Dani Shapiro

On Sensitivity

I've heard it said that writers are born with one less layer of skin--one less layer of protection--than normal people, or civilians, as I like to think of them.  I don't know if this is true of all writers, but it certainly is true of me.  I have long felt like a slightly neurasthenic creature who needs great amounts of solitude and quiet.  In the words of my wonderful teacher and friend Sylvia Boorstein, I am easily startled.  My natural habitat is my house--in the daytime hours--when all is silent.  Even the dogs barking at wild turkeys out the window makes me jump.  And I admit that I ask Jacob not to practice his recorder first thing in the morning.  I recently had a conversation with another writer I greatly admire, and she told me that she never travels far from home without earplugs, eye masks, slippers... anything to create a buffer with the noisy, noisy world.  I so related to that.  But what about when a buffer isn't possible?  What about those times when we need to simply be in the world in all its cacophony, to embrace the noise, the tumult, the...aliveness?

Over the years, I continue to develop tools.  These tools can be as simple as remembering to breathe.  To go inside myself, no matter what's happening on the outside.  To find the words that center me, and remind me that everything I need is right here, right now.  When I am internal, I am a witness.  I'm the outsider, the observer, absorbing and seeing everything around me.  Sometimes it's a little bit lonely--the price to pay for being on the other side of the window, nose pressed to the glass, looking in.  But when I'm too external, I become part of the world--and I lose my own outline.  I lose myself.  I do think this is the lot of the writer.  We need to be ever-so-slightly apart from what goes on around us, so that we can see it, feel it.  Ultimately, so that we can record and understand it.  Instead of berating myself (as is my wont) for the silence, the buffer I crave, perhaps instead I should see it as my greatest friend.

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  • Joyce Norman

    I agree with you on much of what you said. For instance, I am a very out-going person, like going out to dinner, good conversation, good theatre.....HOWEVER, and here is where many people do not understand me at all: I love and must have, the silence of my study where I write and let the Muse help me create amazing plots, characters....for my readers. I literally gain large quantities of writing and creative energy from this solitude. Do all writers not need this?

  • http://www.karenfollowingthewhispers.blogspot.com Karen Walker

    Dani,
    This is an exquisite explanation of how it is to be a writer. Most of the time I feel "other" than most folks. You've made me see that's really okay.
    Karen

  • http://www.jungleoflife.com/ Lance

    Hi Dani,
    The quiet of the early morning is what sustains me throughout my day. There is something very connecting in that alone time. Time to feel a deeper sense of peace.

    In those moments when it's not so quiet - or I'm craving some of that...I focus inward. Much like what you do (although I can't think of any particular words I use while there) - it's as though I see the "noise", yet don't fully hear it. It's there, and yet it's not. Does that always work? No. And there are also times the "noise" is good, too.

    Dani, thanks for the reminder of what quiet does for the soul...

  • lemead

    I adore this. I can relate so keenly. I wonder if I need the space, though, to NOT feel it quite so much - I need that distance in order to be able to understand and appreciate and even experience without the intensity of being too close. I mused a while ago about hwo I've always been the one who takes the pictures (http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/11/official-p...) and I think this was one of my coping mechanisms, developed over time, a way of maintaining even the slightest remove to keep from staring into the sun all the time.
    I'm grateful to feel I'm not insane for being skin-less, porous, overly sensitive, as I've always been told.

  • Peggy

    Oh, Dani, I can relate to this. There is so much noise that goes on in any given day that when a quiet moment comes along, it feels like heaven. It is to savor and enjoy. I live for those moments. Just to come home from work and be quiet, to journal, for an hour, is pure bliss! I enjoy reading all your posts! So thought provoking.

  • crnnoel

    Finally... an explanation that makes sense for this feeling... this inability to cloak and move in motion with the rest. What a beautiful take on the sensitivity that makes so many of us individuals, though we're told to fight it like the plague. Acceptance is a beautiful thing.

  • http://marianne-elliott.com Marianne

    I'm with you Lindsay. All my life people have told me that I'll need to get a thicker skin if I want to 'be a human rights lawyer' or 'survive in a relationship' or 'be a writer' and I've never felt that my skin was getting any thicker. Instead it seems to be dissolving away. What is changing is that my foundation is more stable, so that the influence of the noise doesn't sway me from my own path as much.

    Wonderful post! Thank you so much Dani. Everything you write seems to be written just for me. That is powerful stuff!

  • Heidi

    Dani I think you got it just right. I'm always trying to create that little bubble that writers crave. This is often a lose-lose proposition. Either you are pushing away your loved ones (bad mom) or ignoring your craft (bad writer). Yesterday the house was full of noisy tween girls but instead of hiding in my room, I started to chronicle what they were doing for a piece I imagined. Running up and down the stairs, spying on them and then taking some notes (they don't need to know!), I was able to be both writer and mom and stay in the moment. A first maybe! How great to be inspired instead of just annoyed. Thanks for reminding me this is actually possible and sometimes preferable.

  • http://www.katrinakenison.com Katrina Kenison

    You explain this so perfectly, Dani. Years ago, in a book about ADHD, I found helpful definitions of extrovert and introvert--in a nutshell, the extrovert gains energy and strength from being with others and is drained by solitude, while the introvert -- though perhaps friendly and sociable -- needs to refuel alone and in silence. It helped me to understand why, much as I love my family and friends and even a good party, one social interaction a day is just about ideal for me. So, I guess we could have been nuns or hermits, but we write instead, stepping gratefully and fully into the world, and then slipping out again, back into our silent places, in which seeing and feeling and thinking gives rise to something that just may be worth sharing with someone else.

  • Elizabeth Maker

    Tequila works for me. JUST KIDDING! Dani, I do indeed completely relate to what you are saying, and have actually been immersed in my own quiet garden sanctuary for the past two days, not answering the phone, hearing only the birds and the breeze in the trees. Ahhhhhhh. You articulate this so well, I feel much better about my periodic freakish reclusiveness. And neurasthenic sounds much nicer. Thank you. Real comfort.

  • http://www.facebook.com/danishapiro Dani Shapiro

    Thanks for these wonderful comments, all! I wrote this particular post very much out of necessity -- and literally while on an airplane flying to LA -- and facing another flight this morning -- and a very populated weekend. I'm trying to learn how to stay within the buffer zone even as I navigate the world. I love hearing from all of you!

  • annhite

    Thank you. I so relate to this and so many people do not understand.

  • http://bethandwriting.blogspot.com bluebethley

    Thank you for this post about the inner sense of being a writer. This need to be reflective, to be alone, both separates and distinguishes writers. Quiet time writing in the morning sustains me through the day, whether I'm on the road or at home. This process seems not quite conscious, bumpy and uneven. Without this time, a very precious hour, perhaps two, I get restless and feel unfinished. Your post reminds me that these are the gifts we give ourselves.

  • http://www.coffeesandcommutes.com/ Christine LaRocque

    I know this. I'm shaking my head yes. There are moments when the outside fuels me, but the inside is the place I'm most comfortable. The trick I'm trying to learn is to not lose myself on the inside. If that makes any sense.

    Writers "one less layer of protection," it's true, we wear it out there for all to see and know.

  • http://www.creatingwings.com megg

    Oh Dani, this is the first time I have been here (sent by Marianne's tweet!) and I am so glad to be here. When I read the first paragraph I didn't know whether to laugh out loud or cry. I had to admit to never connecting the dots between being a writer and being - as your friend says - so easily startled. I thought I was just being cold by keeping a part of myself separate from so much, but I like this explanation. I do feel sometimes like if I did let myself be more external the world would be too much for me to bear. But maybe I need to stop being so hard on myself.

    Thank you for a wonderful post. It's very nice to meet you!

  • http://www.facebook.com/danishapiro Dani Shapiro

    Welcome--glad you stopped in! I think many of us need to be less hard on ourselves--though this is, of course, easier said than done.

  • http://www.facebook.com/danishapiro Dani Shapiro

    I like the word neurasthenic because it's just so old-fashioned. Calls to mind smelling salts and fainting couches. Though sometimes, really, only tequila will do. JUST KIDDING! Nice to see you here, Beth.

  • http://www.facebook.com/danishapiro Dani Shapiro

    Welcome--glad you stopped in! I think many of us need to be less hard on ourselves--though this is, of course, easier said than done.

  • http://www.facebook.com/danishapiro Dani Shapiro

    I like the word neurasthenic because it's just so old-fashioned. Calls to mind smelling salts and fainting couches. Though sometimes, really, only tequila will do. JUST KIDDING! Nice to see you here, Beth.