My
tag-line for the party we held over the weekend: “party until I break a hip”
(which didn’t happen, fortunately). Responding to an email on same, my birth mother
wrote, only: “You’re funny.”
Of
course, I produced a chapbook as a handout for the event, the poem “snow day,”
which makes up the entirety of my writing production from January to the opening
of March (I did post work-in-progress excerpts on the blog if you missed). You can order a copy here, if you wish. I’ve already been
sending out copies to various of my Patreon supporters.
At
the party itself: we were there early, which meant Rose and Aoife ran laps
around the tavern, slamming themselves into the wall and laughing, laughing.
Before they arrived, I spent the afternoon downstairs in my usual spot, working
on short fiction and reviews, thanks to Christine and her mother (which is all
I ever want for my birthday, anyway).
What
does forty-eight mean? I’m not quite sure. Closer to fifty, I suppose. Aoife
turns two in about a month, and Rose is almost four and a half (my daughter
Kate, of course, is twenty-seven). It means I’ve been home full-time with
children for quite some time now (since Rose was born, basically). During those
maternity leave months (Christine had a year with each), we juggled time, but
otherwise, I’ve been home full-time, employing an occasional teenager
throughout the summer to play with the girls for the sake of writing mornings
(which happened earlier this week as well). I work during the two mornings a
week Aoife is in preschool, as well as during her naps; Rose is already in
full-time junior kindergarten, where she seems to be thriving (she could write
her name before school, and, unprompted, has been writing out Aoife’s name
also). And I do quite like being the home-person, Aoife and I walking Rose to
school in the morning, and collecting her again in the afternoon.
Last
year, I managed to start and finish a poetry manuscript, “the book of smaller,”
over the course of the calendar year, aiming for very short poems during my
shortened attention span (see lots of links to a variety of these online). Once
Rose began school, the plan was to return eventually to short stories, which
has come far slower. I’m very close to completing and sending out three short
stories, but I thought the same of these same short stories, what, six months
ago? Everything moves slow, but at least it moves.
I
work on a mass of above/ground press items, celebrating this year’s twenty-fifth anniversary. I keep posting essays to my (small press) writing day, many gendered mothers, and the “On Writing” series. I keep posting poems to
the weekly “Tuesday poem” series. I keep posting my Spotlight series monthly at Medium. The latest issue of seventeen seconds: a journal of poetry and poetics appeared
recently, and the next issue of The Peter F. Yacht Club is imminent, as is the next issue of Touch the Donkey. I’m also curating/hosting a series of literary
walks around Ottawa this year, as prompted by Arc Poetry Magazine, with the first one next week. There is so much
to do.
[Rose and Aoife, upon being asked to smile for the camera] And
then the rebuilding of our basement continues, after our Hallowe’en flood. Some
two or three dozen boxes of fiction and trade comics returned to our shelves.
There is so much more to bring in, but it moves. We return.
Thanks
to this week’s childcare, I’m re-entering short stories, albeit slower than I’d
like. I’m hoping to get at least one of these stories finished and sent out
before the end of the week. Slowly.
Will
I make it back to that memoir-in-progress? That novel? One hopes. Slowly. Slow.
No comments:
Post a Comment