pjthompson: (lilith)

I’ve been trying to dig myself out of the mounds of acquired stuff that have begun to seem more a burden than preserved treasures. Part of this has been cleaning up and getting rid of old paper files and odds n’ ends in filing cabinets and boxes. Sometimes I actually throw them away; sometimes I digitize them then throw them away. Other times I run across relics of my past that aren’t really worthy of preservation—except, maybe, as personal historical documents. Signs and portents from a much younger me which now and then have messages for the present.

I came across one of those today, something written on a scrap of paper when I was about fourteen or fifteen. There was some scribbling in imitation of a novel called Jesus Christs by A. J. Langguth that made a big impression on me back then. Not great writing on my part, but I find it as hard to be disdainful of that child who was me as I would find it impossible to be disdainful of any fourteen or fifteen-year-old child trying to find their way in the creative world. I will digitize this page, even though it isn’t “worthy.”

We need to protect our young selves because they still exist inside us, still need to be nurtured and told it’s okay to come out of hiding. They are part of us, no matter how we may deny them or what sophisticated masks overlay their faces.

On the bottom of this same preserved page was another message, scrawled in a different pen and in obvious distress—not the fat, rounded characters of my “artistic” handwriting.

Why am I so cruel and impatient? He’s old and needs help. He needs someone to listen to his stories and make him feel good.

That one sent a chill through me. That young girl was speaking of her biological father, already a senior citizen when she was born. What chilled me? It made me realize that my life has been bracketed by the care and consideration of two old people. When I was young, my father—much older than my mother, and now, of course, as the wheel turns round and round…it’s my mother.

In between these brackets existed a time for me, a precious and fleeting time, but I didn’t realize that. I piffled it away, had some fun, worried too much about inconsequential things, thinking my time infinite and solely my own. I don’t believe I’m alone in this kind of behavior, this illusion, as many a human seems incapable of grasping the passage of time. I have done a lot of gazing in crystal balls in the course of my life, consulting with the tarot and the runes and the lines in the palm of my hand. I got quite good at telling fortunes. I could really sell it, you know? Weave a good story for the marks…

Like many and many a fortune, my own held good and bad, steady going and crumbling steps, the expected and unexpected—none of which, really, was picked up by the crystal or the cards or the lines or the runes. Like many and many a future, mine held a large dose of irony that oracles seem very poor at ferreting out of the aethyr.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)
I was under the weather and dozing most of yesterday (feeling fine today) so missed [livejournal.com profile] matociquala's declared International Embarrass Myself As An Artist Day. But I didn't want to deprive the flist of more bad writing, so here's my entry. I'm not entirely sure how old I was when I wrote this, but I think from the handwriting it might be junior high. And don't ask me what this is about because I have no idea. It doesn't appear to have a title, either, but from another page I found I know it takes place in The Future. I note that I still have not gotten over my over-fondness for ellipses, exclamation marks, and dark subject matter.

Internationally Bad Writing )
pjthompson: (Default)
Since Jodi expressed an interest in not being the only one hanging out there in the Early Writing Zone, I'm posting this. There doesn't appear to be a title, but there are chapters with titles. This is the oldest piece of writing still in my possession. I think I was ten or eleven when I wrote this--maybe as old as twelve. I seem to have written a lot of rock n' roll fantasies about that time. No slavish descriptions here! No adverb too clumsy for inclusion! (I do note I'm still overusing exclamation marks. And ellipses.) As I told Jodi, I look at these things with a combination of familiarity and bafflement. I'm not sure what this was about except that my heroes were the rock n' roll musicians.

Chapter 1 - Caboom! )

Profile

pjthompson: (Default)
pjthompson

April 2025

S M T W T F S
   12 345
6 789101112
13141516171819
2021 2223242526
27282930   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 23rd, 2025 08:13 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios