Kindle, A New Way To Read

Friday, October 30, 2020

A Room Of My Own by Louisa Rogers

I finished reading Virginia Woolf’s famous essay, “A Room of One’s Own,” late one night and lay in my bed musing. Fifty years earlier, in the 1920s, Woolf had argued that women needed independent space to be creative. Glancing across my studio at the Smith-Corona typewriter where I spent most afternoons tapping away, I knew she was right. Having my own private sanctuary had jump-started my own writing practice. 

At 24, I had a part-time job I loved, teaching English to adult foreigners. Stimulating as it was, though, my work was not enough. Since childhood, my dream had been to be published. Every afternoon when my classes were finished, I’d ride my bicycle back to my apartment and plug away at the travel article I was writing about my recent trip to England. Occasionally while pondering a word choice, I’d look up at the row of sparrows sitting on the telephone line outside of my window. 

After weeks of writing and rewriting, I sold the article to a regional airline magazine. My first article in print! And byline! For days I glided down spongy streets, giddy with excitement at my success and at the sense of promise and possibility ahead. 

That same month, my boyfriend and I decided to rent an apartment together. I was ready for our next stage of commitment, but anxious at the thought of living with a man – even my man. How would I satisfy my need for a private refuge, where I could brainstorm, dream, plan, and write? 

To my delight Barry supported my desire for a room of my own, but it turned out he wanted a space of his own, too. (The nerve!) We couldn’t afford a larger apartment, so we decided to sacrifice the bedroom. Every night we unrolled our foam mattress on to the carpet in a corner of the living room and made the bed, reversing the process in the morning. In my office, I’d type away at my desk, occasionally glancing up for inspiration at my print of delicately patterned kimonos hanging on a clothesline. 

During the six month we lived in that apartment, I sold every article I wrote. Looking back, I don’t believe I’d have been a successful had I squeezed my desk into the bedroom. My office was a metaphor for my sense of professional worth, a statement announcing that I took myself and my writing seriously, and that I would not compromise my goals. 

In the 45 years since, wherever Barry and I have lived—homes on both coasts, four states, a Canadian province, and a Mexican state—I’ve always maintained an independent space. It hasn’t always been a formal room with four walls and a door: in one small apartment, I had to settle for a nook bracketed off by a divider. And when my stepdaughter lived with us, I rented an office. 

In all those rooms, I kept publishing: personal essays and columns, articles and op-eds, reviews and blogs. Throughout my career, I’ve always focused on what compels me: physical and emotional health, food, home, travel expat life, family relationships, spirituality. My writing has been published in the U.S., Canada, Australia, the U.K., South Africa, and Brazil. 

How prophetic that I read Virginia Woolf’s essay only a few weeks before moving into the apartment with my beloved. The timing seems almost eerie. I had no idea that my mentor’s words would have a such a lifelong effect. The sanctuaries Woolf inspired in me have not only been places to write, but havens to grow, evolve, and discover who I am in the world. 

Article from Writer’s Digest July/August 2020