 a.m.. As she makes clear, the job of returning to oneself, even in the course of a normal day let alone getting dressed up for a prize or special event, is the real and main struggle of writing and of life. Without dropping down into silence and solitude we will write nothing, less still send work to magazines, useless or not.

With its brave portrayal of the public and private face of life as a poet, Kim’s piece reminded me obliquely of that marvellous poem by Jaan Kaplinski, from Evening Brings Everything Back (Bloodaxe, 2004), the one which begins ‘In the morning I was presented to President Mitterrand,/in the evening I weeded-out nettles under the currant bushes.’

The poem continues:

  . . . In the evening
I saw the full moon rise above the alder grove. Two bats
circled over the courtyard. The President’s hand
was soft and warm. As were his eyes
where fatigue was, in a curious way,
mingled with force, and depth with banality.
He had bottomless night eyes
with something mysterious in them
like the paths of moles underground
or the places where bats hibernate and sleep.

As in much of Kaplinski’s work, there is attention to detail in regard to both the grand and the domestic. There is also a palpable sense of the ‘mysterious’, with no overweening attempt to draw meaning from the apparently artlessly juxtaposed forces of bats, the President, and subterranean moles. On one level it is possible to read those ‘weeded-out nettles’ as a kind of necessary recuperation of the soul as it were, a deliberate returning towards the self and to solitude.

I also like to think, however, that Kaplinski places them where he does in the poem not to diminish his rising to high places, but merely to indicate that it is all of a piece. In this Janus-like way the poem becomes a kind of note-to-self to concentrate on the main thing and treat the ‘gold medal’ of meeting the President in exactly the same way as his gardening. There is a man with his life and work, and the so-called balance between them, in perspective.

 

This blog post first appeared in November, 2013

10 Comments

  1. I loved this piece, Anthony. Like so many of your disarmingly honest examinations, it speaks right to me at a time when I need it most. Thank you – company and courage when I need them.

    Sorry about SA beating Wales last Saturday – but I think you can look forward to the Kiwis taking their revenge.

    Have you read Rosemary Tonks? She is bracingly good.

    Love

    Bev

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I found this a very moving and helpful piece, Anthony. So much of what we have to do ‘to be picked’ is at odds with our nature as creative introverts, and it is good to be reminded that we have the antidote. Thank you for your honest, open writing.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. As I once wrote in a (rather silly) blog entry: ‘Is Times New Roman too dull? I am a Garamond sort of poet? Don’t get me started on font size…’ Good luck to you and have no doubts you’re writing well whatever the inner critic says. By the way, I enjoyed your poems in ‘The North.’

        Liked by 1 person

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