By
Gail Kittleson
Housecleaning was not a huge priority as I grew up, and the junk drawer sat at
the bottom of the list. Actually, there was no list. Anyway, if someone dumped
that drawer out, we knew things were desperate.
About two weeks ago, my husband greeted me with, “It’s three degrees this
morning—a degree warmer than yesterday.” Blizzard conditions prevailed over
each weekend, and officials cancelled school on three consecutive Mondays.
On March 21, we teased friends and neighbors with a tongue-in-cheek “Happy
Spring!” On the twenty-second, I noticed a sign on Main Street:
PICTURES WITH THE EASTER BUNNY
MARCH 23, 1-3
You’ve got to be kidding me.
That day, we reached a high of twenty-two degrees, and a violent wind pierced
even Thinsulate outerwear and fleece mittens. People walked bent-backed, if
they walked at all. A highway scraped clean in the morning wore an ice
coating by afternoon, from blowing snow that melted under the traffic flow and
refroze.
I know, you’re sick of winter, too, so why am I reminding you of it? Trust
me—there’s a writing point here somewhere. And it’s about that junk drawer.
One thing winter is good for . . . hunkering
down with your work in progress. You can’t leave the house anyway. This past
month I did just that—hunkered down. And it was one of those periods I
could sense my skills sharpening.
On one of my first go-back-through edits, all
of a sudden, a light shone . . . it was easy to spot backstory and wipe it from
the face of the earth. Thousands of words went by the wayside—that is, into the
backstory file I keep for this particular story, just in case I need them, you
know.
That file overflows with all that stuff you
can’t use right now, but don’t want to toss in the wastebasket. So you throw it
into the drawer, where moth and rust corrupt. And then, some winter when the
cold, cabin fever and degenerate thoughts swirling in your head become
unbearable, you decide to clean that baby out.
Somehow, on that day, it’s okay to get rid of
the stuff, now infested with dust, dead insects, and an unidentified sticky
substance. Afterward, you clean the grime from the bottom of the drawer, and
replace (in an organized fashion) a few remnants that might actually be useful
some day.
Your satisfied sigh echoes through the house. You did it!
That’s how I felt after that strong edit,
razing retrograde, redundant ruminations from my first three chapters. What
possessed me to think I’d needed them in the first place? As I reread those
all-important chapters, they seemed lighter . . . fresh . . .free . . . and
much more effective.
Ahhh, the joys of winter.
5 comments:
Ahh, yes. The junk drawer. Let's see we have 27 drawers in the house, 26 of which are junk drawers. Sigh
That file full of cut backstory = a junk drawer. I like it, Gail. :)
I not only have a junk drawer, but a junk room (well, not the whole room), and a junk garage (where of course there is no room for a car). Hmmm where do I begin...lol. Much easier to cut chunks out of my story!
Great analogy! I love it when edits make us free. It's such a great feeling and you captured it well.
A very appropriate point as I found a short story I wrote, on yellow paper in long hand,back in 1970!
Post a Comment