It's amazing to meet a person in real life when you already enjoy exchanging ideas--it makes the conversation a fascinating mix of personal discovery and continued conversation. If I could have imagined a reader of this blog when I first started it, I'd have imagined someone like her. And she is beautiful, as you can see, so she made me think of this poem by Ted Kooser:
Selecting a Reader
First, I would have her be beautiful,
and walking carefully up on my poetry
at the loneliest moment of an afternoon,
her hair still damp at the neck
from washing it. She should be wearing
a raincoat, an old one, dirty
from not having money enough for the cleaners.
She will take out her glasses, and there
in the bookstore, she will thumb
over my poems, then put the book back
up on its shelf. She will say to herself,
“For that kind of money, I can get
my raincoat cleaned.” And she will.
This has always struck me as an emblematic poem for a blogger. It doesn't matter if I get money or recognition for what I write here; what matters is that for just a moment someone is reading it.
Thanks for giving me a face to put with your name, avid reader!
11 comments:
She is beautiful. Then again, so are you and remarkably unchanged from my memories of you.
Very cool!
What a lovely poem :) And that's so nice that you got to spend time with a fellow book blogger in person!
I love meeting "imaginary friends."
Elizabeth, that's nice of you to say!
Nymeth, I think the poem captures some of the introvert-writing-to-be-read issues!
Amanda, this is the second imaginary friend I've gotten to meet, and both times we had a lot to say immediately. Just like we already knew each other!
You are all too kind. Jeanne, I had such a wonderful time getting to know you and chatting in person. There is something magical about meeting someone, face to face, that you only know through the internet. What a joy to realize that those same people are ones you'd choose to hang out with in the "real world" as well.
So fun to always meet the bloggers behind the blogs!!
Getting together with other book bloggers is so much fun because no one else really understands us. I love the poem!
Avid Reader, it really was a joy to hang out in the real world for a while!
Coffee and a Book Chick, yes--and to hear from their friends! It expands the circle!
Kathy, I know what you mean about how no one else really understands how much fun it is to talk about books, but I'm lucky enough to have some book-loving friends in real life, too!
I know what you mean abt instant 'friends' when you meet a blogger - conversations are lively!
Care, lively is a good word for that kind of fast, intense conversation!
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