Catherine was a BBC News Producer for 20 years specialising in Business and Economics with a side line in travel writing for national newspapers, then she had twins. Now Catherine writes about what she loves, Arts, Culture and Travel on her blog Catherine’s Cultural Wednesdays. If you are seeking inspiration about where to go and what to see or need someone to write about it, she is your woman.
What is it about writing? I love it. I adore telling stories. Yet I am the queen of procrastination. Tales tumble over themselves waiting to be told. My laptop awaits. Coffee, I can’t write without coffee. Ping, a group chat on Facebook messenger surges into life. Cheap, cheap, somebody on What’s App has an urgent bon mot. Trillll, a twitter group surges into life. At last somebody suggests a word race and we’re off.
Writing is something that I have always done. Long letters to distant friends, fragments of ‘Famous Five’ style stories, breathless accounts of everyday occurrences in my tiny childhood village. To begin with this need to write beyond the demands of study was a solitary pursuit. I knew nobody else who scribbled endlessly. Then I became a journalist, suddenly everybody I knew wrote, cared deeply about punctuation and was certain that they had the makings of a novelist.
After twenty years as a BBC News Producer I fell pregnant with twins and took the Corporation’s kind offer of redundancy. My life changed, utterly. Thoughts about writing a witty and engaging account of parenting identical twins in your forties came to nothing. For two years it was all I could do to keep all of us fed and dressed. Eventually when a sleep pattern was established that involved both boys sleeping at the same time as each other for longer than two hours, the fog began to clear.
Now my thoughts turned to a blog about what interested me. Catherine’s Cultural Wednesdays started out as an account of my weekly jaunts out of the house and widened out to include travel. I published the first post and was then overtaken by fear. What if I couldn’t write? What would people think? Worse, what if nobody read it. For the next six months I wrote posts and didn’t post them. Paralysed with fear.
Without the support of friends and fellow writers I would still be writing posts that never got published. Where did I find my support network?
Put #amwriting into the search box on Twitter and all manner of people pop up. Daily word races take place. The same people kept on popping up, so we set up a chat group, called ourselves the LLs or Literary Lovelies. We went on writing retreats together. We supported each other through first drafts, agent hunts, publication days. Well some of us. The rest of the LLs are proper novelists, I realised that what I like doing is telling immediate stories, fiction is not for me. We chat virtually most days.
Wonderful though virtual friendships are flesh and bone is important too. When my confidence was rock bottom, I joined a local creative writing class. Slowly, week by week my confidence returned. After a year or so the formal structure of a class was no longer the right format for some of us. Now a group of us, the EveryGirl Writers, meet every week for two hours just to write, to support each other in our writing.
Telling stories is what I love to do. The solitary nature of sitting down to write suits me perfectly. Yet it is the support and friendship of fellow female writers makes the procrastination so much more fun.
Catherine’s Cultural Wednesdays https://www.culturalwednesday.co.uk
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/culturalwed
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Fab post, Catherine. Lovely to hear more about your journey as a writer (books or blogs).