
I glance back at my journal entries over the last couple of weeks and find more than a handful of ideas for old and new stories I could be writing.
I seem to be entering fertile ground, but my old friend Hesitation keeps rearing his head. He is a formidable opponent, my old friend Hesitation. The commitment and concentration involved in crafting a poem, or a song, or a short story, or heaven forbid a novel, and the requisite time requirements, hold me on the precipice of action, even though I know the exhilaration of finishing the process will be worth it in the end. That’s the stranglehold that Hesitation holds on me.
Even writing this, this journal entry that will become a blog post, this act of writing about Hesitation is one more way that Hesitation snares me in his web. You see, if I am writing about not writing, then I am not writing what I want to write.
There was this girl with a perfect face and strawberry blonde hair, and I was convinced it would be interesting to kiss her or at least dance with her. The problem was I had no idea how to talk to a girl. They were a different species, an alien race, and my tongue would freeze whenever I drew any closer than 10 feet.
“What are you doing?” Hesitation whispers over my shoulder.
“What does it look like?” I say. “I’m trying to write a short story.”
Let’s say her name was Rhiannon, changed to protect innocent memory. I choose the name to disguise the fact that this took place before 1975, because no one named their children Rhiannon until there was a song.
Since she was a girl, I had no idea how to talk to Rhiannon. For all I knew, she either never noticed me or knew me as the weird kid who read comic books and sat in the corner of class. One day they announced the school would be having a dance on Friday night, and I devised a scheme: I would ask Rhiannon to accompany me on every slow dance. Surely we would think of things to say to each other and begin a romance for the ages.
“No, no, no, no, you can’t do this,” Hesitation hisses. “You must think very hard and plan carefully before you start writing, and my goodness, a story about that embarrassing night? You would humiliate yourself.”
“Relax,” I say. “I’m only doing this to illustrate how you keep me in bondage and how the only way I can break free is to sit down and start writing before you can stop me, instead of having endless conversations with you about how I should sit down and start writing.”
“Oh, thank you,” Hesitation sighs. “I was quite alarmed there for a minute.”
“On the other hand,” I admit, “I’m still embarrassed about making a fool of myself that night, more than 60 years ago, and so it might be terrific fodder for a sweet, heartfelt and entertaining story.”
“Don’t you dare,” Hesitation barks. “I absolutely forbid it, do you understand?”
Rhiannon was standing with a group of other girls, and as the strains of the first slow song began to emerge from the record players, I gathered up the courage to walk up to her and ask her to dance. She may have rolled her eyes a bit, but she acquiesced, and as we walked to the dance floor, I began to sweat as I realized I still had no idea what to say to her. This might be the first of a half-dozen silent and awkward trips around the room together. Still, it was nice to feel her warm hand in mine and to press my hand gently against the small of her back.
Even as we make our first turn, somewhere in the background I hear Hesitation screaming at me through the years.


