Everything
changed when I won the Poetry Rivals competition.
I had
been writing for about 20 years by that point, but had done nothing
with it. On my own, I probably wouldn't have done. My daughter saw
the competition online and talked me into entering. I never thought I
had a chance.
My
life at this point was in something of a slump. I'd come to Swindon
for a job which no longer existed. I'm bipolar, prone to depression
and unemployment was not kind to me. Now I was stuck here and
couldn't afford to leave. My marriage was over. I used to work as an
IT consultant in places like Hong Kong, Australia and the City of
London. Now I watched the same Top Gear on Dave three times a day and
only left the house when I had to. I don't drive and I'm not a fan of
cars. I think I found the repetition comforting.
And
then I got invited to the final of the first Poetry Rivals Slam
Championship. I was stunned by this. I didn't think I had a chance –
I'd stopped thinking of myself as the sort of person who wins things
– but I'd give it a go. I managed to talk my Housing Association
into paying for the trip all the way to Peterborough. There's a sign
right there how far my horizons had shrunk.
I was
incredibly nervous when I was doing my Money God poem. I'm not
normally the nervous type: I did amateur dramatics for a few years as
a young man and I'd given any number of corporate presentations, but
usually on nice safe unemotional subjects like getting a computer
system to recognise changes in tax laws. This was very different.
This was me, competing with the top 50 poets from the competition,
having to interpret my own words and express them to a panel of
judges made up of proper qualified poets. This wasn't like handing a
mate a piece of paper and saying 'check this out – I just wrote
it'. It wasn't like putting something up on Facebook. I'm not even
sure what it was like. I have no frame of reference. It felt so
personal. I don't think I'd ever said 'this is me – tell me if I'm
any good' before.
The
compere of the night said that my intensity was such that he feared
for me, but it was really just nerves, a newly shy man thrust into a
spotlight and putting his own words up for approval. It was probably
some kind of public breakdown. I was pretty much terrified. I
remember shouting.
Somehow,
though, I'd done something right and I won. I won! This was something
I'd genuinely not expected. Writing was something I'd done for 20
years, but so was music, and they were both just pleasant
recreational activities, things I would do when I was away from home
in a hotel room somewhere in Asia. They were both just hobbies. It
never occurred to me I might be good at them. They were ways to feel
better about myself, ways to think 'yeah, OK, I've got a boring job
but at least I have some cool pastimes'. This was more about the
music than the poetry, of course. Poetry has not been cool for a long
time. Poetry is the anti-cool. It's a way of rejecting everything
that cool implies. Set it to music, of course, and things change...
And
now I had a publishing contract. Wow. Never saw that one coming. It
wasn't like I had a book or anything. What I had was a 100 page Word
document euphemistically called 'Complete Works' that had somehow
survived all the challenges of evolving technology. It started off as
a word processor document on my old Atari 520 when I was still living
with my parents, then laboriously copied word for word to my first
PC. It had migrated, constantly growing, as it went from hard drive
to floppy disk to USB stick, finally ending up in the email account
of my editor, Lindsay Evans.
It was
when we were putting the book together that I realised how
euphemistic my 'complete works' filename actually was. There was
stuff everywhere. By the time Lindsay had sent me a formatted draft
of what she had, I'd found more. Or written more. Probably about a
third of what ended up in the final version of the book was written
in the six months between winning the contest and publishing
'Reflections from a Broken Mirror'.
I was
starting to think of writing as my job. I had a publisher and
everything. I got involved with a local poetry group: I was even
their treasurer at one point. It didn't last, but that was not for
reasons related to poetry. I just got sick of the politics. Twenty
years earlier, I'd given up amateur dramatics for the same reason.
But I
carried on writing. I went through Wikipedia's list of poetic forms
and attempted all those that interested me (some examples are here). I wrote a series of
articles on poetry (available here) for Wise Badger, a now-defunct webzine. In a
particularly bleak period, I was even poet-in-residence for Walford
Web, an EastEnders fan site (I am no longer a fan). I was involved
with a Facebook group that would suggest themes to respond to
artistically, and many of the poems for my second collection
('Knitting Orang Utans') were inspired in this way.
I
stuck with the poetry for about 18 months, I guess. I'm still writing
verse and my third collection 'Et Cetera (And Other Similar Things)'
is almost ready to publish. But I don't think of my job as 'poet' any
more.
I had
discovered prose.
In
November 2011, I tried NaNoWriMo (the National Novel Writing Month - a separate blogpost on my first NaNoWriMo is available here)
for the first time, and I was hooked. There's a target of 50,000
words to write for the month, which equates to 1,667 words per day.
This is about 3 sides of A4. It's not a big deal.
So I
tried that, by the end of the month I had 80,000 words, and a few
months later, I had my first novel ('The Cybermancer Presents',
weighing in at 108,000 words). It wasn't poetry, but I still maintain
it was the confidence in my writing that came from winning the
competition that let me believe I could do it. It had always been one
of those 'wouldn't it be nice if...' things before.
To be
honest, I didn't really believe I could fill out a story to 50,000
words. I was a poet / songwriter. I wasn't used to writing in bulk.
Even the songs that went on for 11 minutes were only a few sides of
A4. So I kind of cheated a bit. I came up with the idea of having
players trapped in a videogame, fighting from game to game, and each
game would be a different genre, so they could go from sci fi to
fantasy, etc. Then I'd only have to write a series of vignettes about
a consistent cast of characters. Cunning, eh? I'd fill the 50,000
words in no time.
What
I'd not considered is how long a story takes to tell. By the time I'd
done the first level (a fantasy role playing game), I'd written
30,000 words. I looked at the list of the dozens of games I wanted to
include and scaled things back a bit. For that novel, at least. I've
written three more since in the Cybermancer Chronicles, and there are
at least four more to come.
To
paraphrase a line from The Commitments, I'm happier as an unemployed
writer than an unemployed IT consultant. I would define myself as a
writer now. It's the job I feel most passion for, the one I spend the
most time doing and it neatly encompasses poems, novels and songs, so
I don't have to commit myself to anything. I wouldn't say I was a
successful writer, because that's usually a function of sales and I'm
terrible at marketing, but it's what I do, whether anyone wants me to
or not.
Scribo
ergo sum. I write therefore I am.
If
winning Poetry Rivals taught me anything, it taught me that.
My books are available here. For Kindle versions, please select from the 'Links' section.