top of page
  • Maureen Bush
  • Mar 11, 2012

Updated: Feb 16, 2022

We’re renovating again. We’re back to chaos, distractions, dirt everywhere, and pizza in the living room because the kitchen is deep in electrical equipment and drywall dust.


Last week, the hole in the floor in our back entry was repaired. This week – electrical – old lights out, pot lights in, odd repairs because we’re in an old house.  Holes in the ceiling, in the walls, and a bare light bulb dangling over the kitchen table. It’s a nice look.


New lino in the back entry on Monday. And every day workers are here, there’s dirt everywhere. That should really be nice as the snow piles melt into lakes to wade through.


But it’s exciting, too, and I’m hoping some of that will filter into my writing. When I can write, around the drilling and hammering and discussions of why we can’t put the light where we want it because of the odd construction of the house.


Maureen

 
  • Maureen Bush
  • Mar 6, 2012

Updated: Feb 16, 2022

I decided to set aside writing for a little while – to let my current manuscript sit, while other people read it, and to not start on a new project. I have a long list of other things I need to take care of, and this seemed a good time to focus on them.


Except it’s not working. I feel unsettled without writing, by days filled with important tasks completed, but without that quiet time immersed in a story.


I think I’ll have to pull out my notes on the new project, and start to play, at least a little bit every day. Perhaps then I’ll be more effective getting all those other tasks done.


Maureen

 
  • Maureen Bush
  • Mar 2, 2012

Updated: Feb 16, 2022

Thursday I was in Brocket, working with kids from nursery school to grade 7, talking about stories and writing. Brocket is in a stunningly beautiful location, just east of Pincher Creek, hills and river valley overlooked by the snow-covered Rocky Mountains (it was just hazy enough for the photos to not turn out).


I was shown all the projects the kids had worked on as they read Feather Brain: big paper maché dinosaurs and tiny clay ones, drawings and paintings, and booklets with chapter summaries and drawings that I got to sign.


I was sent away with two gifts: a Piikani Nation T-shirt, and a lovely hand-beaded leather barrette, which made my younger daughter very happy when I gave them to her.


Maureen



 

© 2021 by Maureen Bush. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page