Today I have
a new title. I am now a Shrieker
Creature. A Shrieker Creature mother to
the Screecher Creatures. But for once I
am not shrieking at them, instead I am
shrieking in delight. For this afternoon
I was contacted by an Irish parenting magazine with the news that they want to
use Screecher Creature No. 4’s birth story.
My VBAC story. (Vaginal Birth
after Caesarean Section) Money will not exchange hands but this I do not mind;
for me it’s all about seeing my name in print, up there in black and white
lights as it were. Okay, okay, I am not
completely against the idea of having a sum of money lodged into my bank
account but this is good enough for me at the moment. When No
Doubt first made it big with Don’t
Speak they had been a band for ten years so it was an overnight 10 year
success for them. I have been noodling
or writing since I was 16. Anyone
remember Sweet Valley High and the Sweet Dreams teenage romance novels? I wanted to write those. Hell, I wanted to be the Wakefield twins for gawd sake! I spent the best part of my teenage years in
my tiny bedroom clattering away into the wee small hours on an old typewriter,
similar to the one in Stephen King's Misery. My aunt
took it as a souvenir from her old work place and it made its way into my
bedroom to be placed on a makeshift table which was essentially two milk crates,
a shelf taken out of my wardrobe and placed on the top to make a table. Everything I wrote was carefully collated
and tidied away in folders and boxes and stored in the bottom of my
wardrobe. Soon I had more noodling’s
than clothes. A confession here. I used to do my sisters’ English essays for
them. I loved it. When I was 16 and doing the Inter Cert, now
called the Junior Cert, I sent off a badly typed, single spaced, yellow paged
document to a publishing company in America.
Never let it be said I didn’t aim high!
A couple of weeks later I received a compliment slip telling me my “work
would receive their careful consideration.”
I can still see those words and feel the elation. This was going to save me from my Inter
Cert. I was going to become an overnight
teenage publishing sensation (Tiffany and Debbie Gibson eat yizzer hearts out!)
and have to go under cover due to the immediate fame that would naturally
enough, come my way. I sat on the garden
wall at the same time every day for the next month waiting for the post man and
my two book deal contract from America to show up. I’m still waiting. Over
the next couple of years I wrote for everything and anything, never getting
anywhere and becoming slowly disillusioned with the whole thing. I took a big, long break from it for a couple
of years when I moved to Dublin as I had drinking and partying to do. But as these things have a habit of doing,
the words started to clamour for space in my head once again and I felt the
strong compulsion to commit them to paper.
I got my first short story published and I was back on track. Over the years I have had many letters
printed in various magazines and the like, some for monetary gain and others
for prizes such as clothes for my kids. Still
though, the rejection letters towered over the bits and pieces I managed to see
making it to print. Then I discovered I was
pregnant and began to record the trials and tribulations of ante-natal visits
and the well intentioned advice from others. The boys grew older and I had a nice
little stock pile of cute stories and anecdotes to read over. But much in the same way that looking at
other peoples’ holiday snaps is like watching paint dry, these stories were
cute to me and me only. Then came the
day I answered a post on a parenting website from a Canadian born Cork based writer
who was looking for the pregnancy, birth and labour experiences of Irish
mothers. “Write as much or as little as
you like,” Maria told me. Sure that was
akin to opening lock gates and I e-mailed her back tomes of stuff. I was lucky enough to see a lot of it included
in her book The Mammy Diaries. If I wasn’t bitten by the writing bug before,
I definitely was then. Shortly after
that I was delighted to find that my VBAC story made it into Tracy Donegan’s The Irish Caesarean and VBAC Guide. An edited version of which will now appear in
this parenting magazine. A few people
congratulated me on my “overnight” success and even suggested that I try and
get something published independently. I
approached the parenting magazines I read every couple of months and even a
local regional newspaper. I got
promising responses from the magazines but nothing came to fruition. The newspaper kindly informed me their budget
didn’t stretch that far at the present time.
Fair enough. Then Mister Husband suggested a blog. Eeekkkk!
But people would, you know, read
my stuff. Have an opinion on it, maybe
not even like it. No, it was much too
risky. I’d have to put my name on it and
everything and everyone would know. But I found myself mulling it over and at the
sound advice of Mister Husband, that if it didn’t work out, or I didn’t like
it, I could always stop. No one would be
any the wiser. Try it for 6 months and
see, he said. So last November I started
blogging about my gorgeous boys. I gave
myself the task of posting three times a week and always before 9pm. It’s good to have a deadline, a little bit of
discipline. And I’m still at it. I’m loving it more and more. I’m having people tell me that they love it
too and thank god someone is honest enough to tell it like it is sometimes. Maybe this is the start of something for me,
maybe not. Maybe I’m destined to write
for me, myself and I for the foreseeable future. But this is what I do. I can’t help it, I can’t stop it. It would be more than nice if my hobby
morphed into a little career for myself but there is only one way to find
out. So I shall keep writing and hope
that people keep reading. If you still
are, thanks. Thanks a million. Be sure to keep an eye out for Easy Parenting
over the coming months containing my first shiny, published article. Marian Keyes, you can stop looking over your
shoulder. But just for a little
while. Wink. Wink.
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