kindness of strangers

writing hardily

writing hardily
Written by Cathoel Jorss,

Today I was writing in a cafe and when I pulled out my laptop to transcribe out of a messy notebook the woman next to me got up and slid between our tables, saying something over her shoulder under her breath. “I’ve just come from the office…” I was wondering why she would feel so insecure that she would need to explain her movements to a stranger when it sank in – as she sank in, to the bench seat opposite – what it was that she had said: “Ich komme gerade vom Büro, I’ve just come out of the office and I don’t want people doing their office work around me.” The funny thing was she was clutching her mobile phone like it was a huge reefer she was about to lift on the ball of the hand to her lips, and the flickering of her screen had caught my eye and momentarily bothered me, before I caught myself and realised how insane it was to resent someone for poring over their screen while I pored over mine. She was staring at me across the room, I raised my shoulders and spread my hands. “Was, denn?” She called the waitress over and repeated her complaint in the exact same words: “I’ve just come out of the office and I don’t want people doing their office work around me.” Around the flower arrangement she pointed me out. The waitress shrugged helplessly, her face relapsing from an attempt at sympathy into a foolish smirk. What could she say? I let go the sward of ideas I had built in the air as they demolished themselves and dissolved in the face of such tiny, such concerted ill-will, and took out my notebook again and tried to let my gaze fall into the precise point of the middle distance where happiness and contemplation and, it sometimes seems, poetry lie thick on the chilly air like leaves on the ice. I told myself this place – a “literary cafe” attached to a bookshop – would not exist if not for writers like me and took up my pen again and foraged on.

14 comments on “writing hardily

  1. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Oh, Tams, it’s gotta feel pretty good that random strangers at gigs offer their services to help you get paid! Yes that bridge from artist to scientist… a trembling slack rope, and I admire the way you juggle the hollahs as you walk it.

  2. James Sumner says:

    To turn a slightly bitter remark into something useful as food for thought is a kind of alchemy that allows for civilization rather than tearing at one another’s pharynx. Thanks Cathoel for sharing from your life.

  3. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thank you, James. You have such a kind and responsive, sensitive way of seeing, it is a great pleasure indeed to share some thoughts with you.

  4. Lesley Owen says:

    Good for you girl…..so glad you didn’t get up and leave.

  5. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thanks, Lesley, I wanted to! Her disdain really hurt me. You know when you’re open and creative and in the flow, and you have no defences.

  6. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thank you, Rhyll.

  7. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thank you, Tams, that is very gratifying to hear and I appreciate your saying so. Thanksx

  8. Cathoel Jorss says:

    The gumshoe as protective alter ego for poets in public. I like it!

  9. Jameela says:

    How sad that a laptop and notebook meant onerous work to her – it is one of the ways that you make so many of us happy, sharing your ‘office work’. One sniffy woman can’t compare to all of us who love you!

  10. Loni says:

    You are known for your cariness!

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