Okay, on Thursday, I had one of
the biggest sermon surprises in my decades of hanging around the beautiful,
broken Church of Jesus Christ.
I particularly came to RiverCamp
to hear Heidi Baker, as well as Mark Stibbe because I am interested in his message of the Father Heart
of God. But what Mark talked about was—get this—writing!!
Yes, a whole sermon on writing!! Never
ever heard one before.
That evening, the preacher Trevor
Baker felt God told him he was going to heal someone with secondary cancer. And
there was only one person in the huge tent with that. He said, “Well, that’s
okay. Sometimes the message is just for one person.”
Stibbe’s message was so apposite
that it felt as if it was also just for one person. Me.
*
* *
Mark Stibbe spoke of writing as a
spiritual gift, an anointing. He had attended a John Wimber conference as an
ordinand from Nottingham and everyone else had a spiritual experience. Except
him.
However, when, on the last day, he
went up for prayer, sad and disappointed, his right hand began shaking uncontrollably.
He asked God, “So, what’s going
on?” God answers, “What can you do with your right hand which you cannot do
with your left?”
“Write.”
And Stibbe said on that day, he
received an anointing to write, an anointing, which, in R T Kendall’s phrase in
his book, The Anointing, makes the
difficult easy.
Stibbe then talked about an angel
of writing, who would put its great golden wings around him when he was stuck,
put a quill in his hands, and say, “Write.”
Some pages from his most recent book, he says, were so “anointed” that
he does not remember writing them.
He prayed for an anointing on us.
Talked of the importance of “seeing” before you write.
*
* *
And in the course of the next two
days, through talks on something else, through hours of “soaking prayer” in
community with dozens of others, a vision jelled, clarified and solidified
which filled my heart with joy. A re-vision, really. A recovery of lost dreams.
*
* *
With a rush of sadness (because
of how I’ve forgotten it) and joy (because God’s gifts and calls are
irrevocable) I remembered how I began writing.
As a young woman, I had wanted to
leave India to study abroad, and looked at several countries, the US, NZ,
Australia, aiming low--and not thinking of the UK because of the exorbitant overseas
student fees.
And then suddenly, I heard God
say, “Apply to Oxford.”
Me, “Okay, I’ll apply to Oxford
and Cambridge.” Roy, now my husband, was then at Cambridge,.
Inner Voice, “No, just Oxford.”
Me, “And how will I pay for it?’
I hear, “You have your pen,
haven’t you?”
And poetry came in a flood. Eight
poems that evening.
(And the call to writing, and the
call to Oxford are somehow intertwined, but in a way I do not understand. Yet!)
Later that month, I won a
national poetry writing competition for a long poem I had written in three
hours.
The gift came from God.
·
*
*
But oh, how I have worried it and
worried about it, tried to protect it, squeeze time for it, flog it, sinned in relationships to get time and space for it,
necessarily and unnecessarily sacrificed for it.
And while—oh, I could cry—all the time it
was a gift!!
*
* *
As I have often written in this
blog, I have two deep failures in my life. One is my failure to control my
weight (which is not a failure God intends, and which, I believe, is a battle I am going to win when the time—the
chairos time--is right).
The other is THE book. I had the
idea for it in the mid-eighties. I started writing it in 1991 and continued
until 2006, though, on the way, I got distracted and wrote and published essays,
book reviews, film and theatre reviews. Oh, and had babies.
Chapters of the book met with a
lot of success, the $20,000 NEA award, the $6000 Minnesota State Art Boards
Award, prizes for the best article in the Catholic Press, many essay prizes,
have been published in “Commonweal,” “Virginia Quarterly Review” and magazines
like “Notre Dame Magazine,” which paid $1000 etc. I once added up what I had
already made from this unfinished, unpublished book—it was $35, 000.
And, yeah, if you detect a note of insecurity in the last paragraph, you are right!! I need to keep reminding
myself there was goodness in the manuscript.
*
* *
I took wrong turnings. I really
wanted to write a story of my Roman Catholic Childhood in India. A teacher
suggested I focus on my 14 months as a novice at Mother Teresa’s Convent. A leading
editor and agent were very interested. I finished the manuscript in my life-blood
through my pregnancy and the first year of my baby’s life. They turned it down.
And in my naivete, I thought that that was the end of the world, instead of
shipping it out again.
I then wrote the whole Indian
Catholic childhood; again agents were interested but each wanted changes which
I couldn’t see how to make.
I had twisted my original vision
of many short topical chapters into what the industry wanted—fewer, more
thematic chapters. No wonder it was hard for me to formulate it in a magnetic proposal,
write it or sell it. Also, I guess I did not try hard enough it to ship it, but
crumbled with each rejection.
Crumbled too soon. Focusing on
publication instead of finishing it. Focused on what the publishing industry
wanted instead of my original vision. And, then, believe it or not, depressed,
I shelved the project
*
* *
And started selling antiquarian
books in 2006, when I had bought my
dream house I could not afford, and put both girls in a dream school I
could not afford, either. I then founded a small publishing business in 2007.
Which God blessed so much that within 3 years, my husband, Roy, was able to
retire early at 47.
Which means I am writing full
time, and have domestic support, the lack of which depressed
and bedevilled me.
But I did not take up the book of
my heart, which I have always been longing to write.
Instead, on guidance from
God, I took up blogging!! Which for the last 28 months has squeezed out "real" writing. But taught me a huge amount about writing.
*
* *
And then, as Mark Stibbe spoke, I clearly saw
that the time had come to take up writing the book again.
And I saw the form it should
take. Which was, interestingly, my original vision—many short chapters of 2-3
pages each. Roughly 800-1000 words each. In other words, the length of blog
posts.
I am going to re-write the entire
book, which is going to be so much easier than revising my original version. My
style has changed over 28 months of blogging. It is less mandarin, less
literary, less poetic, but easier to read. And to write!!
It will be too hard to revise the
old manuscript. “Style is the man.” Or woman. It reflects your thinking and
sensibility. When you change, your style changes. When you deliberately
simplify your style and make it transparent, you also start thinking in
shorter, lucid sentences and paragraphs.
Attempting to revise the old
manuscript will be like revising someone else’s manuscript. I am a different
woman now.
On the other hand, since much of
the work of memory, writing and organizing into chapters is done, rewriting
will be relatively easy. And very easy compared to writing it in the first
place when I had masses and masses of
notes and memories.
*
* *
And I am going to start today,
and if you, my blog readers, will indulge me, I am going to post chapters from
the memoir on my blog as I write them.
So starting today, I will write 400
words of my book each day, posting each finished chapter on my blog as it’s done.
300 pages of 400 words each. 120,000 words. A page a day. And will be done with
the book by September 1st, 2013, so help me God.
And that is not an over-ambitious
goal because A) the book is written. It just has to be rewritten into an
easier and less mandarin style. B) I have been writing 800-1000 word blog
posts every day for 28 months, and writing has now become quick and easy.
*
* *
So I guess I am going to try to
have a very quiet and focused year. Which is just as well as it’s our daughter
Zoe’s final, and crucial year at school.
And I am so grateful to God for
restoring my vision and enthusiasm for finishing my book at just
the right time, the chairos time.
That is inspirational, Anita! Prayers for you as you live out the Vision and the Calling. We will look forward to reading what you will be sharing!
ReplyDeleteThis is a really inspiring story! Go for it, Anita!
ReplyDeleteHeather
Thanks so much for the encouragement, Penelope and Heather!
ReplyDeleteYour journey is an incredible encouragement and provocation to me. May you find much grace and joy as you step into your vision. I will be watching with bated breath and, perhaps, joining in by pursuing my own long-overdue writing dreams.
ReplyDeleteNaomi, welcome to my blog, and yay! do join me in pursuing your own writing dreams!!
ReplyDeleteHow I would have loved to hear that sermon! Godspeed in your writing, I know it is all in God's time. I'll be praying for you and anticipating the chapters.
ReplyDeleteJust as I feel it is time to get my first novel printed, even if I have to do it myself. I know the time is now.
oh YAY!
ReplyDeleteI'm SO excited about this!
It feels just right for where you're at and I'm cheering with you. Let me know how I can be an encouragement to you. Much love xx
Thanks much, Mollie and Tanya. Yes, it does feel the right time--and I think it is the new vision--rewriting in short chapters, sharing it on the blog--which is energising and joyful. So I won't need to abandon the blog I've worked on, and blogging posts unrelated to the book won't take all my energy either!
ReplyDeleteSo thrilled for you! I always appreciate your inspirational thoughts and candor.
ReplyDeleteThanks muchly, Ang:-)
ReplyDelete