So it reminds you, my friend, that the beginning doesn’t have to be the end.

I told my dear friend Rosaline I was having trouble writing and she recommended that I should grab my pen, and just free write. “The words will flow by themselves.” The only catch being, there’s a time limit. “Try 3 minutes.” I did. Except I gave myself 5 minutes. This is what became of it. Below is an un-edited extract from a letter I am writing to B, written in 5 minutes. It’s not been changed in anyway so excuse all the mistakes. I hope she doesn’t read this before I give her the letter next week!

*****

It’s been a long time since I last wrote to you. A week I think. What’s the date today anyway? I can’t check either, well I can but I can’t be bothered as I always write it at the end of the day’s scribbles. Where did I end the scribbles last time? I don’t really like endings if I’m perfectly honest with you. I wonder why they say goodbye. Where is the good in bye? Do you know? I have spent hours pondering that question but to no avail.

But what is a beginning? No more than another beginning’s end. And just like the last paragraph, starting on this virgin page, first line, came to an end, so do many other things. For sometimes an ending marks something new. It’s a delicate moment, like the starting of a new diary. You open the first page, your pen hovering in your hand, the molecules of ink waiting to burst out and bring life to the page. And yet you hesitate. You wait as your mind thinks of the that first stroke, that first dot, that first line, that first word, that will flood the page. But you make sure, perfectly sure that that first contact is perfect. For how many pages do we rip out of the diary because they were “not right”? A collection of first-page-less diaries. The real delicacy comes after you’ve written that first letter, or the first word, or the first line, or the first page. The real delicate moment is when you lift up your pen and look at what you have done. The real delicate moment is then when you ask yourself if that page stays or whether it ends up in the bin. B, if and when you ever find yourself at such a delicate stage of a beginning just remember the seed in the soil. The farmer throws them haphazardly, orientated in all sorts of ways. No two seeds land the same. Probably. And yet only those that persist and persist and persist rise to the surface and feel the wind in their shoots and the rain on their roots. It doesn’t matter how bad your first word looks, just keep going. And keep that first page, so it reminds you of that delicate beginning. So it reminds you, that the beginning doesn’t have to be the end.

_________________________________

Photograph of the letter to a friend, taken from personal photography.

20 Response to "So it reminds you, my friend, that the beginning doesn’t have to be the end."

  1. Anonymous Says:

    This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
  2. sady Says:

    It worked! That doesn't sound like trouble writing. Very well written actually :)
    Take care Nas :)

  3. Anonymous Says:

    Dude, I love the way you explain things.

  4. Ghadeer Says:

    ^Yeah, with suited analogies and all that. And I also love your handwriting- it's the handwriting of a writer.

  5. Thinking Says:

    hmm...its nice to read you always...

  6. Anonymous Says:

    goodbyes scare me too. we are similar that way. =)

  7. Zee Says:

    This is a bit crazy! But good.

  8. R. Says:

    This is really lovely.
    "All endings are also beginnings. We just don't know it at the time."
    — Mitch Albom.

  9. danah8686 Says:

    Loved it. I relate to it.

  10. Jasmine Says:

    If you've lost your literary mojo and need it back: read Life of Pi
    Did wonders for me :)

  11. Furree Katt Says:

    I love your handwriting, Nas!
    When I used to do free-writing exercises it took me ages to write so much in such less time. You are like, the LORD OR FREE-WRITE. I love the way you write. 'No two seeds land the same' struck some kind of chord deep within me. Haha. :)

  12. Nas Says:

    @ Sady: Thank you! And you too Sady.

  13. Nas Says:

    @ perfectly.imperfect: Awh, thank you!

  14. Nas Says:

    @ Ghadeer: My mother always tells me I write like a baby 8-)

  15. Nas Says:

    @ Thinking: Thank you!

  16. Nas Says:

    @ firefly: Indeed.

  17. Nas Says:

    @ R: Thanks R! Always bang on with the quote.

  18. Nas Says:

    @ danah8686: In a good way or bad way?

  19. Nas Says:

    @ Jasmine: I sure will check it out. Thank you for the recommendation.

  20. Nas Says:

    @ Furree Katt: Thanks Billi (remember I used to call you that?). I'm not all that you know. And was a good chord or a sad chord?

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