The Sleeping Hillbilly: Writer’s Block or Simple Inertia (A Case Study)

Back when I thought I was just a hillbilly wannabe.

Back when I thought I was just a hillbilly wannabe.

It has occurred to me that what I have been labeling writer’s block may just be simple inertia born of sleep deprivation. This thought was born of pondering why it is that if I miss 10 hours of sleep over two days, it takes me 42 hours of sleep to catch up.  Of course the answer is 42: bonus points if you know why.

I was rip-roaring and ready to take over the world on Monday when I got a phone call from Chef Boy ‘R Mine announcing a surprise, imminent visit. His visits are rare enough and due to the continued shenanigans at Hell’s Kitchen of the Moment, he is fixin’ to move to Charlotte.

I suppose the move to Charlotte was inevitable, but when I got him back after two years and four Floridian Hell’s Kitchens of the Moment, I was hopeful I could keep him close. Not gonna happen. Besides, it seems de rigueur for younguns to spend part of their youth in Charlotte. It’s a rite of passage or something. While the direction of the Hillbilly Highway keeps changing, the existence continues.

My people outmigrated from Appalachia so many years ago that for a time the younger generation was completely ignorant of our hillbilly roots. It wasn’t until my family moved here in the early 70s, left again, and then came back in the mid 80s that I started exploring why it was that I was just so comfortable here – why it was that a Californian born military brat with no roots who had never tasted pinto beans outside of a Mexican restaurant felt completely and utterly at home. That old saying – there are two kinds of people who leave West Virginia, those who come back and those who want to – didn’t seem like it should apply to me, but it did. The seven years of exile from the hills between high school and young adulthood were great fun, but I talked incessantly of getting back here. And I did just in time to raise Chef Boy ‘R Mine here.

Prior to that, home had been that collection of people known as my immediate family. I discovered that while I had been reared in military towns all over the United States, my rearing had been supervised by parents who had parents who had parents with deep roots in Appalachia. The behavior that made us stand out in Camp Lejeune and Quantico and Kaneohe was so muted by generational atrophy that it wasn’t even noticeable here. (I’ve been working on that – I hate not being noticed.)  Home is now both a group of people and a place.

You’d have thunk one of us would have cottoned on when the family friends we developed were the pharmacist originally from West Virginia, the co-worker from Tennessee, my mom’s BFF from Kermit. There were other friends, of course. A lot of them were from Michigan and it wasn’t until I studied Appalachian history and culture that I learned about the Hillbilly Highway to Detroit/Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti. I recently learned that one part of Ypsitanti is called Ypsitucky. Both of my parents were from that area of Michigan and they simply thought the connection was a Michigan connection. Pshaw. That I’ve picked West Virginia to bond with should be no surprise. It’s the only state entirely contained within the Appalachian Region and I’m an all or nothing kind of person.

When I worked at the newspaper in Waukesha, Wisconsin, I was awfully puzzled when all the paperboys/girls brought me birth certificates listing Owensboro, Kentucky as their place of birth. [Johnny Depp is the only pretty-boy type of famous person I’ve ever salivated over post-junior high. It tickles me pink to know he’s from Owensboro.]

So, anyway, I’m enjoying my adult (and I use that term loosely) son. After the slamming door phase of his teenage years, it’s heady stuff to sit at the table with him after one of his spectacular concoctions and kill a bottle (or two) of wine. This last time we were up until 1:30 discussing the events of his birth. I haven’t been up at 1:30 unless I woke up at 1:29 to pee since. . .since. . .since I don’t know when.

Unfortunately, I had to be somewhere the next morning. I had to be there with all my synapses firing and a spring in my step. Morning is not my friend and this was a daunting enough challenge without starting sleep deprived (and more than an hour late as things turned out). That night when I finally got to my hotel room, instead of diving into bed, my roomie and I were up far too late talking about this and that. She’s roughly my age, working full-time and going to grad school full-time. She was as tired as I.  [<–Well lookie there!  Excruciatingly correct grammar.  I should fix that.] Yet we stayed up talking about a scintillating conversation she had with a controversial legislator in the hotel’s business center. One thing led to another and it was midnight before we turned the light out. (She was on spring break and we’ve dubbed this out-of-town sleepover Girls Gone Wild: The Menopause Years. Pitiful.)

I had to be at the Capitol rotunda by 7:00 a.m., so it was another brutal morning made more so by the agony of trying to find parking in the rain. When I finally got home later in the afternoon, I crashed into bed for a nap. Woke up to eat and went back to sleep.

The following morning, I overslept. I put in a full day of work and came home forcing myself to wait until 7 p.m. to go to bed for the evening. By 7:11 p.m., I was nestled in bed with a trashy novel and asleep by 7:30. I didn’t wake until 8:30 yesterday morning.

I sat at the laptop for hours yesterday morning trying to summon the creative energy necessary to blog about some current events that are driving me crazy, but I couldn’t get going. I checked Facebook. I checked Twitter. I cruised other peoples’ blog postings. I cleaned out my email box and set up some new filters. I took a nap. And then I took another nap. And then I went to bed at 9 p.m. before waking just a bit ago.

Trying to motivate, but getting (surprise!) side-tracked.

Trying to motivate, but getting side-tracked.

I’m still tired. I’m willing to bet that I nap at least once today. I still don’t have the energy to tackle the plethora of blog postings, news articles and videos, etc. that are making my hair burst into flames. I don’t know if it’s writer’s block or inertia born of fatigue. While I have no desire to return to my misspent youth, I do miss being able to be dynamic and functional on 3-hours of sleep per night, night after night. I wonder had I slept more between 1979 and 1987 if I’d be more dynamic and functional now. As a dear friend pointed out, I seem to wonder, ponder, muse, and cogitate a lot these days. I hadn’t thought it was a new habit, but my biggest failing during my youth was that I didn’t do such things with enough regularity. But hot damn and a fine cha cha too, I had a good time. Of course, now I think about stuff too much and thus get nothing accomplished. I’ve been seeking balance my entire life.

I’m hopeful that by tomorrow I’ll be ready to take over the world again. Trust me: when I rule the world things will be different.

Places of Great and Good Interest

Tiaras should be standard issue.

Wednesday evening I was standing in line at the gas station when a little girl, about 5, tapped me on my butt. I turned around and she asked me where I was going as if putting gas in the car was a sign I was going to some place of great and good interest. I told her I wasn’t going anywhere exciting right then, but that Thursday night I was going to a pajama party.

She thought about for awhile and after putting her hands on her hips, she said to me, “Well, don’t forget your tiara.” Bless her heart. How did she know I have a tiara?

I love that some little girls think tiaras are standard issue. I love that this little girl isn’t afraid to ask questions. And I was knocked out by her glittery tennis shoes and Dora Explorer backpack with the Girl’s Rule bumper sticker obscuring Dora’s feet. That child is going to go to places of great interest, I hope.

I did go to a pajama party Thursday night. The Obama Pajama Party was held at the Java Joint in Huntington and hosted by the enthusiastic Democrats I hang out with. The plans were to watch Obama accept the nomination on a large screen with like-minded people wearing pajamas. When I agreed to attend, my mind wasn’t included in “like-minded.”

I am a registered Independent and always have been. I’ve never been able to articulate it with any skill, but there’s something about the party system that pushes all my buttons. I can riff for hours, with little provocation, as to why I think political parties are one of the great evils. In more practical terms, I don’t agree in entirety with either of the two major parties’ platforms. I’ve already got so many labels slapped on me that I don’t need another one that allows people to jump to conclusions about my values, my actions, my thoughts, my experiences. Because of my lack of party affiliation, I have not been able to vote in the Democratic primary in West Virginia. The Republicans welcomed me, but not the Democrats – until this year. Apparently, whatever was rattling around in my mind became of interest.

The Republicans disqualified themselves from my consideration for their violations of trust and decency along with their constitutional outrages.  I did watch their debates just in case.  I didn’t hear anything to change my mind.

I’ve been threatening to sell my unused wide-eyed-political-candidate-enthusiasm on E-Bay. I have never voted for a candidate; I have always voted for the lesser of two evils. The first election I could vote in came after the Nixon scandal, after the Iran hostage crisis, after the horrors in Central America, and after the Big Daddy of them all, the Vietnam War. These things can make a person jaded about politics in America and skeptical of anyone who wants to be a part of it. I’ve often said that I cannot in good conscience vote for anyone who wants the job of president.

As it turns out, I had a brand new pair of pajamas recently acquired while on vacation in the Boston area. (Yeah, we hillbillies get around and find the taking-off-the-shoes-thing at the airport right accommodating.) My pajamas, marvels of sartorial art, make for a lovely ensemble with their vibrant redness emblazoned with Drama Queen in white. I had planned to wear them with my nearly knee-high fuzzy, rainbow boot-slippers, but I had never given the tiara a thought. 

A friend of mine, upon learning I had no tiara, sent me one. And it’s a beauty. I can’t remember exactly what it was that she said, but she was incredulous I didn’t own one. Tiaras should be standard issue.

Drama Queens for Obama

I found myself in a coffee shop wearing Drama Queen pajamas, fuzzy slippers, and a tiara. I had feared I would be the only person in pajamas, but I was assured this would not be true. I was, however, the only person in something that really looked like pajamas not to mention the only person in a tiara. I’m really glad I decided against the boa. Magnet. Every camera, digital and video, ended up pointed at me at some point in the evening. Trying to watch a big screen television while wearing a tiara and bifocals in public while also trying to read DNC bloggers on the laptop with television camera lights and camera flashes in one’s eyes is a misery I would only wish upon a few.

And it got worse. In preparation for this pajama party, I had watched some of the convention. I had read and read and read about the issues, the schisms, the rumors and the PUMAs. Since I had not ever really thought Obama was a serious contender, I hadn’t spent much time learning about him. I didn’t think he was not a contender because we, the collective we, are racist, but because we, the collective we, can’t see the forest for the trees when it comes to Muslims. The truth be damned, there are still far too many people in this country convinced that man is a Muslim, which for so many of them equates to terrorist.

I enjoyed every segment of the convention I had time to watch, but this last event just rocked. I was pretty much glued to the screen, especially after Obama began speaking, because my inner-cynic demanded I pick apart every word; find the flaws in his reasoning and the gaping holes in his plans. The cynic was quieted and I was spellbound.

Those “like-minded” people were chanting, fussing at me to put my tiara on, putting my campaign sign in my hand so I could wave it for the cameras, hollering at me to go sit here, go sit there, stand up, and on and on. I’m trying to listen to this guy. I’m trying to watch the celebratory finale. Eventually, I wrapped the campaign sign in the tiara and put the tiara on my head in hopes they’d let me listen. While I’ll never be wide-eyed and without criticism, I can vote FOR this man. I am pleased to vote for this man. I might campaign for him.

I will not change my party affiliation, though. Anybody can join me in my newly-formed Drama Queens for Obama even if you don’t have a tiara, aren’t a Drama Queen, and have wide-eyed, non-critical enthusiasm.

And if anyone knows that little girl, you tell her I’m doing my part to make sure she always goes to places of great and good interest.