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by Kathryn E.
Member since:
January 15, 2006

A room of my own: the desk

April 06, 2008 09:53 AM EDT (Updated: April 06, 2008 09:58 AM EDT)
views: 277 | rating: 9.9/10 (84 votes) | comments: 124

In my attic, beyond the cobwebs and ancient tapestries, past the gunmetal grey filing cabinets that line the walls, is a room of my own. It is where I write. It is not a writing shed, though that would be perfectly lovely. I like to keep this room neat, the files respectable. Most days, that is a tall order.

The sun floods the attic as I crouch underneath the beams, trying to find my desk. My desk is rudimentary -- a child's first desk, a hand-me-down -- perhaps someone bought it at a garage sale. It is small, plain, unfinished. That is the key: It is not finished because it is unvarnished pine. I doubt it will ever be finished. Three drawers are on the right: the top is for pencils and other writing implements; the middle for papers; the third for files.

Originally, I used these drawers in the way they were intended: in the top drawer, I kept pens, pencils and erasers, a protractor and a lucky rabbit's foot. In the middle drawer, I kept my childish essays -- words scrawled at fever pitch in a race to keep my creative vapors from escaping before pencil forever seared my words onto the page. In the bottom drawer, I kept files -- report cards, essays and tests, all humdrum verifications of my life at the time.

As the years went by, I grew taller and my needs grew more sophisticated. In the first drawer, the changes were gradual. First ballpoint, then fountain pens replaced my trusty Ticonderoga No. 2. A left-handed Calligraphy pen was my favorite. I kept a small box of watercolors nearby for painting flowered borders alongside love letters penned in hand-lettered calligraphy -- letters intended for someone special but never sent. The lucky rabbit's foot remained as the sole object from my childhood as a 10-year-old girl.

In the second drawer, essays on 100 percent cotton-rag Bond replaced wide-ruled, loose-leaf pages, now yellowed and dog-eared. These were not school essays, but fancies of my imagination stored in darkness until ready for the light of day.

In the third drawer, the one reserved for files -- well, this is where I lost all sense of order. Soon I kept belts, scarves and a pair of shoes. I had outgrown the need for files, having graduated to the gunmetal grey filing cabinets.

In the third drawer, I have a favorite red-and-white scarf -- a silk scarf long enough to be a belt, neck or headscarf. I've used it for all three. Mostly, I've used it as a belt for jeans or a wrap to tie around my Polish pigskin shoulder bag. A Polish Kilim hangs above my desk, its linen fringe mere inches beyond my grasp. Woven into this tapestry is the image of a schoolboy and a schoolgirl running from their home, a symbol carved into the collective Polish unconscious from 1,000 years and more of the ravages of war.

In the third drawer is my first pair of heels -- a cute, low-heeled number made from ivory leather and still stylish, first worn the night of LBJ's presidential win. I first sipped champagne that night when I was 13, the year I was lean, leggy and too-quickly growing buds, believing in my parents' dreams before I learned to follow my own. My favorite leather belt, one my father had made in his own childhood and one I often wore in my 20s, also lines the third drawer.

My father's hand-made leather wallet is in the third drawer. A common thief once stole this from me on the MBTA when I was distracted and he reached inside my pocket book and removed my wallet, my license and six dollars. He thought he'd found his mark: I was well made up and neatly coiffed, dressed in an ivory, wool crepe suit that day. Two weeks later, the post office returned the wallet to my address, with the following note attached: "This was found in a garbage can in Haymarket Square. No money inside."I praised small miracles. I have the wallet still.

I no longer look at these items much; they are reminiscences -- markers of where I've been. Perhaps also they are markers of who I may become or where I may someday go - a 'has been' who shrinks from shadows of her past, of someone never having moved on. I hope to God this does not happen.

At night, the light in the attic is too dim for much good work. I don't need much, and most nights, the naked bulb will suffice. Sometimes, I hear the patter of light rain upon the roof; up here, even the vibrations of light patter are magnified one hundred thousand times. The aroma of the pine beams, the warm, wooly feel of the Kilim and the knowledge that my childhood, adolescence and adulthood is safely tucked within my desk affords me great comfort.

This room of my own feeds me and I need little else in my life -- water, bread. Wine, perhaps. I can take this room of my own anywhere, and shape it according to my moods, needs, wants.

Best of all, this room of my own is virtual.


***

Copyright © 2007, 2008 Kathryn Esplin-Oleski


Expand Tag: fiction
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Comments: 124

Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:00am EDT
I had written this originally a year ago and had posted it at that time, but I have since rewritten it yesterday and this morning.
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Stirling D. Apr 6, 2008, 10:08am EDT
What a wonderful imagination you have.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:13am EDT
Stirling: Thank you very much.
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Ashmin C. Apr 6, 2008, 10:14am EDT
I really loved your story. I understand the need for a space of your own. Ever since I got my laptop just using it makes me feel like I have my own space. Everything is on it and I can do everything I want and or need to.
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Benedict A. Apr 6, 2008, 10:23am EDT
That's a good piece of creative writing. I felt you holding your breath while writing this precious piece. Are you ok, now?

Great man, you do wield strong and smooth pen.

How would it be, I wonder, if you mixed a little bit of humour to your delicious dish.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:27am EDT
Benedict: Thanks for your kind words, my man. For humor, I have the True Adventures of Little Kathy that I write from time to time.
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subroto s s. Apr 6, 2008, 10:51am EDT
Kathryn, it's a wonderful demonstration of the equivalence of changes in the human environment and nature. As you grew 'taller and your needs became more sophisticated', your perception of the environment in your attic, also changed. Similarly, the 'climate change' is also a reflection of the changes in nature to suit the growing changes in the global environment. There is no need to press the panic button!
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:51am EDT
Ashmin: that is very true..Our virtual space is so relative...I actually work in a corner in the dining room but i feel like I am in the room in my story.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:52am EDT
Subroto, that is very astute - and I had only begun to realize that that is where my subconscious had led me.
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Randall C. Apr 6, 2008, 10:52am EDT
yes. it brought back memories, of my high school desk
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Dee - Nature Babe! Apr 6, 2008, 10:54am EDT
This is lovely and could be in anyone's attic. You have done well with this virtual space.
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Patti M. Apr 6, 2008, 10:56am EDT
Kathryn, I know too well the need for a room of your own to put your thing right where you want them. Great story. My room is a beautiful shade of deep lavender with hints of sage green and white crown molding. It's so very much me. I can lose myself for hours in that room.
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Samara O'Shea Apr 6, 2008, 10:57am EDT
Thank you for these lovely morning musings Kathryn. The nod to Virginia Woolf and the impeccable description of a writer's need for space of his or her own is the perfect beginning to my day.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 11:02am EDT
Samara: As I was revising this yesterday and this morning, I was THINKING OF YOU!!!

the pen, the pen, the pen - our most trusted guide for our soul...(I still don't use a pen, but I DO print and redline)...
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Doc, in the middle, holding on... Curmudgeon esq. Apr 6, 2008, 11:04am EDT
Lovely Kathryn... simply wonderful.
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Laura T. Apr 6, 2008, 11:04am EDT
Nice! So many layers to dig through just like your desk, such a wonderful metaphor for your writing life. A bit of Polish history, a miracle, and many souvenirs (i.e., memories). An engagement of all five senses. A pairing down in order to fill back up. A bit of ontological insecurity. And an ultimate embrace. But that's what it takes, n'est-ce pas? You have the discipline to match the space.

Bravo, Katheryn. May the drawers continue to grow... xoxox





Beautifully written. Thank you. xoxox
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Romy A. Apr 6, 2008, 11:06am EDT
I love this, Kathryn. It's funny, I often try to picture authors the of books I read in situ- do they have a typewriter? a computer? A yellow legal pad? How about a plush office? Thanks for this dance through your memory and musings...
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chuks o. Apr 6, 2008, 11:07am EDT
Great sorry for not have replied so long i have been away to do some writing i really love this write up hey can you send it to my personal email onyenm@yahoo.com
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 11:08am EDT
Laura: Merci bien,

Rosaleene: ah, yes, I often wonder that, as well.

Doc: TY!
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Granny Janny H. Apr 6, 2008, 11:09am EDT
Nice twist at the end. I like how you weave the stories of your past into different forms. I have been getting such of sense of who you were and who you are by these autobiographical pieces.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 11:13am EDT
Janet: You picked up on an important facet: The room itself is virtual - (the attic is a mess, though once it was not) I did have a treasured desk and I did once own these items. But, yes, the feelings are quite real. I was thinking perhaps of putting this into a memoir - stating that although the room and desk were fictional, the items were at one time real and that this was a real portrait of me through the ages.
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Gisela S. Apr 6, 2008, 11:24am EDT
I think you should definitely include this in your memoir! I had to laugh though. Your desk can get as untidy as you like in it's virutal realm...mine has papers piled high and only about four square inches of clear space for writing on! Maybe I should make the conversion!
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Kimberly Ripley Apr 6, 2008, 11:25am EDT
Sounds like an inviting place.....sometimes the most inviting places I know of are in my mind's attic!
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 11:29am EDT
Gisela: I don't have enough space in my real life.....

Kimberly: So true.
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M. Bradley McCauley McCauley Apr 6, 2008, 11:35am EDT
As I go through my personal writer's block, I envy you but in a good way. I seriously enjoy your inventive and artistic mind and your way with imagery. So glad you keep updated with your posts. I look forward to reading and knowing you better.

Blessings
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Joseph S. Apr 6, 2008, 11:59am EDT
This is a wonderful piece of writing. I particularly enjoyed the last two paragraphs. The whole essay is textured and well written as is. Change nothing. Bravo!
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Prima Donna Apr 6, 2008, 12:03pm EDT
I need a room like that. Though I think I would be distracted there -- I would want to go rummaging through the drawers!
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Aman V. Apr 6, 2008, 12:36pm EDT
HI Kathryn. Ohh, what an immersible piece of writing this is! I was in a tearing hurry - have to meet some new musicians in my daily hunt for new members of my latest band - and later, have t0o sit and rehearse some new Sufi music. And yet, I got so lost in this piece, it brought the sweet smell of nostalgia flooding into my subconscious, and I've been lost to the world for quite some time before I managed to hunker down to write this!

So many different things in this piece struck an emotional chord with me, and one phrase in particular - "as the years went by and my needs ..." - brought the melancholic strains of an old Bee Gees number wafting into my heart again - "Now we are tall, and Christmas trees are small...".

In that sense, your writing here is like that sudden fragrance out of nowhere, the one that catalyses old memories. Thanks for this early-evening music, Kathryn - love it, and love you for your intimate way with words! And love your beautiful eyes that seem to read the future and light up the present! (((((((((Kathryn)))))))))
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 12:39pm EDT
Aman, thank you for your kind words. I don't know that Bee Gees title...Or I never listen to the words, anyway...only the music...

Judi: Thank you.

Mary Mc: Thank you.
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Patricia F. Apr 6, 2008, 12:43pm EDT
Kathryn...this totally sucked me in and I was there with you in that lovely cramped space at the "top" of your house, a place filled with history and memories, sometimes dark and dimly lit and then sometimes burned with shafts of light. And then to have it be virtual! Wonderful!You are such a talented writer!

I did an interview on the Murder By 4 (wish I knew how to link! I was featured 3/21/08...shameless plug!) website and I described my virtual writing spot, too. A fun exercise!
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Gwen P. Apr 6, 2008, 12:52pm EDT
I loved this virtual tour of personal archeology - some things (methods and tools, like paper and pencils) we replace, some (things rich with memory that had a hand in making us who we are) we keep and merely add to.
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J F. Apr 6, 2008, 12:55pm EDT
I think I read this before. I enjoy it.
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Natalie Neal Whitefield Apr 6, 2008, 1:05pm EDT
This is so beautiful! I had an attic space where I did my homework when I was growing up and I loved it more than any other I've had since. You have re-captured that experience for me. What sweet memories come streaming back to me this morning. Thank you, Kathryn!
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Richard Frisbie Apr 6, 2008, 1:06pm EDT
a lesson in virtual reality - I believed it, saw it, felt it - it is real
Well Done!
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Bert Van Essen Apr 6, 2008, 1:07pm EDT
Thanks for sharing your life. I could picture your writing cove knowing my inner picture was tainted by our attic in a country home. Again thanks!
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 1:11pm EDT
Nat: Attics evoke so much, don't they - beams, the low ceiling, the treasures calling out our name, mice perhaps, and the roof inches above our heads...I have not had an attic before and love this one. Maybe I'll clean it up and then install a desk there.
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necee t. Apr 6, 2008, 1:18pm EDT
oh Kathryn... fantastic fiction... i love the way you write... soo vivid, i feel like i am there at your desk... wonderful visions .... thank you for taking me with you...
Blessings always... love,


Girly Comments & Graphics

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John Philipp Apr 6, 2008, 1:22pm EDT
Kathryn, a delightful piece. It rings true with all of us who have had a "special place" at one time or another.

Thanks.
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ness m. Apr 6, 2008, 1:26pm EDT
Very imaginative
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Quinn (aka Entwife) Blackburn Apr 6, 2008, 1:30pm EDT
..
U
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Elizabeth Madrigal Apr 6, 2008, 1:44pm EDT
Ah, Kathryn, you brought me with you as your 'virtual' room was as well in my imagination.:) Clever lady.
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Sharon B. Apr 6, 2008, 1:52pm EDT
That is great. I need a virtual room to escape to sometimes.
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Jerri H. Apr 6, 2008, 2:42pm EDT
I like it Kathryn~
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Dave McGill Apr 6, 2008, 3:08pm EDT
ah, the eastern attic....my own little virtual paradise as a wee one - the location of my toy armies and the storage areas for my paraphenalia such as comic books and baseball cards - which might be worth something if they survived - and maybe they are still tucked in a remote corner up there under the eaves somewhere.

Great article, Kathryn. You have a knack for dusting off old memories. Thanks...
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Sharon P. Apr 6, 2008, 3:27pm EDT
That's a wonderful roomful of memories you've shared with us.
Thanks Katharyn.
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elizabeth e. Apr 6, 2008, 3:30pm EDT
I have a room similar and it resides tucked away in the recesses of my mind and every now and then I enter the room and sit among family and friends who are on a journey not yet my own. We talk about wiener roasts on the Fourth of July, sliding down sandhills, and squeezing between the bars that enclose Plymouth Rock from the sea to collect coins for ice cream cones. We laugh about sawing the roof off a Cadillac to make a convertible and how we got soaked in the rain. All too soon a phone rings from afar and I leave the room to walk into the present.
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Fern Cohen Apr 6, 2008, 3:48pm EDT
Everybody needs a quiet place all their own.....unfortunately I have a studio apt and a caregiver in my space 24/7, but I put on my headphones, and sit at my laptop, and it is my own little world!
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Georgiana S. Apr 6, 2008, 4:25pm EDT
and there I was seeing you up in your attic! ...virtual!
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Anila J. Apr 6, 2008, 4:35pm EDT
Liked reading about your past days, it definitely took me to my maternal home as well.
Thank you for this read Kathryn!
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Layla Morgan Wilde Apr 6, 2008, 4:40pm EDT
I love this but you know how visual I am...I expected a photo ;-)
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~*~Danyale~*~ N. Apr 6, 2008, 4:46pm EDT
great imagination
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Katherine M. Apr 6, 2008, 5:03pm EDT
We all have places like this or if not desire a place to call my own ... I know I have a desk that holds my life in it and I had the same when I was a child.
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Larry H. Apr 6, 2008, 5:14pm EDT
thanks for sharing. room of your, Wouldn't be able to have one in my attic, can't stand up in it.
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Lawrence J, H. Apr 6, 2008, 5:40pm EDT
oh how the memories last a life time
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 5:47pm EDT
Dave: Now's the time to see if the BB cards are still there. My husband bought a load of 52 Topps Mint High Cards - Mantle and all the others - from a Lodge or a Cabot who discovered them in the eaves of the W. Roxbury home he'd bought a couple of decades ago...
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Denise B. Apr 6, 2008, 6:59pm EDT
very nice :)
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 7:06pm EDT
Thank you, Bob, Elizabeth, John Phillipp, all. Mary M. all.
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Connie H. Apr 6, 2008, 7:07pm EDT
At work my desk is clear, each and every evening. But your article has me thinking of the attic over my garage at home. We have a nice spacious office in the house. There is enough room for my daughter, her father and I each to have our own space. But they put me to shame. My desk at home can not be seen for the most part. I would so love to take my desk, four book cases, filing cabinets, etc and hibernate in my own little world. I'm jealous Kathryn! So enjoy it, and wish me luck in entering my own attic one day!
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Stacie N. Apr 6, 2008, 7:19pm EDT
My "room of my own" is finally getting my own computer: my very own laptop.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 7:22pm EDT
Constance: I work in the dining room at a computer hutch, in all actuality. I would love to work in the attic, but it is too crowded. This room of my own is virtual, my own imagination.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 7:29pm EDT
Thank you all.
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Cheri Cabot Apr 6, 2008, 8:08pm EDT
this is really a nice article, Kathryn. There is a grant for women writers called a "Room of Her Own". I will have to look it up because I can't remember who started it...a famous woman author...anyway, she said every woman writer needed a room of her own. So very true indeed.
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blaine d. Apr 6, 2008, 8:22pm EDT
every one needs his / her space at one time or another, great article thanks
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Debra H. Apr 6, 2008, 8:23pm EDT
many nice thoughts in it
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Magi the magical poet is riding the wind again Apr 6, 2008, 8:32pm EDT
Kathryn, we all need a room of our own like this. Mine is a happy mess.
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leann l. Apr 6, 2008, 9:26pm EDT
awesum as allwayse
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pamela r. Apr 6, 2008, 10:01pm EDT
Virtual or not wish i could keep my desk cleaned up or just have that space to begin with as here lately i need that retreat.
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Karen White Apr 6, 2008, 10:13pm EDT
I really enjoyed this--thanks for sharing, Kathryn!
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:17pm EDT
Mine is actually a happy mess, too, Magi. In the dining room. But I live virtually in my head, wherever I go. Don't we all?
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 10:23pm EDT
Karen, thanks for stopping by.

Thank you all.
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Debby O. Apr 6, 2008, 10:28pm EDT
Excellent Kathryn
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John F Walter Apr 6, 2008, 10:57pm EDT
An amazing piece of self-construction in the metaverse.
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Kathryn E. Apr 6, 2008, 11:04pm EDT
John F. Walter: :) Thank you, my dear man. I'd like to extend it but must prod inspiration.
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Wanda H. Apr 7, 2008, 12:36am EDT
This reminds me of an exercise I did years ago, while attending a seminar in Alpha Awareness training. I created my 'virtual' space and even after all these years it is still a true space for me, a place in my mind where I can go when I need find quiet to work. The miracle of this is that it is as real to me today as it was when I first created it, many years ago.

Thank you for this tour of your 'space'.
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Carol Lloyd Apr 7, 2008, 3:06am EDT
Thank you very much.
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Miriam J. Apr 7, 2008, 3:14am EDT
Oh, I truly enjoyed this piece. The creativity is delicious and abundant, exactly the way I love it. Wonderful!
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 5:32am EDT
Wanda: Interesting - because I do the same. Never knew about that kind of training. Thanks for that tip.

Carol: Thank you.

Miriam, thank you. Fun for me, too.
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 5:55am EDT
Thank you all.
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Brian Kavanagh Apr 7, 2008, 5:59am EDT
Where ever you write is your own space. A mystical place. I enjoyed the story, Kathryn.
Cheers,
Brian
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Judith f. Apr 7, 2008, 9:11am EDT
I wish I had the imagination you do. I used to write short stories when I was young but my mama told me they were nonsence and wouldn't ever be read by anyone. I guess I stoped living in a fantasy world and dealt with the real world, it wasn't very good this real world but I had to be grown up and deal with it.
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Erica M. Apr 7, 2008, 10:47am EDT
Great description of your imaginary world. It is nice to create your own place to write, even if it doesn't exist in the real world.
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Elsie Duggan Apr 7, 2008, 2:03pm EDT
I love this peace Kathryn, I think it is wonderful that you use your imagination so well to create this space of your own, I am beginning to clean mine out a bit by digging into my past and putting it down on paper, but you know, it will never really leave my space up there, Thanks for this article, lovely
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Sandy R. Apr 7, 2008, 2:13pm EDT
This is so nice..thank you :)
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 4:00pm EDT
Thank you all.

I will be back in a bit to respond to more comments.
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Jean Winstead Apr 7, 2008, 4:30pm EDT
Wonderful. I grew up in an eight-room house with fourteen people living in it. My "room of my own" ended up the space behind the piano bench. I still go there (virtually) to read, but I have an office where I write.
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 4:35pm EDT
Jean: Wow, that is a busy house...You have come a long way.
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 4:38pm EDT
Elsie: Thank you. I wrote it last year on another week home from sick; more time to just lie in bed and write...I have to stop getting sick...more sleep.
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amy s. Apr 7, 2008, 5:13pm EDT
sounds like a great place to keep your work
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Karolyn Q. Apr 7, 2008, 5:25pm EDT
It is wonderful that you have a place of your own. I hope to someday.
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 5:32pm EDT
Karolyn: Yes, it is.

amy, thank you.
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Amanda S. Apr 7, 2008, 5:59pm EDT
Thanks for sharing this story.
Its a wonderful story.
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 7:10pm EDT
Amanda, thank you.
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Shun P. Apr 7, 2008, 8:06pm EDT
I can certainly identify with this!
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Pat S. Apr 7, 2008, 8:48pm EDT
Incredible writing.....................love reading them...............thx for sharing..... :O)
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Kathryn E. Apr 7, 2008, 8:58pm EDT
Pat: Thank you...

Shun: Thank you...
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Dave McGill Apr 8, 2008, 12:36am EDT
You got the address, kathryn....break in and check it out....
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Kathryn E. Apr 8, 2008, 12:40am EDT
Ah Dave, thanks.
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Sheila Deeth Apr 8, 2008, 3:53pm EDT
I remember reading the original when I was fairly new to gather - really inspired me. Thanks for the chance to read the updated version.
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Kathryn E. Apr 8, 2008, 4:13pm EDT
Thank you Sheila.