Posted on

Pandemic Pause (Part 3)

Facing a worldwide pandemic was scary, facing the ridiculous stock-piling crisis that followed it was scary but, when Boris Johnson told us cafes had to close and I was able to stop worrying about being a huge infection risk to my family, the relief was immense. I write this post very conscious of the awful time some people had in lockdown but, I think for a lot of people (including me), it was like someone had pressed pause on everything that had previously crammed into our days and we finally had space to breathe.

It wasn’t easy. It wasn’t smooth-sailing. Two weeks in and I had to move out of the place I was living. It wasn’t allowed, but I didn’t have a choice. I packed up my car and my dog and sneaked to my sister’s house in the night.

I then had to find a way to live harmoniously with the sister I’d not lived with since she was fifteen and her husband and their 5 month old son. I am so, so grateful they let me stay, and I’m eternally gifted with being there for my nephew’s first crawl, first steps, first hug and kiss, first words. And there were beautiful days of barbecues and baby cuddles and standing bare-footed in the kitchen preparing salads and marinades and me washing up while my sister dried. And then there were days when the baby had woken us all at 4am and no-one could get along and I felt like sisters just maybe shouldn’t live together.

I was sleeping in my brother-in-law’s study and, like so many others, he was now working from home so I had to make myself scarce in working hours. I put my notebooks and pens in a box and spent my days writing in the conservatory, sporadically interrupted by my sticky nephew bringing me toys and wanting to type on my laptop and my dog who panicked the baby would get all the attention and needed some reassuring fusses and my sister who needed some actual conversation.

In some ways, I’m very well designed for lockdown: an introvert with a time-consuming creative hobby that involves staying in the same place all day. But, like everyone, I struggled with the massive change my life had undergone.

I was saved by the aspects of my routine that couldn’t change. My nephew woke us up bright and early and my dog needed a walk morning and evening, I need coffee at 11am (fact) and my brother-in-law worked Monday to Friday which gave us all a residual sense of working time and weekend-relaxing time.

And my writing. My writing saved me even when I had neglected it for all this time. I suddenly had the time to write. Loads of it. More than I could even use. But I didn’t just jump out of bed every day, full of beans, and skip into the conservatory to type merrily all day.

Obviously.

But, with little else to fill my time, I tried to write every day and, with that level of perseverance, I did learn two essential lessons that I have carried with me as “normality” returns.

The first is my need for external accountability. The magical Caroline Donahue (check her out on Instagram @carodonahue because she’s great and her podcast is amazing) did something incredible during lockdown and reached out to anyone who needed it. She started running an Instagram live every weekday called the Quarantine Writers’ Retreat. Every day, by 3, I had to have words on the page. We’d set ourselves targets and share them with the group and, every day, we’d check in. I asked Caroline to hold me accountable and she really did, calling me out by name. We’d confess we’d actually spent the morning making cakes instead, or proudly show off our thousands of words, or sympathise when someone couldn’t find the headspace to create that day.

Because, with few demands on my time, I was realising I will always naturally prioritise the things other people expect of me. All this time at home and at work I had been cramming my days with everything I could do to help others at the expense of what I wanted to do and then feeling guilty when I hadn’t got my writing done again. I kept thinking if I changed jobs, if I worked fewer hours, if only I could protect my time from the demanding employer, then I’d get more writing done, only to find I filled it with cooking more elaborate dinners for whoever I lived with, taking my dog for longer walks, agreeing to meet more friends, for longer. In lockdown, I learned to harness this weakness and make it a strength. All I needed was someone who would expect me to write every day. If someone else expects it of me, I will do it.

The second thing I learned is how valuable it is to surround yourself with other writers. If you don’t have any writer friends in real life (and I didn’t really then), you can connect with people online (Instagram has a beautiful and supportive writing community) or take writing classes, or listen to writing podcasts or read books on writing. This is something I really invested my time in during lockdown and the effect of it is amazing. It makes you feel like you are working on writing like it’s your job, good old-fashioned career development. It’s also a powerful motivational tool. When you hear from other writers about what they’re doing, what works and doesn’t work for them, the goals they’ve hit and their achievements, the inspiration is strong.

It felt like a cheat at first. It felt like I was still not a real writer because I had to have someone else thinking of it for me, inspiring me, making me sit down and type, but then, when it worked, I thought, who cares if it’s a cheat?!

The challenge with both of these methods is being brave enough to go out to strangers and identify yourself as a writer, to tell people what you really want to achieve. That’s, I think, what prevented me from learning this sooner. The thought of saying it out-loud to someone, the thought of the potential for them to see me fail, was (and still is) utterly terrifying. But, the biggest thing lockdown did for me, was give me a taste of what it was to be a full-time writer. And I can’t forget that taste. I always knew I wanted it but now I know I can’t settle for anything else. And, having learned from the people who are living the life I want, I know what I need to do.

When I was struggling to protect my boundaries at work before lockdown, it was because I didn’t think I could justify prioritising my writing until I was a real writer. And what made a real writer? Why a publishing deal, a literary agent, book-signings and readings and festivals and book tours of course! All the things I couldn’t control. But the old adage applies: a real writer writes. And defends their writing time against everything else.

I can’t control whether an agent or a publisher will like my work or see a place for me on their books. All I can control is how I use my time. Do I want to use my time working extra shifts, or do I want to use it working on my writing career by writing?

So, when “normal” life began to return, and I went back to full-time employment and all the demands that go with it, it was with the understanding that, if I don’t honour my time to write, no-one will. (And a bag of sneaky writing tricks to help me along the way!)

Posted on 3 Comments

Pandemic Pause (Part Two)

The country has gone into lockdown and the café I’m working in is still open.

One morning, I opened the café bright and early but my colleague was late. When she arrived, she told me she slept in because she’d had a rough couple of nights with a cough and a temperature. But, she said, “I feel fine now, I don’t think I was really ill, I think I’m just run down. I don’t think it’s the virus or anything. And, anyway, I can’t afford to go off sick – I only just earn enough to pay the rent as it is!”

Because that’s how it was for a lot of people. If your employer didn’t take the decision to furlough you, then you had to keep working. The idea of taking two weeks off work, “just in case,” meant you probably wouldn’t get sick pay (because, no doctor’s note) and you’d have lost half your monthly salary. There was no covid-testing then.  So, I do not condone the choice my colleague made at all, but I totally get the place the decision came from.

Ten minutes later, I was in the stock room when I heard shouting. I ran back to the bar to find my colleague passed out on the floor.

Ok, so for anyone who’s watched any zombie apocalypse films at all (and I’ve watched almost all of them!), this is always the kind of thing that happens when the virus first starts to hit. Now I was officially freaking out a little bit.

Over the next few days everyone called in sick. Within days, the only full-time members of staff still coming in were me and my manager and we were still operating 6.30-5. She asked Head Office if we could close but they said no. She told me I could go home if I wanted because, at that point, everyone was really scared for their families and I was living with my disabled mum and diabetic dad. But I could see her mental health was shot and I was concerned for her too. I couldn’t leave her working on her own during a pandemic.

“No, we’ll see this out together. Surely, they’ll have to let us close soon. Surely, the government will do something, they can’t be this unaware of people in non-essential, minimum-wage jobs!”

We were told to dramatically cut our stock. Stop ordering food. But, still, remain open. The only customers who came in now were the die-hard regulars and the pandemic-deniers. The people who would actively not wash their hands, or keep their distance, or stay home if they were sick, or respect our boundaries. The people who would lean across the bar (no screens then) and tell us face to face (no masks either) Coronavirus is a myth before touching everything in the shop (no hand sanitiser) and leaving us annoyed, frustrated and anxious.

The trouble was, even the people who cared about us, really didn’t help. My parents kept telling me I shouldn’t put up with it. “You should tell customers when they cross boundaries like that,” “You should tell Head Office you won’t put up with this treatment,” (my Dad wrote an anonymous, furious email to Head Office) but, when you’re emotionally wrung out already, the last thing you have the energy to do is engage in repeated verbal battles with opinionated adults, or stand up against the massive, faceless corporation that pays your wages.

And I guess that’s what I was starting to realise about protecting boundaries. I had decided my law career was getting in the way of my writing because it took up all my time and energy, so I walked away. But, what I hadn’t yet realised, is that changing your job, or even reducing your hours, is not enough. You still need the emotional fortitude to defend your choice against all the other demands on your time. At this moment, I was sure I wanted to be a writer more than anything but, whilst I couldn’t point to tangible evidence of its value (a publishing deal, an agent setting deadlines, any kind of income at all) I didn’t feel I could justify putting it ahead of the job that made me money, the team that depended on me, or the family and friends who wanted to spend time with me.

Then, at last, Boris Johnson made an announcement.

I was still in my uniform from work, leaning on my parents’ dining room table, the crumbs and grain of the wood pressing into my arms, when I heard the words I’d been longing to hear, “all cafés must close.”

The euphoric relief.

My work WhatsApp group went berserk. Head Office sent out an email explaining how we would be paid during furlough. At that point, we thought it might just be four weeks or so before normality returned but it didn’t matter.

In that moment, I felt like a kid leaving school for the summer holidays and the freedom stretched all the way to the horizon.

Posted on

Pandemic Pause (Part 1)

When I started my new job in the café, I was so grateful to have work, let alone a job that didn’t come home with me like law did, I didn’t even think of having to set boundaries. I was so sure that, from now on, my writing career was my absolute priority, but I hadn’t worked out yet how to defend that priority from the demands of the work that paid my salary.

The thing with café work is that it attracts teenagers looking for their first job, students looking to fill a gap year or a summer holiday, people who can spare a couple of days a week and just need to make some money. So, if you’re willing to work full time and you look like you’re here to stay, you rise fast.

Within a month, I had a promotion, a pay-rise and a strong and enjoyable place within the team. After three months, I had the prospect of becoming assistant manager to the manager I really liked, and a steady 40-45 hour working week that ate up all my time and energy. At best, I spent one day a week writing and, at worst, I didn’t write at all. Progress on my novel was slow and stuttering and I felt a constant sense of guilt for not prioritising it like I said I would and a growing imposter syndrome for having claimed my identity as a writer and then, almost immediately, almost entirely, stopping writing.

In my previous jobs I had worked through every lunchbreak, I’d worked overtime without pay, I’d worked nights and weekends for so long that I didn’t actually know how to stop. I couldn’t even feel the boundaries being crossed anymore so how was I supposed to defend them?

At the café, we would be short-staffed and my manager would ask if I could possibly work 6 days that week? Just as a one off? Yes, ok, I guess, it’s only one week. Then, on my one day off, someone would call in sick and no-one else could cover the shift. Well, ok then, I don’t want the team to struggle.

We stopped getting paid fifteen minutes after the café closed but that wasn’t nearly enough time to clean so, as the shift leader, I’d always end up sending the more junior staff members home when the pay stopped and I would stay late (and unpaid) to make sure the shop would be ready for whoever opened up the next morning (which might well be me). Bleary-eyed, I’d be behind the bar and ready to serve at 6.30am having only locked up the night before at 7.30pm. Days blurred into weeks and weeks into months and I would realise I hadn’t even opened my laptop. The demands of work were right out of control and I had no idea how to stop them.

Why had I left law again? So my job didn’t take over my life right? So I could prioritise writing right? Wasn’t that it? But when had I last written anything?

Eventually, I spoke to my manager and asked if I could go down to a four-day working week. She winced but I knew she would find a way of making it work if I insisted. This was important. I wouldn’t ask if this wasn’t important. But I also knew how much she struggled with the rotas each week. I compromised: “I’ll work all the long shifts – I’ll still do a 35 hour week, just condensed within four days.” But I knew I hadn’t timed this well, an experienced team member had just left and her replacement hadn’t even started yet, I hedged: “It doesn’t have to be right away. After the new person starts, after she’s been fully trained.” And so even my big, bold attempt at setting boundaries crumbled away. When the new person had settled in, someone else left and we were short-staffed again. OK, I thought, I’ll cut my hours when their replacement has been trained. But then someone else would leave and the cycle would go on.

Seven months passed and I felt as settled into the situation as if I had been doing it for years. Seven months and I was used to my 40-45 hour week on my feet. Seven months and I was depended on by the team. Seven months and my writing had ground to a halt.

I kept thinking I needed to get myself together, I needed to make a change that would mean I was writing regularly again but, then I’d think, a real writer wouldn’t be in this situation. A real writer would always make time to fit writing in every day, a real writer would always have the energy for it, a real writer wouldn’t sleep in on their one day off but would be up at dawn and tapping away on the keyboard. A real writer would bash out 500 words while her uniform went through the spin cycle. A real writer would say no to meeting her friend for a coffee, or walking with her sister, because she had to focus on the next chapter of her book. If I wasn’t able to do these things, maybe I just wasn’t a real writer.

But then something wildly unpredictable happened.

The pandemic hit.

I was in Germany when northern Italy went into lockdown. It was weird. A little bit scary. But mostly, a problem abroad right? I’d heard a bit about this virus in China but viruses happen all over the world all the time. It was curious it had spread to Italy, but nothing to worry about.

In the UK we have this islander’s viewpoint with no real sense of connection to any of our neighbours. So, when Italy went into lockdown, the Germans I was spending time with were talking of neighbours who had family there, friends who holidayed there, family who worked there but, to me, it all felt like a very distant curiosity. Things that happen in Europe don’t cross the English Channel. Fact.

The next day I happily hopped onto a train in Munich and travelled to Frankfurt, then Brussels, then London, then Gatwick, then home. There were moments when someone coughed and everyone looked at them suspiciously, but it was nothing serious, nothing to really worry about.

The next week two friends of mine had their civil partnership ceremony and I celebrated my 31st birthday. I was out for meals and drinks and then, suddenly, the virus had crossed the border. (Brought over by lackadaisical travellers like me, sorry!)

Pubs and restaurants closed, ceremonies were off, everyone seemed to be working from home or being furloughed (had anyone else in the UK ever even heard that word before!?) but cafés were still going. The government hadn’t specifically said they had to close. They said selling food was an essential service and there was to be no sitting in. So, Head Office gave a thumbs up, we sell toasties, we can do take-away only, we’re staying open!

Everyone was pretty scared, but it was only going to get scarier.