It was a wake-up-at-3-a.m.-and-get-that-thought-on-paper-before-you-lose-it kind of morning. I’ve had many of these as a writer. Just a few short years ago, when I was working on an early draft of The Hapless Life of Samuel Joseph, my life changed. My then-sixteen year old granddaughter, troubled and not doing well at home, moved in with me, as did a dear friend of mine in need of a temporary place to stay. I was living in a small apartment, and we were, all three of us and our respective beds, crammed into one tiny bedroom. My granddaughter -being a teenager - slept through my late-night bouts of creativity, but I would often hear my friend chuckle from her bed as I’d mutter “damn!” and shoot out of bed to run to my desk, pounding out the pages that were shouting in my brain, then stumble back to bed, pull up the covers, and close my eyes, only to have the insistent story dragging me from bed short minutes later to write some more as I muttered soft curses under my breath. The house-mate chuckled, and I beat out page after page on my old typewriter, and slept a whole lot less than I might have liked. A month or so later, we found a much larger house to rent where each of us could have our own room, and lived there for a year or so, but I would still wander out to the deck in early mornings to find my house-mate grinning and commenting on the sound of the typewriter having lulled her to sleep the night before.
Those months were, for me, the height of the creative process in the writing of Samuel Joseph. His life and the story he had to tell unfolded in my brain insistently, as though I were but recording the story as he narrated it, trying desperately to get it all out before he lost the connection with me. Pages piled up in my writing room (another reason we chose the house we found - rooms for each of us, and a writing room for me), stacks growing exponentially. Three thousand, four thousand, sometimes as many as six thousand words in a day. It was a wave of energy, a wave of clarity, and I rode it all the way from the first scene to the last, feeling the story unfold, knowing when I needed to stop what I was doing, rush to the typewriter (or the page, as I wrote a great deal of that first draft in long-hand). And I often did not get much sleep.
I had not gotten to that point easily - for months I’d been trying to find Sam’s character, feeling the basics of the story, having strong images of scenes and characters, with no idea how they connected, but understanding they had a story to tell that meant something to me. I knew it had to do with the tragedy of a very talented young person with the wrong mentor, I knew that some of the things I tried to write were not right, as I stumbled around, trying to find the presence that was haunting the corners of my brain.
This is the same process I have gone through lately with the story I am currently telling - the story of a family once torn apart by secrets, now finding their way back to each other. For this story, the characters have been clear to me from the very beginning, but how their individual stories connect had not been, until, after much stumbling, I began to see those connections in the pieces of their lives. Which led to today’s late-night scribbling, and lack of sleep.
I was in a show last night, performing on a local stage with more than a dozen other actors, and coming home with that post-performance high that caused me to putter about for a couple of hours before I lay down. Once asleep, though, that rest did not last - at three in the morning comes the muse - with yet another connection in the woven fabric of these characters lives - an essential one between parent and child, a clear and simple explanation of who they were and who they have become, and I had to get out of bed and get it down. Once done, the energy of that release, that creation, once again left me too wired to sleep.
Some time back, a friend and I (the same woman who was, just last night, my scene partner in performance), joked that someone needed to start a training school for the muse, as she tended to misbehave and come at the most inconvenient times. We even joked that we would write a play about a training school for the errant muse, modeled after those schools that train misbehaving dogs. Interestingly, it is often the owners of the dogs who are really trained in such a school, to understand how to work with their dog’s essential nature in a way where they can live together. I think such a thing is also true of the training of the muse - we must actually train ourselves - to be open, to listen, to understand when the voice of the muse is the true, essential voice of the story and must be written, and when it is okay to mutter “oh, go away” and go back to sleep.
Learning such a thing is not easy, and none of us are ever perfect at it. Like writing itself, it is a process. I have had moments when I’ve muttered ‘go away’ at my muse, and returned to sleep (or to work, or to feeding the cats, or whatever I happened to be doing at the time), only to jolt upright later and realize that there had been a light in my brain, a window opening onto the brightness of the story, and I’d slammed down the shutters. The key, I believe, as it is for so many things in life, is to listen.
And perhaps learn to be good at naps.