I recently caught a winter cold, which turned into an infection, or it came with it, just before Christmas. It was just a cold, or so I thought.
The common cold had taken a backseat in recent times, as COVID-19 got all the headlines. But it has been around a long time; there are about two hundred strains of it. It was just waiting its turn, or a new strain was around. Old or new, I got it from somewhere.
And it was a lingering cold.
A continuous cough is not just something that comes with COVID-19; mine from this simple cold lasted three weeks, and I’m still not over it. The cough pounds away at the rib cage — it’s like going ten rounds with Mike Tyson at his peak.
It all meant that I struggled to write. That’s the way it is when I’m ill. I might have good intentions, that having all that time, I will write. In reality, that doesn’t happen. Being ill drains any desire to do anything, other than to get over it.
You eat a meal without tasting a bite. You read a message twice and still don’t absorb it. Watch a YouTube video, without taking it in. Somewhere along the way, you forget to write. The hours drag on.
And this is where writing lives.
To be a writer is to exist half a step removed from the world, constantly translating experience into language in a way that, hopefully, someone will like and understand. The writer is always watching, listening, and storing fragments away in the mind for future use. Even in moments of rest, or illness, thoughts are working, shaping sentences, rehearsing conversations, rewriting endings that never happened.
This is the art of it.









