"Have you booked a holiday
yet," friends have been saying all year. "When are you going
away?" "We're not," I reply, "at least not in the sense you
mean."
We're fortunate to live in a beautiful part of
the country (Devon), we work for ourselves, so have no bosses to get away from
and, having travelled internationally for many years on business, have nowhere
we are burning to visit. As my husband says frequently, if ungrammatically:
"what would we be going away from?"
However, I’m
in the middle of my own, very special, summer holiday at the moment. For 17
days in July, our small town has a summer festival, Chudfest, followed by CarnivalWeek. I am one of the organisers of the festival and also take part in some of
the Carnival events. Since 5th July, I have: marshalled at a rock concert;
danced at the Summer Ball; applauded the entrants of Chudleigh’s Got Talent; served
squash to more than a hundred toddlers at the Teddy Bears’ Picnic; assisted the
question masters in the Quiz; sold books, listened to workshop leaders and
other authors at the Literary Festival; marvelled at Nicholas Parsons’ memory
for Lear’s poetry; laughed until I got stitch at the Comedy Club; supped at the
chocolate fountain, drunk pink fizz and taken part in my first ever Karaoke
session at the Pink Pamper Party; finally got the hang of line dancing at the
Hoedown; sold programmes and won on the ferret race at the Fete; marshalled for
the 6 mile road race and walked in the Carnival Procession as part of the
Chudfest entry (we came third in our class and the fact that there were only
three entries did not dim our pleasure one bit!).
In addition, I’ve slept in the
marquee three times (on security duty, not because I couldn’t find my way home)
and learned: it gets very cold at night, even in the middle of the hottest
summer for years; the church bells ring out the hours every hour, throughout
the night; and we have owls, seagulls, pigeons and crows in the playpark - all
of whom can be very noisy! I’ve also
been part of the team that liaised with the local press, put up banners and delivered
brochures to every house in town.
I spent two wonderful days
working with the local primary school, putting together a Chudfest special
edition of Chudleigh Phoenix, our community newsletter. Our Junior Press Team
were a credit to the town, the school and their parents.
What I haven’t done is write. I
normally try to write everyday and set myself goals on a monthly, weekly and
daily basis. I don’t always keep to them, but they provide a structure which
this scientist and former production manager needs. At the back end of June, I
started feeling guilty that I was not able to spend enough time writing — and I
knew it would get harder as we moved into July.
I ‘gave up the day job’ to write
full-time in March 2012. In fact, writing is now my day job. I love being a
writer; I enjoy it especially when the words flow and the word count grows. I
don’t want it to be a chore, although I realise there are times when one stares
at the blank page or screen — and it just stares back! And I certainly don’t
want to end up feeling guilty when other things have to take priority.
So, I gave myself a month off! I
made no plans to write during July (although there has been an occasional
burst, like this posting, which would not be suppressed). My notebook is brimming
with ideas for new stories. An old friend visited us last week and left me with
a brilliant plotline I can’t wait to get written. I am keen to get back to the
novel and implement the advice I got during the Winchester Writers Conference. In
a couple of weeks I will be heading to Derbyshire for this year’s Swanwick Writers’ Summer School, which is the traditional start of my writing year and we’re
launching the fourth annual Chudleigh Phoenix short story competition. It’s
going to be a brilliant year.
But first, I have a few more fun things
to do before the end of the month and I’m going to enjoy my holiday to the
full.
What are your views on holidays? Do
you have to go away to get away?
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