On Writing in Canada
by
Carolyn Henderson
Even
in the frozen north, it all comes down to people.
I love
to write. I love the freedom of expression that's an innate right
in all of us. To stare at a blank page brings me joy when I know
that in minutes I can fill it with colourful thoughts, opinions,
fascinating characters or the not-so-fictional-drama that is my
life.
Writing
in the Canadian Rockies is a unique and blessed opportunity. Most
of my writing has been done at my PC with a glance of the majestic
Mount Rundle out the window to my left. Last year, when I started
writing my memoirs, I invested in a laptop computer. I had this
vision of the perfect writing life, and it included writing freely,
sitting on the fresh-smelling shores of the Bow River, ideas jumping
at will from my brain through my fingertips. I am passionately
pounding the keyboard, coming up with just the right descriptive
paragraph that would undoubtedly move even the most reserved reader.
With the mountains in the background, how could I go wrong? I
certainly wouldn't be lacking in inspiration. But what if it snows,
as it so often does this time of year? Then what happens to my
cliché of a writing life? Simple solution: our local coffee shoppe....a
writer's dream haven.
With the
smell of caffeine welding my thoughts and the never-ending cast
of characters coming into the shoppe, I most certainly have the
materials for a best selling novel. I sip my chai latte while
I watch that same lady with the baby who I see in here every week.
I never see her with anyone else and she talks to that little
baby like he's her best friend, sharing with him the day's events
and even reminiscing about the "Friends" episode they
caught last Thursday. Is it really possible to reminisce with
a baby? Perhaps. In my novel I will give her a deadly disease,
cancer or something, and I will talk of how she herself is a struggling
writer, writing through the eyes of a newborn baby as she battles
for an understanding of the world before she dies. Interesting
stuff. And let's not forget about that group of wannabe-pro snowboarders,
the twenty-somethings. I want to turn them into a gang of hoodlum
thugs but my commitment to the Canadian personality prevents me
from doing so.
The best
part of writing in Canada has to be the people. Being a writer
here does not make you weird or an outcast as it might in other
locales. We have a varied palette of artists here -- actors, writers,
painters, photographers, quilters -- all expressing their inner
vision through their chosen medium. Mine just happens to be words.
-- CH
©2001 Carolyn Henderson |