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Callie Feyen

If You Give A Writer Doubt

in Uncategorized on 13/09/22

Doubt is uncomfortable. It is sad and scary. It often feels lonely. But doubt is observable, too. If I can put myself in an observable, curious state, doubt will show me a story.

Every day I read one entry from Daily Rituals: How Artists Work edited and with text by Mason Currey. Every day is another pep talk sharing how one writer or another carved their own path – working a job, not working, living in the country, living in the city, writing in the middle of the night, writing in the morning, writing near a river, writing in the carpool line. I keep the book at work and either read an entry as soon as I get there, or when I’m feeling a bit unsure I’m doing it right. There is no right, the book says. There are only an infinite amount of ways to try.

My doubt is tethered to my faith, and my faith anchors my doubt, and this is where my writing begins, and this is how it happens. Sometimes it’s in the morning before I go to work. Sometimes it’s in coffeeshops. Sometimes still, it’s in parking lots waiting for one kid to finish school or sports.

This is how it is now. This is what works now. This is how doubt becomes faith. When life changes, when doubt shrugs off what has begun to feel like a costume (or an outfit that doesn’t fit or doubt no longer likes), I take a look at what it’s trying to say, what it wants to show me, and I make plans for a new wardrobe, one with all the vivid layers and the dull ones, too, and I say to Doubt, “OK lady, let’s see what we can do.”

2 Comments

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Comments

  1. Tracy Erler says

    October 5, 2022 at 6:41 pm

    “My doubt is tethered to my faith, and my faith anchors my doubt, and this is where my writing begins, and this is how it happens….This is how it is now. This is what works now. This is how doubt becomes faith.”

    What a great tweak to looking at doubt as a companion of sorts and walking with it instead of something to overcome or beat.

    Reply
    • Callie Feyen says

      October 8, 2022 at 5:48 pm

      Thank you, Tracy!

      Reply

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Hi! I’m Callie. I’m a writer and teacher living in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I write Creative Nonfiction, and in my oldest daughter Hadley’s words, I “use my imagination to add a bit of sparkle to the story.” I’m a contributor for Coffee+Crumbs, Off the Page, Makes You Mom, and Relief Journal. My writing has also been featured on Art House America, Tweetspeak Poetry, Good Letters, and Altarwork, and in 2014 I was one of the cast members of the Listen To Your Mother DC show.

I hold an MFA in Creative Writing from Seattle Pacific University, and I am working on my first book that will be published through TS Poetry Press.

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When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth k When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth knock out during a baseball game. I was in the dugout, trying to make a butterfly in the dirt with my shoe. The batter, who’d hit not just a home run, but a grand slam, came running in and everyone cheered and so did I because I’d gotten really good at reading cues for when a good thing happens in sports. I even attempted a high five, and somehow I knocked my face into her batting helmet, thus spending the good part of that weekend summer day in the dentist’s office getting a root canal.

No teeth were lost in this latest incident, but I was lost in a bit of imagining on Sunday when I tripped and fell on Packard while running. I look like I’ve been in a bar fight and my shoulder looks similar to how Wesley’s looked after being attacked by an ROUS. 

But I’m going into work today, and when I told my boss I’m nervous about how I look she said, “It’s OK because you have a story,” and if that isn’t the best thing you could ever say to me, I’m not sure what is. 

So, here I am with a story. Thanks to all my friends and family who’ve been so kind and keeping me laughing.
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