RE-OPENING MY NOTEBOOK
My last entry on Open Notebooks was on 30 July when I was waiting to give birth. In between then and now the worst thing that has ever happened to me happened: after a healthy pregnancy of 41 weeks I went in to a long labour that lasted for nearly five days all in all. It wasn’t until the morning of 7 August that the midwives picked up an irregularity in the baby’s heartbeat and I was rushed in to theatre for an emergency Caesarian. Unfortunately, the surgery was unsuccessful and after a long fight for life, our son Otto’s heart and lungs gave out. He was a first and a much longed-for child.
The rest of August is a blur of shock and grief. I think the body literally puts you into physical shock so you can cope with the spiritual and emotional turmoil. I didn’t know whether I would write or not, but as it turned out, it felt quite natural to open my notebook, start a journal and write poems about the experience.
The next question was whether I would share that process here. In many ways it was something I wanted to do: surely this was the point of Open Notebooks? The death itself had been necessarily public: pregnancy is a time of expectation and many of the physical changes in the body are obvious. Friends, family and colleagues await news. Yet the intensity and depth of grief felt inherently private. My Twitter, Facebook, online blogging and browsing were all abruptly halted. Even connecting to the internet to check email was something I was slow to do. I needed the quiet of trees and birds, to look at the sea not the screen.

A huge wave of support washed in from everyone we knew. The buzzer would sound and packages arrived. The parcels, notes of condolence, cards and flowers were a comfort, and something I came to enjoy, despite their provenance.

Abiye Sends Me 'The Poet Reclining' and Some Shades. There's a beautiful synchronicity to this package's arrival. All week I'd been working on a poem - in my mind was a long walk in the Luberon earlier in the summer I wanted to compare to a painting by Chagall, with a horse, green fields and a bruised-looking sky. There was something very particular about the colours and the atmosphere I wanted to catch but I couldn't quite conjure up the image. Abiye's gift came with a postcard of Chagall's The Poet Reclining - the very same image.
I began also to venture back online. One day I clicked through to fellow poet Miriam Nash’s blog post about her creative letter writing workshops which explore the letter as a form. I loved this idea. I left a comment and also started to think about how I’d enjoyed the snail mail letters I’d received and how this experience related to the idea behind Open Notebooks.
With this in mind, Miriam and I met earlier this week and she’s going to be guest blogging on the site with me over the next few weeks.
We’ll be sending each other snail mail letters, responding to the contents and using the correspondence to generate poems.
I gave Miriam a book of stamps. She seemed very pleased with them. Now I need to write my first letter…
Tags: baby, birth, Chagall, death, grief, Karen McCarthy Woolf, letter writing, nature, notebooks, sea, synchronicity





December 9th, 2009 at 10:16 am
Lovely idea – look forward to seeing the results!
x x x
December 9th, 2009 at 11:14 am
Dear Karen,
Its good you’re writing, very therapeutic I believe. May I say they shouldn’t have left you for so long in labour…
take care
lots of love
elsa x
December 9th, 2009 at 4:54 pm
Dearest Karen
It’s so very good to have you back on Notebooks following a period of intense sadness. You’re producing your finest work to date and I can’t wait to see how notebooks develops.
Much love
Emma
x
December 10th, 2009 at 8:18 pm
hey karen, welcome back.
see you next week, I’m really excited about OP.X
December 12th, 2009 at 1:07 pm
Hi Karen,
A really beautiful and moving post to re-introduce yourself to Open Notebooks.
Keep sending me links on FB when you make a new post.
Lots of love
Bernardine
December 29th, 2009 at 11:50 pm
I’m so moved by your entry and by the fact that you’re back writing and sharing. Poetry is one of the greatest healers so I’m pleased that you’re able to write about all you’ve been through. You are an inspiration. Love and best wishes for 2010 x
January 20th, 2011 at 2:39 pm
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