What would I think of this mushroom if I was six-years-old?
Bleurch. Slimy. Yucky. Ach-y-fi. Fingers down throat.
Slugs.
What would I have said to that teacher when I was thirteen?
Probably nothing because I was the shyest person in my class
and I didn’t want to show myself up in front of Erin Jackson, who had never
noticed I was alive anyway.
That sort of thing.
I draw on my memory bank daily and revisit the best and
worst memories of my young life.
Unfortunately, I can almost put myself back to teenage
times.
I’m at the ‘pop and crisps’ disco where I feel jealous of Caroline’s
spotted leggings and her stupendous success in life at actually having a
boyfriend. I can feel the weight of my ungainly arms as they hang in odd
directions while I sway to Depeche Mode and pretend to know the lyrics whilst
hiding behind the lankest fringe in the history of hair.
I can be back with my nose pressed to the cold wet glass of
even younger, Santa-spotting years. Taste the glitter of the stars beyond the
condensation. Hear the strains of harp music in the background – on an old 78
not my mother playing – I know I’m Welsh but seriously?
I can believe in magic.
I remember when I was a foetus and….
Okay, that’s taking it a bit far, but you know what I mean.
And something happened to me this week that made me wonder
if I have actually changed that much at all.
I mean, yes, physically I’ve changed quite a bit and lots of
me has gone south or grown unusual hairs. But inside. Do I still have the
belief in magic? Do adults generally believe in the magical?
The wonderful Tamsin at Kenilworth Books designed this
window display for my new book ‘Gaslight’ and it did strange things to me.
It made me think ,‘It’s magical.’ She has created magic
there. Right in front of me. I can feel it. Inside me. Reaching out to me.
I didn’t think - wow, this is going to really sell my book –
although I’ll admit that did come later.
I just thought. I want to be in that story. I want to be a
part of that world.
All the years melted away and I was back to the child who
had imagined themselves escaping through the back of a wardrobe.
The feeling was the same. The fizzle of excitement. That
nervous coldy-weirdy feeling all over my skin. Possibilities opened up in front
of me and I could taste the shimmer and smell the greasepaint of the story.
So, in these times of sadness and uncertainty, I am moved
beyond anything I can express in words (come on you’ve seen the struggle
already with the ‘coldy-weirdy’ description) to find that I’m still the same at
heart.
I can still be ensorcelled by story-telling, the magic of an
artist creating a window display, the taste of a story about to be told.
And we
all need to remember to be ensorcelled by the beautiful and the magical because we
all had it in us and we all still have it.
And, anyway, ensorcelled is a really good word.
5 comments:
Lovely post, Eloise! And Kenilworth Bookshop create the most wonderful window displays ever. The Gaslight one is fantastic!! :-)
'Ensorcelled' is absolutely a good word! And that's a beautiful display.
Great post, Eloise, and a fantastic display for your book!
What a lovely display. And I totally get what you mean by wanting to be a part of a story. It has to make you excited.
Thanks all :)
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