Kim Stafford’s father was the West Coast poet William Stafford, a man whose “rich beginnings” lay in the calm and quiet of his own sleeping house. Every morning for more than forty years, he would get up at 4 a.m., at least two hours before the rest of his family, and settle down to work. Stafford himself described his practice in terms of “just plain receptivity.”
When I write, I like to have an interval before me when I am not likely to be interrupted. For me, this usually means the early morning, before others are awake. I get pen and paper, take a glance out of the window (often it is dark out there), and wait. It is like fishing. But I do not wait very long, for there is always a nibble—and this is where receptivity comes in. To get started I will accept anything that occurs to me.
Years later, Kim Stafford wrote a memoir about his father entitled Early Morning. He described William’s steady practice as a “symposium with the self.” A particular day’s writing might include images from a recent dream, news of the family and the world at large—and a couple of poems. Often, these first drafts didn’t seem to amount to very much. Stafford himself said that they were “often so colorless, so apparently random, so homeless and unaccountable,” that most people wouldn’t have bothered to work with them. But by making time for them, by lending “faith and attention” to what he called those “waifs of thought,” a total of more than sixty books made their slow way into print.
“A good life is partly a matter of luck,” wrote William Stafford. “I can look for it and cherish its intervals. But I can’t control it.” Still, he could choose to set aside that time: to protect those early mornings. “To get up in the cold, then make a warm place, have paper, pen, books to hand, look out at the gleaming rain, shadows, the streetlight steadfast. You could stay awake all night, not give away those hours.”
~ Christian McEwen, World Enough & Time: On Creativity and Slowing Down
Notes:
- Photo – Ecriture Infinie
- Related Posts: Christian McEwen
Thank you, so very much David. Reading your Excellent post I kept nodding and saying ‘yes, right, that’s it!’
Within 2 minutes I’d checked out the book & made the purchase. Already onto Chapter 2.
Still nodding. Still murmuring yes.
Highly Recommend. Brilliant! appreciate it 🙂
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Agree Debi. Love the book. She’s great. Glad you found the inspiration that I did. Thanks for sharing.
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have you read the entire book yet David?
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1/2 through Debi. Highly recommended.
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thank you
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i love this and can completely relate. early morning is my magic time of day.
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Me too Beth. There are a few of us rummaging around at 4 am.
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and ironically, and perfectly, none of us would ever meet the other early risers during that time, to commiserate as to the power of the early morning, as the magic of it lies in the quiet solitude.
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I had to think about that for a matter. So true.
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My heart song. Early morning, when the house sighs with contented snores and lingering dreams, when errant birdsong breaks the silence now and then, when the night’s embrace gradually fades…this is my time. Into the queue this books goes… 😌
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Yes. We are soulmates on this early morning journey….
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Indeed. And our Mimi, too. She’s another one of our early morning tribe. ☺️
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Yes, she’s been quiet for a few weeks. I need to check in with her.
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She’s been having trouble with her WordPress subscriptions. I’m sure she’d appreciate the check-in…
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Wow-Lori sent this to me. Does it ever resonate with me!
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The 4 a.m. epiphany…magic. ☺
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It is, Magic…
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Here’s to early mornings!
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Beautiful Inspiration!
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It is time for me to return to this. Thank you David! And something new for my list.
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It’s worthy Makere. Enjoy.
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