I took an afternoon off from the computer yesterday to revise poems the old-fashioned way: with pen and paper, sitting outdoors in a café. It amazed me to see how much more productive I was than with fingers poised above a keyboard. While I am a big fan of computing and the Internet, writing is a slow affair, at least for me. The speed of word processing is anathema to my poetic process. It cannot be attributed to a pencil-and-paper childhood, as I learned to touch-type at age ten and was fast by eleven, typing out my first novel of 100 pages on a Smith-Corona portable (that I still miss).
But poetry is a very different animal than prose. I noticed yesterday that I would put down the pen, let the pages riffle in the wind, sip my iced tea and people-watch while wrestling with my subconscious for le mot juste. Again and again. I became aware that it might take five minutes or more for a few possible words to stream through my mind, and then another five to decide which one I wanted to use. I don’t usually allow myself that kind of time — and it’s esthetically unappealing to dream while staring at a screen.
Glad to hear of your fiction venture, Scott. I've written fiction too, and find it's a whole other thing. Like taking on a second job!
Cafés abound here, and I find myself wondering why I don't more often go and pursue slow-poetry-time there. I think I will, and will raise a caffelatte to your fiction project when I do.
Thanks for this. Beautiful thoughts beautifully expressed. I'm writing some fiction now – a challenge indeed. It fails to offer me the same rewards, the same transcendence that poetry does.
Wish I had a cafe that I could use as a small writer's retreat.
Hope all is well.