Saturday 26 December 2015

Boxing Day Blues

You can tell it's Boxing Day; Jehovah's Witnesses out in force. Two visits so far. Geeky young fella first, then smiling elderly couple. I argued with the young chap for a short while and suggested he read my FATHER OF LIES. He declined, so I did the same with his offer of The Watchtower. Meanwhile, the great god, Consumerism, gains more converts with The Sales. Adherents work themselves up into a frenzy, where any common sense they had evaporates at the hint of a bargain price for something they don't need. Ah well, all religions have their down sides.

Thursday 22 October 2015

Take More Water With It


TAKE MORE WATER WITH IT.   (From the bath of Serena Cairns!)

 

Lying back in the bath, the warm water gently washing away cares along with grime, you relax in its womb-like buoyancy.  You feel pampered, safe and comfortable.  An idea forms in the blank void that was your mind.  Snatches of meaningful dialogue rattle off strange tongues, and emotions threaten to swamp you in a sea of creativity.  You reach for pen and paper, but no, you've left them on your desk... again.  You try to stem the flow of ideas, knowing you can only remember so much, but the blockage you've suffered from for days has been swept away by a mental Dyno-Rod, and Pulitzer prize material disappears down the river of lost thoughts before you can grasp a towel and slop your way to the word-processor.  Sound familiar? 
            We generally assume the reason for this creative surge has something to do with relaxation, but what if there's more to it than that?  What if, as the saying goes, we 'feel it in our water'? 
            We all know the moon governs emotions, and, in astrology, the water signs are emotional.  The moon causes the ebb and flow of the tides, and, as our bodies are composed of 86% water, it must exert a tremendous pull on us too.  The percentage of water in our brain is even higher.  There is exactly the same amount of water on our planet as there was when it was formed, not a drop more, not a drop less.  It changes form, of course, evaporating, condensing, falling, freezing, but it's still the same water whether it makes up the oceans and rivers, the thunderclouds or our bodies, and part of that large body of water also fills our bath. 
            Water gives life.  Without it nothing would live, but it also destroys life with floods and tidal waves.  People drown in the same element that cocooned them before birth.
            The water lapping around your reclining form could have run off the back of a Tyrannosaurus rex, or, for that matter, through a Tyrannosaurus rex (Michael Crichton probably bathed in something similar).  It could have lapped at the hull of a galley ship manned by weary slaves, or washed the bloodied decks after the Battle of Trafalgar.  Maybe it was used to mop the brow of a small child dying of Bubonic plague, or was the last few drops in the canteen of a thirsty man lost in the desert. It could have protected the infant Alexander within his mother's womb, crested as snow on the Himalayas' highest peaks or fallen, salty, as Cleopatra's tears.  Nothing that has taken place on this planet, involving any living thing (and most non-living too), has done so without the presence of water.  It is a conductor of images.  Is it any wonder that, when we are relaxed and receptive, surrounded by this most essential of elements, we pick up and absorb the memories, the visions and the motion of several million years? 
            Maybe that masterpiece you thought of today was drawn from memories, memories contained in a minuscule particle of water that makes up your body content, was sipped in your early morning cup of tea or in the gin-and-tonic last night at your local. 
            You could argue that fantasy and science fiction cannot be remembered, but the emotions, incentives, hopes and fears, courage and everything else that plays a part in such stories can be.  It is only the time and setting that is altered.  When all the strange and varied beliefs of the world are composted down, we shouldn't be surprised when some of us harvest an unusual crop. 
            It's not such a strange idea when you consider that stones store impressions, emotions and scenes, which are later picked up as feelings or ghost sightings by those in the right state of mind to 'receive'.  Why can't water act in the same way? 
            Carry it one step further and we could have yet another explanation for hypnotic regression into supposed past lives.  The individuals being regressed are in an imposed state of relaxation.  Who's to say the verifiable facts that come from such a state aren't coming from the water content of their own bodies?  OK, so I'm letting my imagination/creativity come into play here, but then I blame it on the water. 
            Perhaps I'm crazy, but by all means put my theory to the test next time you suffer from writer's block.  If you really want to dip into the Cauldron of Inspiration, I suggest you grab your pen and paper and take a long, long soak. 

© Serena Cairns     (previously published in a pagan writers' magazine.)

NB  Since writing this, it has occurred to me that it is not strictly true that there is the same amount of water on this planet as there has always been.  The advent of space travel means that water may well have left our atmosphere, and there is also the possibility some may have arrived by meteor.  However, we are talking minute amounts, and it no way detracts from the basis of my conjecture.

 

 

Please note...

This should at least arouse some interest with the ladies... and one or two of the gents too. Come on, help a girl out. I need reviews, folks.

Between Stops



Between Stops is available through Amazon as both an ebook and print. Do take a look.
Do visit www.serenacairns.co.uk to see reviews of my novel, Father of Lies, from both Amazon.co.uk & .com. Am delighted with the comments so far, and want to trail them behind a plane on a huge banner.

Thursday 19 February 2015

Dumbing down

 #Reading
 
The dumbing down wolf now comes in sheep's clothing. Certainly, getting people to read is the aim of the latest scheme, but, oh, are we really incapable of immersing ourselves in books these days? We used to be brought up reading Stevenson, Poe, Dickens, etc., so I'm sure the children of the 21st century, not to mention adults, can cope with normal length novels.
            In the latest edition of 'Booktime', the free magazine advertising the latest books, the first page is devoted to 'Quick Reads'. This is proudly sponsored by Galaxy chocolate. The books are written by bestselling writers, aimed at giving 'a fast and satisfying read'. Surely the joy of immersing oneself in a good book is to take time out, relax and not rush through it - unless, of course, the pace is so frantic that you just have to keep turning the page.
            No, educate the populace in the joy of literature by all means, but please, please not with adulterated novels that pander to those with short attention spans.

Short stories

Well, it seems as if I have a lot of catching up to do. How do people manage their time so well as to write a blog as well as their other creative writing? I think I'd better begin with mentioning BETWEEN STOPS. This is an anthology put out last year, featuring very short stories from five authors. Stephen King said, "A short story is like a kiss in the dark from a stranger.". There are over thirty kisses contained within its pages, a veritable orgy in fact, and it's available from Amazon as both an ebook and paperback. I'll post some of the reviews next time. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Between-Stops-Anthology-Simon-Cornish/dp/1497542200/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1422304991&sr=1-1&keywords=Between+Stopsme.