Wednesday, 5 March 2008

Walk to Work

Thanks, Anne, Alex, Chris and Nicholas, for your welcome. I hope the people who read this blog will include as you do, people of all ages and genders. Just as my novels are adult novels for young people and young people's novel for adults.
Thanks, Nicholas, for hoping for a new book from me soon. I'm afraid you might have to wait a while. I'm busy writing a book of short stories of different kinds 'about' young people (six so far, I want about 12 or 15), and working on an 'adult' novel, which is being stubborn and won't 'go'. (But then, what's new about that!)
I have no idea what you're meant to write on a blog. The few I've read seem to be by people who lead terribly busy lives, meeting all sorts of people. My everyday life is about as active in that regard as the life of a hibernating hedgehog. As opposed to the activity of my mind, which is more like that of an over-active tortoise.
I guess, being a 'log', blogs are supposed to be some sort of diary. That's not my style. So you'll get whatever comes to mind. And I have no idea whether it will interest anyone.
For example, every day I take my 'walk to work'. That means leaving the back of our house after breakfast, walking down a path (Roman in origin) between two fields, then through the north part of the village, by the church and school and through a newish estate, which leads to a cycle path (which used to be a railway track) beside the tree-lined little river in the bottom of the valley (which readers of This Is All would recognise as the path Cordelia and Will use to get to their kissing tree), at the end of which I walk up the hill, along a lane through two fields and back home.
I walk the same way every time. They say familiarity breeds contempt (or boredom). For me familiarity breeds interest, at least when I love what I'm doing and love the people I'm doing it with. By following the same route each time I see the small changes that occur every day, as well as the change of the seasons, the people who walk their dogs, the teachers arriving at the school, and the wild life - today, with the sun sparkling on frost, two deer in a field, a woodpecker hammering away, a blackbird with its beak stuffed with leaves and moss (its that time again!).
And my walk to work is a meditation. Because it's so familiar half my mind can think about the day's work, give myself a good talking to when I'm feeling down in the mouth, get my body moving as well as my mind. One of the day's best pleasures.
But I have no idea if that interests anybody else. However, whether it does or not, it's the blog for today.
Now it's back to the blank page.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

How wonderful that you have a weblog now! Hope you´ll get lots of visitors!

Karin Kustermans said...

Welcome in the blogging world Aidan! What a wonderful and exciting news!

Anonymous said...

Hi Aidan Chambers!
What a pleasure to read about your new blog! I'm regularly going to visit this spot.
This is very exciting!
Perhaps you will remember me as one of the two ladies (Inge and Inge) who were in Mechelen and even had a typewriter signed.
Did you like the jam?
Greetings,
Inge (from the jam :-)

Anonymous said...

Dear Aidan,
Welcome to the 'blogging nation'!
I still treasure my typewriter which you signed in Mechelen.
I too work and write from home and as from tomorrow on, I will walk to work as well. What a great idea!
There aren't any bridlepaths near my home, but there's a small horsehoe-road with lovely cottages just five minutes away, so I'll walk up there and back. I am looking forward to my first walk to work tomorrow!

Word spreads fast, so I am convinced your blog will become very popular real fast!

Anonymous said...

Your blog will be in my favourits list!

Lucy Pearson said...

Hurrah! Welcome to the blogging world, Aidan!

There's nothing you're 'supposed' to write - I always think of blogs as public diaries - you write to pelase yourself and other people can read if they wish. Most of the blogs I enjoy the most are by people who are not doing lots of exciting things in the outside world - like you, they have lively inner worlds, and that's what makes them exciting blog writers. After all, mountain climbers do exciting things in the real world, but they're often awfully dull when it comes to telling other people about it!

I love the description of your daily walk. I too love the way that having a habitual route to walk allows on to notice all the small changes as time passes. When I lived in Italy I felt rather cheated, because there was no plantlife around my city. I really missed watched the spring flowers arrive. A few weeks ago, I was watching the first snowdrops pop up and appreciating the way they give hope for the year ahead. Now the crocuses are here, and some of the trees are starting to bud - it's a good time of year.

More Aidanly musing, please <3