I have the unique joy of being able to trace my family
heritage back to the early 1700s. The
tomb stones of many of those relatives are placed behind an historical country
church established in 1759 less than two miles from where I live today. Consequently, I’m not just talking about
tracing as on a genealogical site, I’m talking about walking up to their grave
and saying out loud… “See here, right here I stand. The fruit of your loins 200 years down the
road, and counting.”
Fortunately, I have a family that not only remained local,
but also believed in education and schooled their children to write extensively.
It’s in my genes. As icing on the cake, someone had enough
insight to save their letters and pack them in a crate for me to open 150 years
later. Those letters have been great
fodder for my imagination.
Imagination is the
key word here. Predominantly, I write
fiction, so I juice things up a bit. I
play around with names and take a bit of one person’s history to combine with
another. I create places of intrigue and
there’s nothing more fun than ghosts and spirits and sounds in the night. To put all of that in a grave yard, well, the
combination is irresistible.
Herein lies the problem.
The embellishment of these stories by me and others over the years has
become viral, and with the onslaught of tweet and twitter and all these nasty
little messenger devices, the church sees more action at night than during the
day. The congregation only meets every
other week for one hour. The cemetery is
busy from midnight to dawn. Our
surveillance cameras caught a bevy of not-so-tantalizing beauties dancing in
the nude last weekend. It was hard to
identify them because they didn’t have any clothes on but their bare breasted
frolic would have been more pleasing had more been hidden. Just my personal opinion, of course.
Do I care? I didn’t
used to. Get your jollies by tiptoeing
around graves under a full moon or pretending that some ghost appears to
reclaim his golden arm at the stroke of midnight. What I care about is that frivolity is
turning more often to vandalism and we pick up beer cans, liquor bottles and
broken glass on a regular basis. Our “no
trespassing after dark” signs are ignored and the security camera and lights
are destroyed. Recently, church windows
were broken. Last night I ventured out and
confronted six more young people at midnight.
Really, midnight is long past my bedtime. I don’t like doing this, but I’m afraid we’re
going to have to start prosecuting for trespassing in order to close the flood
gates. And yes, we already have a
gate. It appears to stop no one.
I write this because this senseless destruction has made me
rethink my own writing. What have I
written that people actually believe is true? I used to think that was the height
of a good writer, to be so convincing that your reader confused fiction with
reality. I’m having second thoughts,
especially now that tweeting appears to be able to broadcast tidbits of misinformation
to thousands within seconds, without anyone having read the book.
I’m open for suggestions.
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