REVISION

I’m revising my new book of short stories and hopefully my last on the Holocaust. I think it has some measure of character to it but I’m not sure. I believe the stories in which I allowed my fantasy to take over may be the better ones, again who knows. I may be strident in a few of them, trying too hard. In any case revision sometimes involves when to drop a story completely. I’ve done that and it hurts. Sometimes I feel I have a paragraph or phrase that has come from the mouth of the muse herself and it is so damn hard to let go of that, like an affair or a memory of an earlier heartthrob. Since I am an autodidact, completely self-taught, unwilling to take courses, et al I am aware of the defects of being such a fellow; however, I do like the freedom of not being conditioned of how to write and in what ways. The learnings I’ve amassed over 40 years have been hard won and I feel as ignorant of the requisite skills as I did when I began in depression so many years ago. Writing then was a search for release or mental health. I began in pain.

I am stubbornly intuitive; ask me about the arc of a novel or how to plan a novel or how to write a short story and you will not get much from me. I am just too ornery to learn all that it takes. I go my own way. What I know now has been essentially acquired over decades; youth is now gone and my old age shows the pock marks where writing skills have not been assimilated — or learned. I am not a practitioner of a craft. In the truest sense I suppose I am an amateur. I believe I am a very good writer, no more, no less. The weaknesses I have do not gnaw at me. I go my merry way. The journey has given me success, inner success. For someone who did poorly in English in high school in the desperate 50s, I’ve accomplished much. I recall how I felt “less” when I mistakenly and in an unhealthy way compared myself to the teachers about me who had majored in English (I majored in history) and had grammar down pat. I still am weak in that area; but in terms of imagination and empathy I more than compensate for that — I excel. So whenever I teach a workshop I stress the feeling aspect of writing, the capacity to enter the world of others, to feel, to palpate the meaning in others, to see through cant, to feel oneself as a self. It is here that I have my autodidactic strengths. I  didn’t plan for all this. Thoroughly serendipitous. And what is serendipity except surprise.

So revision, I guess, for me, is to extract feelings within my prose, to make you feel touch or sensate in some way. I trim, I whittle, I cut out words, but I have a hard time shaping or making a paragraph or page send the reader out of the park looking for the baseball. Consequently I am very good at deleting words, condensing sentences, of writing leanly, sparely but the weakness may be in that I may not have squeezed the feeling to the fore. I may just be pulling out lint from the dryer filter. It is here I may fall short or I do fall short because I am lacking the necessary writing skills. What can be done about that? When you throw the dice against the felt wall and they break out into numbers, all has been done. A part of me feels the loss of skills, a part of me regrets that, a part of me stubbornly clings to old feelings, or armor and becomes defensive. One sane part says, support the ego! How many lives do I have? At this point I am just trying to churn out books of some quality with posterity in mind, with the children in mind, with myself greedily in mind before I come down with the wrack and ruin of being aged.

I am driven to do a good job, driven in the sense that I put my ass down on a seat and write; that I make a commitment to myself to create some kind of literary art; to do, to be; a personal commitment to understand myself before I enter the world of electrons; to pay homage to the culture that I come from; to honor my heritage, secular and atheistic Jew that I am. I give my all and often it does not measure up in the very writing I struggle to make excellent — or just damn good. Why have I chosen to write, often part time, often late into the night, on Saturday mornings when the kids were growing up? I wrote to find me! And I have, to large measure, come to understand a few of the greater continents in my being. River valleys, mountain ranges and lowlands have escaped my investigations, of course. And I have the grandiosity to believe that what I have discovered about myself may be of use to you, or of interest simply because we are connected as a species. When I go to my sleep, it gives me pleasure to know that a Freese may turn to one of my books and examine a father or grandfather or a spouse, and revisit that soul within any character in a story or novel. I am in the very periods I write; I am the paragraphs; I am the darkness and light: I am in every nook and cranny of my work and yet most of this is unknown to myself for the writer is the last to know — human beings as a species are the last to know about themselves.

We are all in need of continued and continuing revision.

Comments

One response to “REVISION”

  1. Harry Avatar

    Please, please… excuse my having been, so long myself, stymied by mental fears that the cobwebs of despair have all but strangled me from revealing my terrors to anyone close. That’s why I can still remember the grimace on your face when you told of your Real Life NYC cab driver experience in which the juxtaposition of fear/anger threatened to kill you. You remarkably managed your raging fear so well that neither you nor that minority robber suffered physical injury. Perhaps that incident presaged what was to come, and has steeled your resolve to survive so admirably through all of these years.

    I promise to reveal my ID when I’m able to unzip a bit more, something I have done in published literature, albeit not as prolifically as you have done even when you too say, “I Really Don’t Want to Write Anything.”

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