Living nocturnally makes it easier to avoid the distractions
of life. I write when everyone else sleeps, and then I sleep when everyone else
lives. The inevitable consequence is that the world starts getting smaller, and
eventually the entire world is small enough so that an Honours dissertation,
and all of its related anxieties, can fill it entirely. My world has gotten
very small indeed.
So when I stepped outside this morning, to sit in the
backyard and drink coffee, I was struck by the brightness of daylight reality.
I listened to the birds chortling to each other and thought ‘I wonder when I
last heard birds singing.’ Only to realise that I’ve probably heard them often
enough, but my world has become so small that I couldn’t fit them into it, so I
forgot the sound immediately as I heard it.
I wanted to write about the birds and how the world feels
the day after rain, but it occurred to me that if I am going to write something
I should write the next portion of my dissertation, after all I’d probably feel
guilty if I didn’t. And then another realisation hit me, one even more
disheartening than the smallness of my world, I haven’t written a single piece
of creative work in months. My imagination has been entirely repressed by
research papers, articles on malpractice and a bunch of decidedly nasty
psychiatrists. Which actually sounds like quite a decent crime novel, it
isn’t.
I let my world get so small, that I can’t even imagine the
normal largeness of ‘real life’ let alone the infinity of imaginary worlds,
beasts, creatures, emotions and the limitlessness of what my imagination was
before. I keep comforting myself with the knowledge that June will come, and
all this Honours nonsense will end, then I will be back to my old self. That is
what I hope. But, I’m not completely
convinced.
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ReplyDeleteI very much resonated with the paragraph below. I especially noticed how true it is that nocturnal living avoids people and (to some degree) this little distracting thing called 'life'.
ReplyDelete"Living nocturnally makes it easier to avoid the distractions of life. I write when everyone else sleeps, and then I sleep when everyone else lives. The inevitable consequence is that the world starts getting smaller, and eventually the entire world is small enough so that an Honours dissertation, and all of its related anxieties, can fill it entirely. My world has gotten very small indeed."
Cheers for your comment Mark. I've largely given up my nocturnal ways... for all of the reasons that are apparent in this little reflective piece. But it certainly is interesting to notice how sleep patterns can affect one's view of the world.
ReplyDelete