Lost words
June 30th, 2008
Most of us have some sort of dream, some sort of interest or ambition that we could imagine doing extremely well some day, perhaps even being publicly recognized for. The fact is, however, that many of us may not have the sheer talent it takes to make that dream a reality, but more often than not what we don’t have is the will, the ambition, or the guts to make our dreams come true.
Sometimes I find myself lost in the pages of a novel, brought deep into the world of fictional characters by the grace and talent of the author. Light headed, I absently turn one page into the next until I am somewhere in the middle of America, or in the dorm room of a prestigious boys prep school in a time before my own. The words speak to me, so delicately and precisely placed on each page, conveying a message and a story that flows and moves like a brilliant symphony.
And then I sit down to a blank screen, a blank sheet of paper, and my inspired dream like state evades me and my insights into love, life, and human kind lose their way from my brain to the paper. They are there in raw from, but the precise and effective words do not come. My hand is not delicate, but heavy and rash, almost forceful and obtrusive to anyone who reads the words that it attempts to write.
When I slowly leak out of the pages of whatever novel I am lost in, leaving the euphoric state of a place where words always move and are never oddly placed, I often find myself staring at a blank computer screen. So what, then, keeps my dream alive when words seem to fail me? I guess its the words that have not failed others, words that lose me within them, and lead me to the computer and keyboard once again.
I can only hope that in at least a few instances some worthyand perfectly placed words do come to me, and when they do, that will be enough.