Story about a story about Peter Church
Stories spur the imagination that describes life differently.
I remember sitting on the carpet in the little library at Tower Road School. Library Time was a big deal in grade four. Not only did a kid get to escape the times tables (never did learn sevens), but he got to kill a solid half-hour browsing through the curious world of books. This was an optimistic exercise where he would select a book with a cool-looking cover to take home and not read before not really doing the assigned book report. Alas, as with all things school, library hour came with a hook attached.
We had a rather wonderful librarian who would start library time reading a story before we pillaged her shelves. But one wintery Library Time she did something different. She read us a description of an amazing place, a setting with no plot.
Her voice wove magic as she told us of a long multi-colored tunnel, only high enough to crawl through that lit with flashes of light through gossamer walls as the unnamed explorer progressed. It led to, well, anywhere a kid could go. Then she told us to write down what happened.
So I wrote a story. What’s more, I liked writing it.
Now, dear reader, this would be the point in the epic author backstory where my teacher held my foolscap page in trembling hands and declared a masterpiece that would make Dickens hold his head in shame. Chubby cherubs would descend to attend me while the thick-eyebrowed thugs in my class forswore their bullying ways and embraced literature.
None of this happened but I did get a good mark on it. I think. I wasn’t paying attention after that.
The point is, I discovered I love to tell stories so I thought I would write them down.
Telling the tale, whether true or imagined, has the potency to uplift, spark laughter, open dark closets, and provoke tears. Words have power to take us somewhere different. And different is what we need to change.
Thank you for reading a few of my words.