Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Now I am an author

I was born a fantasist.

I had dolls, a wendy house, a girls world head, the usual girl things. My favorite games were imaginary games, without the paraphernalia of plastic toys. I played with another girl, we played schools. We played at being teachers: both of us. We would meet in the staff room and write out “cheques” for our lunch (these were paying in-slips taken from the Post Office) we would walk into one-another’s “class rooms” armed with imaginary photocopies of the sort of things teachers need to photocopy. I am a teacher. And as it turns out so is she.

I conducted wedding ceremonies. I am not a registrar or a priest. I married two teddies. I married Sindy to Action Man. I was always going to get married. Many of us will I guess. My friend did. I used to drag the net curtain over my face and look in the mirror imagining. Like the girls on My Big Fat Gipsy Wedding I designed my dress again and again. I planned the whole thing, long before I found someone to marry. I got married. My friends asked “How does it feel to be a married woman?” and I said “The same.” Because it did, for a bit and now I see how things changed.

I watch my son with lego and think he will be an engineer. I inspect his drawings; he will be a civil engineer. He makes things from toilet roll tubes and sellotape: he will be an inventor. I see him in Minecraft with redstone he will be an electrical engineer. He got a teachers award for his creative writing: he will be a writer.


I imagined I was a writer and thought writers thoughts, I had ideas, and inspirations. I learned to touch type, to pace the room searching for the right word, to carry note books, to write down dreams, to work at poetry and to find my writers voice. I think I found it. It changes. It will continue to change as things must now that I am an author.