By Vicki H. Moss, Contributing Editor
for Southern Writers Magazine
When writing on a certain subject or
activity, how important is it to have experienced the activity yourself? Can
you simply fake it—that you know what you’re talking about it or at least make
people think you do?
I think you’ll agree you can certainly
Google a subject or activity and watch enough You Tube videos to learn to write
intelligently about what you need to describe. However, if you can experience
whatever it is you’re writing about, I do believe you can be more creative on
the page.
So here’s where I use fish emulsion for
an example. As a gardener, I want to feed my flowers and veggies with the best
plant food that will boost them into incredible blooms and produce. And I see
fish emulsion advertised and reason that if the Native American Indians showed
the pilgrims how to plant crops by putting a dead fish in a hole as fertilizer
before planting—and I don’t fish much anymore so don’t have fish for
planting—fish emulsion has to be the next best thing. So I order some. And I’m
amazed at how much plastic is taped around the container.
I suppose, under no circumstances does
the shipper want that emulsion leaking through the wrapper while being shipped.
Hmmmm. This does not bode well. All of that extra wrapping is sending out
subliminal messages that perhaps I don’t really want to deal with fish emulsion
for some reason. Perhaps a stinky reason? How awful could it be? I shelve that
thought for awhile along with the fish emulsion.
Then, I experience an inevitable rabbit
infestation. Deer and rabbit repellent spray are useless when it comes to
keeping rabbit hordes at bay. Nor does clapping my hands to try and scare them
off. Nor does taking hair from my brush and wrapping some around tender plants
scare them off with my scent when I’m not around. And I don’t have a dog or cat
to use their hair to frighten the rabbits with predator presence.
But, oh, look at this article! Red Fox
urine should do the trick! So I read the reviews and are they ever
hilarious—everyone talking about the horrid stench and how the Amazon delivery
guys must hate them now…so, no fox urine for me.
Now, my thoughts wander back to the fish
emulsion luring me to the shelf in my garage. Does it ruin—is there an
expiration date? Perhaps I need to stop
worrying about rabbit damage, throw some fish emulsion around the plants and
pray they grow so fast the rabbits can’t keep up with their growth and the
roses and petunias somehow survive.
However, retrieving the fish emulsion
and returning to the kitchen, I open the container to put a couple of
tablespoons of the liquid into a watering can to then dilute with water. And I
realize—big huge mistake. What was I thinking? After opening that nose bomb and
spilling some on the counter top, and my gag reflex going ballistic as I try to
wipe up the mess with paper towels, I need to either lose my cookies or need a
face mask to breathe.
Rushing outside, I promise myself to never
open that fish emulsion container in the house again. My clothes reek with the
stuff clinging to me like a putrid cloud and of course I hadn’t thought to wear
gloves. No matter how many times I wash my hands, every time my face itches and
I scratch the place, I smell rotten fish. Blech!
And that example, my writer friends, is
why there are just some things you need to experience for yourself if you’re
going to write about it; helps me anyway. No You Tube video can relay such an
experience when it comes to the sense of smell. I had to breathe that foul
odoriferous dark ooze to write about it to help get my personal experience down
on paper.
Hopefully the smell from my watering can
will tone down. In this century. And only if I get desperate will I ever order
fox urine. But you know, experimenting with fox urine could be another
interesting writing exercise. I if only I were that adventuresome.
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