I know this journey well, for it was one of the lifelines
that carried me back from my personal
abyss, which I’ve written about before
and will do so again. I have heard a dozen variations of what brought writers
to their knees and how they found the words to spin despair into hope. Although
particular circumstances differ, as does the degree of incapacity, we have
enough in common to recognize our kinship. We are those for whom the
stories-of-the-heart have been a beacon, a sustenance, and a means of growing
even stronger as we heal.
Sometimes, the very act of writing – no matter what the
subject matter – helps us to focus. There’s nothing like a thorny plot twist or
a challenging bit of dialog to distract us from other problems. Joseph Conrad
said, “It’s work that saves us,” and this is as true for writing as for any
other endeavor. Stories, unlike so much of real life, must have structure and
meaning.
Some stories, on the other hand, do more than provide a
framework for intellectual problem-solving. Whether they are characters,
situations, or entire worlds we know and love, or whether they arise during our
time of crisis, they speak to us – they call to us. They give us a voice.
Perhaps a new voice, perhaps one we have lost or that life has battered out of
us. Or maybe it is simply that when we are pushed to the wall, emotionally or
physically, we need to connect with what gives us joy. Wellsprings of secret
delight and unabashedly un-guilty pleasures. And healing.
