Hello again, at the
start of another New Year!
Yesterday,
home after family travels, I skipped sociability and spent the afternoon simply
tidying my desk: a most wonderfully satisfying activity. I removed
a set of seasonal shopping receipts, discarded the now-cryptic notes to self, popped
different categories of pen into their own pots and stuck together the remnants
of post-it pads. I even gathered several scrunched and scribbled notes into a real-world
folder marked “Possible Blog Ideas???”
Several fireworks and peals of bells later, I considered today’s date – the first day
of the first month of the new year, ta da! – and suddenly my bright golden glow of
smugness faded. I realised I had no idea
what to write for my post today.
I could explain
that my big desk-clearing was also a way of making space in my head for some work
I need to do. Two useful tasks in one!
I could mention
a Christmas present from a well-wisher: a good-quality, carry-around-able
notebook obtained from a bespoke bookbinder, which has these rather pointed words on the cover:
SHE BELIEVED SHE COULD
SO SHE DID.
Hmmm. Should this be my mantra for 2019?
I could flick
through the pages of two more book gifts: RAVILIOUS
& CO: THE PATTERN OF FRIENDSHIP by Andy
Friend or THE SECRET LIVES OF COLOUR
by Kassia St Clair, which will remind
me that art –
in all its forms – is calming and inspiring to me, and that I need to follow those
paths more readily during the months ahead, and also that non-fiction
– in all its forms - can be more helpful middle-of-the-night reading for
insomniacs than compelling fiction. Or twitter. Or Mick Herron’s Slough House
series . . .
Or I
could write about my new diary.
Now, I must
admit that I was feeling daunted and depressed by the flurry of book publicity
and prizes hanging like bunting across media all through the last months of
2018. Good luck to them all, truly, I thought, although my confidence and voice
shrank a little more and my horrible cold continued for another week.
So when I
saw the PERPETUAL DISAPPOINTMENTS DIARY,
my heart lifted, because the thing has been designed to bolster the naturally
pessimistic. The journal might look rather like those Moleskines diaries used by
the great achievers and explorers, but it definitely isn’t aimed at success.
For
example, the On this Day section
lists includes events such as
Edward Munch
inspired to paint the Scream 22 January 1892
or M25 Orbital Road completed in UK 29 October 1986
or Mary Celeste sets sail 7 November 1872.
The inspirational
Quote for the Week roams from
Tomorrow is just another day
to It’s no use sobbing uncontrollably over
spilt milk
or Burn that bridge when
you come to it.
There are
pages at the end too, to enter your details of
Real
Enemies,
or Notes Towards a Dull Novel,
or Notes Towards an Unnecessary Verse Drama,
or Ideas You’ll Never Follow Up and more.
Oh, how I know this place! I thought. Although this rather negative angle
might not appeal to you, by heavens, it does cheer up my own inner Eeyore!
I intend
to keep my Disappointments Diary as
a quiet and secret place for recording those things I should note – word count, progress of projects, daily walks, and so
on – on the basis that anything at all hopeful that I write down will feel good
against that delightfully dark mood and help me feel better.
I could
write about all these odd things, I decided, and now . . .
I find my first post of the year is writ!
However, if my entry seems sad or dark, tomorrow you’ll be able to enjoy Dianne
Hofmeyer’s bright and lovely post for Awfully Big Blog Adventure.
Meanwhile,
in the most cheerful and hopeful way, I hope you have a very Happy New Year, with
good wishes for you and your year ahead. Despite – you know, just everything - I hope you have a good 2019, with good
reading and good words when you need them.
Penny
Dolan
5 comments:
I like the sound of that disappointment diary!
You received a good many interesting books for Christmas, Penny. And I LOVE that diary. All writers need one! (instead of those really beautiful notebooks that we're often too scared to write in). Problem is where does one keep all these notebooks and who will deal with them when we die? Or do we destroy them before we get too 'ga ga' ?
Not sure about the brightness of my blog tomorrow but I'll put Venus into it... it was truly amazing this morning... like a flaming beacon chasing the moon just before dawn.
Thank you for everything that you do and have done in the past to make ABBA tick over Penny and all the best for 2019. Today is your 126th blog... how fine is that!
Love your piece Penny. I found myself worrying away at the quote “burn that bridge when you reach it.” Surely that would prevent moving forward? Maybe going backwards is the new forwards. Oh no! A trend I have missed? Perhaps swimming is to be advised, or finding a way round. Definitely can’t go under! Still, we’re not scared!
Thanks, all. Glad you feel a kindred sympathy for the diary too, Sue.
Cindy, I think the "bridges" quote refers to the not-unknown habit of self-sabotage.
Or how about There is no "I" in team but there is a "U" in failure?
The sentiments just amused me - and no, we're not scared.
Dianne, I will miss the brightness and colour and wonderfully exotic settings of your posts very much. They have always read like such positive antidotes to my witterings from here in the grey north, as well as being a tribute to the international art of the picture book creators.
I can barely believe that number, though. My 126th post, truly? Nevertheless, I wWill look out for Venus early tomorrow, when I'm not madly busy writing both posts for ABBA.
Ordered my diary two minutes ago - thanks Penny. Also a new sardonic Mouse mat. Getting down to writing takes longer - it's the final chapter and I have no idea how to finish it!
Love reading your blog - time I did another posting on mine
Have a productive New Year Maggie
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