It’s that time of year again. It’s summer. The time when
bees buzz (although sadly fewer every year), the flowers burst with colour, the
smell of cut grass hovers in the air (fighting for space with the scent of
cooking meat and burning coals), and children play outside long into the
evening as the sun hangs around for a few extra precious hours.
Summer. Full of long, cool drinks and hot, lazy days. If we’re
lucky and the weather is kind to us, of course. Summer. Paddling pools and
deckchairs, Pimms o’clock at silly o’clock, and that feeling of not wanting to
do much at all because life, the world, and your particular spot in it is so
wonderful.
Writers, however, can’t just stop doing their thing. As Eugene Ionesco said, “A writer never has a vacation. For a writer, life consists of
either writing or thinking about writing.” And a vacation doesn’t have to be
two weeks away somewhere foreign. A vacation for a writer (or any ‘workaholic’,
come to that) can be as little as a day off. Or an evening off. Or an hour off.
The thing with writers is, we don’t necessarily want a
holiday (not without a notebook anyway). Or a day off. Or an evening off. It’s
just that in the summer, with all that fresh air and warmth, all that outdoor
joy, all that world out there, we might be tempted for a moment. That’s why al
fresco writing is so fantastic. Grab that notebook, that laptop, that tablet,
find a comfortable chair with a little shade or a picnic table, or a sun
lounger for that matter, sit back (drink nearby), and relax… Then get writing!
No comments:
Post a Comment