ANYONE WHO WRITES for the public these days
can hardly escape the pressure to reveal everything about himself, "to let
it all hang out" as one of my less delicate correspondents puts it.
With Facebook and Twitter setting the pace,
bloggers and columnists are falling over themselves to tell the world all about
their innermost inhibitions and most heartfelt desires.
Casting every shred of privacy and modesty to
the four winds, they regale us with the causes of their emotional breakdowns
and the size of their expanding waistbands.
I have fought this pressure all my
journalistic life, believing as I do that the things that happen to other
people are far more interesting than the kind of life I lead, which strives to fend
off mishaps and catastrophes by means of dull caution and thorough preparation.
I like to blend in with the background. I feel safer there. But the less delicate correspondent I may already
have mentioned says she wants to know something about me as a person, a person
who has written more than 500 columns in a row and who publishes regularly every
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday something or other about small boats.
"How do you find things to write
about?" she asks. "How much time do you spend doing it? Why don't you
have any Google ads? Why don't you have
pictures, just words?" And so on. You'd hardly believe the list of things
she wants to know. And she is insistent as well as indelicate. "C'mon,
lard-butt," she says, "spill the beans, dammit."
Well, if it will get her off my back, perhaps
I can find a few harmless beans to spill. First off, I can tell you that writing
columns used to be my full-time business. I have written many thousands of them
for big newspapers. Now that I'm a freelancer, and nobody pays me to write this
column, I have to be careful how much time I devote to it. It could take as much time as I care to put
into it, polishing the apostrophes and kicking the adjectives into place, so I
deliberately allow an hour-and-a-half to find a subject, research it, write it,
and edit it. That doesn't leave me any time to steal the pictures or
illustrations that readers have come to expect; and that's fine with me because
I despise the gratuitous use of eye-candy that adds nothing to the substance of
the words. This is a column for readers with active minds, and to hell with the
meretricious bling.
How do I find things to write about? I honestly
don't know. What I do is sit down at the keyboard, threaten to throttle the cat
if she doesn't stop yowling for supper, and squeeze my eyes shut until my
cheeks hurt. Somehow that clears a space in my brain and inevitably some or other
word will fall into that space, a word such as keel, or mast, or anchor. I then
grab that word with both hands and wring its little neck and torture it until
it squeals. And I mean squeals in the
way a Chicago hoodlum means it. I'm
talking literary waterboarding. In a
very short time, keel, mast or anchor has revealed its life history and I'm
writing it all down and finishing in time to grab a beer and watch the evening
news.
As for the quality of writing, I can't tell
you about that. All I know is that I write like I think, and I think like I
speak, and I speak kinda funny because I have a funny accent. I spent a very
formative part of my childhood in a little village called Ashburton on the edge
of Dartmoor, in Devonshire, England, where the piskies live. [1] I spoke with a
broad Devonshire burr in those days but it turned into the flat-voweled accent
of South Africa's English-speaking province, Natal, when I was a young man, and
then it got mixed up with Northwest American when I moved to the States. So,
wherever I go, I have a foreign accent. Except, perhaps in France.
I was attending a formal dinner in Durban one
evening when the woman next to me corrected my pronunciation of laissez
faire. I was naturally offended, and
decided to teach her a lesson. I burst out in French, the only French I knew,
the first paragraph of the Gallic version of Little Tom Thumb, which I had long
ago memorized. I gargled and nasaled the
Rs and vowels in impressive Parisian style at the speed of white lightning. My
lips were a positive blur. Then I paused for her reaction, her apology.
She laughed so hard I thought she would choke.
It turned out she was a French-speaking Belgian. "You're all accent and no
language," she gasped.
Yeah, well, you can't win 'em all.
Today's
Thought
Language is
the soul of intellect, and reading is the essential process by which that
intellect is cultivated beyond the commonplace experiences of everyday life.
— Charles Scribner Jr., Publishers Weekly, 30 Mar 84
Tailpiece
A man
takes his dog to the vet. "Doc," he says, "my dog is cross-eyed.
Can you can do anything for him?"
"Well," says the vet, "let's have a look at him"
So he picks up the dog and examines his eyes, then he checks his teeth and
listens to his heart. Finally, he says, "I'm going to have to put him
down."
"Jeez,
doc, put him down? What? Because he's cross-eyed?"
"No, because he's really heavy."
(Drop by every Monday, Wednesday, Friday for a new Mainly about Boats
column.)