I was 17, a junior in high school, when I started to write. I remember it well. At Christmas break that year I had reached the chard end of my rope. I hated school, hated the boredom of life, and hated my home life. I was full of hate. I begin to write out this hate, this anger. And it helped. It purged me. The more I wrote the more the need to write grew in me.
In January I showed some of my writing (mostly poetry) to one of my teachers. She liked it and offered to spend study hall with me to give me space to write and some guidance. We would go over poems and writers. She would ask me what I thought the poems were about and explained how she read it and what she concluded from it. It was the process in where I began to understand nuances of writing and punctuation. One day she asked me to bring in a poem by a writer I liked. I told her I had no idea. I had no books of poetry, no names of poets to look up. We agreed on the next best thing: song lyrics. I went home and had to choose lyrics of a song to show her the next day.
For me at the time the band was easy – counting crows. The song was tougher, but I decided on ‘round here’. We were sitting in a long fold out table when I passed her the page of lyrics. I watched her face as she read them. Her expectations were probably low, but her face lit up. It was a weird sort of revelation. As she was reading and understanding the lyrics it felt like she was understanding a part of me. She went from impressed to moved. It was in that moment I knew why I wanted to be a writer. I knew the affect I wanted to have on people through it. That relating/understanding connection.
Since that point I have gone through the spectrum of responses to my writing. From the apathic, to those thinking I suck, to the embrace and understanding of what I have crafted. And that is the aim. To have an emotional reach to a person. Writing is my expression. I write to connect to people.
