Monday, December 31, 2018

Permanently Liminal (letter to my desk)

Dear Desk,

I miss you. It's been three months since the tornado that got us evacuated. We hoped to be back in after a month, but complications are still keeping us out. We're staying back at the house, your first home with me. The rooms we once called ours are now unrecognizable. The first has lost its dinosaur walls and has become a storage room full of Grandmama's old stuff. The other is a complete mess. Insulation lies on the floor among my father's tools. The far wall was ripped out due to a leaky pipe. The ledge I used to keep odd knickknacks on is gone. Only the cement of the foundation is still there.

Living here without you is strange. At night I find myself writing on the dining table because I'm not sure where else to go. I'm using that old rickety corner desk I used to keep my computer on. It's alright, but the spacing's all off. The shelves above me and those CD tray sides make me feel enclosed. I miss your smooth oak surface, stained from years of hot tea, and the open space around and above me when I sit in your chair. I've felt so enclosed and trapped lately, stuck artistically and spiritually. I could really use that sense of freedom and possibility you give me. 

Here, this desk has to serve for every purpose. My work space and my play space are muddied together, confined to this little corner in the basement. It's all jumbled together. So much that I find it difficult to do any work here at all. I find myself hunting down cafés because I've always worked at cafés when I'm alone. But I've become nocturnal and so cafés are closed for most of my days. 
 
For a time in university, I was a part of a small writing group with some friends of mine that we had named the Permanently Liminal. I had never given the name much thought. I found that it sounded interesting and that was all the thought I gave to it, but now that I find myself looking back at how my life has been in the recent years, I wonder if it was more of an accurate prediction than simply interesting. I'm always in a state of change, of moving from one place to another. I haven't lived in the same place for more than a couple years at a time, and more often than not, it's far shorter than that. I return home after a year living in Sherbrooke proper, only to have myself displaced by a tornado just as I was starting to get settled. And this place is a transitional place. We are here until we can move back into our apartment. 
 
I had so many plans for writing this year, specifically right before the tornado hit. I had intended on finishing editing my main novel, and had a schedule planned out for how I could do that. A few pages a day, excluding November, and it could be done by now. That came to an end when the tornado hit, only a few chapters later. 
 
I never thought of myself as one who requires schedule and routine, and yet, I find myself creating and following routines when it comes to work. Every November, April, and July, for NaNo, I write at a certain time each day, usually after dark between 10 pm and 2 am. But maybe it's less about routine this time as it is about space. I designate areas for work and for play usually, but without that ability, I find myself floating between the two in a liminal state, and as long as I'm here, I don't think that will change...

I hope you're doing well. I want to come home. I've been away for too long.

Sincerely, Kuna Zero

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