When you quit your job, you take up another task
of having to explain to everyone you meet what it is you do now. This is
because your job gives a glimpse into the kind of person you are. Yes, you are
what you do.
A name doesn’t say much about you, but the minute
you say that you are an accountant, a lawyer, a waitress, a househelp, a
janitor, you will be quickly classified and it is from that classification that
your worth will be measured. Sad, but true.
I have met two people now who, after introducing
myself, sought to find out what I do. Make that three, if you count an old
lady who was curiously interested in my life. I found that a bit unusual.
One was a hairdresser I happened to go to, to have
my hair done. We chatted about my hair for a while – there is so much to be
said about dreadlocks. This is the kind of hair you can pretty much choose to
forget for a couple of days, and there will be no real damage done to your appearance.
“How old are your dreadlocks?”
“Two years?” I counted mentally to confirm this answer was
accurate. Yes it was.
“I think I
should also put dreadlocks” she said with a smile. Why does everyone say that?
Most people keep promising to ‘put’ dreadlocks every time we have a conversation
about my hair.
“It seems so much easier to maintain” she justified
herself.
I smiled at her image in the mirror.
Silence
“So, where do you work?” she ambushed me.
I say ‘ambushed’ because I did not expect to be
asked where I worked. More of what I did. Not where.
She already assumed that I worked somewhere for
someone.
“I am a writer” I replied
I was disappointed when she didn't ask what I
wrote about. I could have told her that I had already written our conversation
in my head and that I would share it with my blog readers this week. Pity she
didn’t ask.
I later thought about it and realized that for all
the years that I have been writing, I had never referred to myself as a writer.
This was my first time.
It felt good.
Another time that I owned up to being a writer was a week ago while on a bid to participate as a Storymoja
Festival blogger. The annual Festival will be running this year from September
17th to 21st. I am happy to have made the cut. You can
visit the storymoja blog where I will be a contributor to keep up with the events lined up during this year’s festival. Also visit my other blog - http://perfectlywoman.wordpress.com/ to read my writeups on various issues. Feel free to add your voice.
I consider it a great blessing to have found
myself in a room full of young creative, free minds. Bloggers who are very,
very, very (can’t stress this enough) passionate about writing. There were
those who had forsaken lucrative careers, law was the prevalent jiltee, to
simply write. Take Olivia who dropped out of a law degree class because she
realized that she did not want to be a lawyer after all, for example. She
was at pains to explain to her people that law was not the way for her. Her
insistence that she wanted to take an English course was met with disdain - What?! And become an English teacher??? You should have seen the passion in her
eyes when she spoke about teaching English. It was palpable.
The thing about one’s passion; be it a writer’s, a
lawyer’s, a teacher’s or a waitresses’ is that it fills your life with purpose.
You stop considering what you do as a job. It becomes who you are. Even if that
(ugly) wig and gown that lawyers wear look good on you, you only find fulfilment
the day you start enjoying what you do.
I sat next
to Magunga who had just shared on his blog that he had successfully completed a
law degree course but was not keen in pursuing a career in law. Why doesn’t
anybody want to be a lawyer woiye? He
wrote about being nervous at the thought of informing his mother that he wanted
to be a writer instead. It cannot be easy to ditch a career that has practically
dug a huge hole in your sponsor’s pockets. It isn’t easy, but such is life. You
gotta live it! You gotta be happy! Happiness comes with a price sometimes.
The passion that Olivia writes with. The expertise
with which Magunga pieces his articles. These can never be ignored. They are
ingrained so deep within the core of your being that you just have to let it out.
When you gotta write, you gotta write! That room was full of men and women who
wanted nothing but to be allowed to do what they love doing. Write.
We understand that there are bills to be paid and
that writing might not always give you the financial stability that you seek. Even
though I was applauded for quitting my job, there were voices of reason in
between the cheers. “When the landlord comes for the rent, make sure you call
all these people who are cheering you this minute to help you raise the rent” Magunga
whispered to me.
Thing is, writing may not pay a dime, but that compelling
feeling will not allow a writer not to write. It
cannot be silenced with a six figure salary. I guess in a way, the universe
knows that it is at a loss when those people who should be writing, choose not
to do it.
I wake up every day to tap away at my computer
because I am a writer. It is all I am now. I am no longer a writer clothed as
a secretary. I have been laid bare. Writing is not my side hustle anymore. It is not something I do
when I have nothing else to do. It might take a while to get where I want to
be, but the crazy me believes that as long as I keep doing this persistently, consistently,
I might not have to go back to my fellow writers for a quick mchango at the end of the month.
So hey, I am a writer.
I am a writer!
P.S: As I write this, news is streaming in about the Mpeketoni Attacks. I condole with the families who have lost their loved ones to this heinous attack. May God help our country.
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