Writing Is Confession And forgiveness is not always promised.

In Photography, Writing
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Writing is many things. Theory and praxis, argument and persuasion, conviction and doubt, truth and power, spirituality and entertainment, seeking and (sometimes) finding. It is talent, god-given, a spark of storytelling that manifests itself through writing instead of dancing, playing music, or image-making. It is a skill, capable of being taught, learned, improved upon, and assessed. It is a craft: the particular way in which each storyteller chooses to weave their narrative, imbuing their work with biography or imagination, shaping it using specific imagery, rhythms, and styles.

In “The Hope, The Prayer, And The Anthem (or, The Fall So Far)”, the first short story that appears in Only Stars Know The Meaning Of Space, the protagonist—at the end of a narration of the zeniths and nadirs of his writing aspirations—posits that “writing is confession.”

I agree.

I think.

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Perhaps writing, like the Catholic sacrament of confession, is a laying down of truths as they have been witnessed, an honest recounting of (one’s) commissions and omissions in the narrative at hand, as thorough an accounting of a tale as possible, told in the best way that the writer knows how, to an unknown reader on the other side of the page—the confessional window, if you will—who may or may not have the power of absolution.

The premise is this: if you bring your sins—completely, contritely—to the confessor they shall exonerate you from them; that if you write your story with talent, skill, and craft, the reader shall reward you (with something).

At times, maybe that is why writing can feel liberating for the writer regardless of the subject matter. A leaden weight is cast off, a lightness is carried in its place. Even the mere asking of a question can feel like a considerable inroad to the gleaning of an answer.

I think good writing is honest and sincere. In the quest to tell a story a writer, traversing through the unknown (using whatever they know to help them along the way), and being painfully aware of their own ignorance and the limitations of their understanding, the gift and privilege of their talent, the shortcomings of their skill, and the imperfect nature of their craft, is necessarily humbled in the process of writing. Mayhaps it is at this moment that vulnerability which, to me, seems inevitable in all forms of writing becomes less performative and self-serving—the space for pretence runs out.

These days I judge a good piece of writing—mine or someone else’s—based on whether or not I feel a writer has sufficiently divested themselves of their original sin: thinking their writing is worthy of taking up time.

When writing is well-executed, the act of writing is a penance of some kind.

But even then forgiveness is not always promised.

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POSTSCRIPT: Maputo is bae. This is not conjecture, but certitude. Maputo is a wellspring of rest, relaxation, and rejuvenation in a year that has, at times, been overwhelming. Despite its grand struggles it is its small joys and ways of life that give it a charming personality. The sometimes strange choice of architectural styles; the midnight piri-piri chicken (Jesu Christo!); the cornucopia of seafood (my god, the seafood!); the thronged streets and the busy night life; the involute history and its modern-day effects; the wonderful and amusing people—THE PEOPLE!—nah, Maputo is bae! At the recently hosted 2024 Doek Literary Festival, long after I have left Maputo’s streets and shores, the Nigerian author Chiké Frankie Edozien will describe the gathering as “the rising tide that lifts all boats”. That imagery will, in retrospect, describe this incredible city by the sea, the memory of which has buoyed me since I visited it.

The Rising Tide That Lifts All Boats. Maputo, Mozambique, 2024. © Rémy Ngamije.

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