http://dailytimes.com.ng/article/welcome-iseyin
Welcome to Iseyin
The first of many chronicles on this writer's experience at the Ebedi Writers Residency
By Temitayo Olofinlua
I wake up in a strange bed. It is a big bed; I can stretch my two hands across it yet there will be space for another. There is a fan squeaking, rolling, blowing in my face. There is a wardrobe and a table. My laptop is on the table, staring at me. My bags -- my travelling bag and my laptop bag -- sprawl on the floor, open. It is quiet, except for the Muezzin's cry calling people to prayer, and the crowing cocks telling everyone it is morning.
I am in Iseyin,
A few hours before that, there had been: "Welcome to Iseyin". A voice shook me awake from my drowsy world -- you know that border between being asleep and being awake. It was Mr. Bode, Dr. Okediran's PA. I checked my watch. Must have taken us about 145 minutes. Minutes of small talk, and sleep, and small talk, and sleep.
Before Iseyin, there was
Before
Getting the residency was, for me, about the freedom to do anything that I wanted during that time, without succumbing to the pressures of deadlines and work. It was an opportunity to do what I always wanted to do; to write. You ask me what I do for a living; I write. And edit. In recent times I had been writing all sorts; press releases, content for websites, articles, investigative pieces - everything but the fiction that was supposed to be my forte. Last year, I wrote just one short story, quite many non-fiction pieces. Shameful, right?
You cannot compare writing for money, writing what you really want, and writing what you have to. There is that confusion, that sitting on the fence. There is fiction on one side, and then there is every other form of writing/money-spinning on the other side. There are bills to be paid. So, you know within you what side to face. And to think, for me, fiction writing is so demanding, less paying, but more fulfilling. So, getting the Ebedi residency was, for me, a chance to write what I really want to write.
I am here in Ebedi, my dreams of getting at least six short stories out of my system in my mind. I hope that the characters will tease me here, their words will urge me awake, push me to my laptop, and force their way out of me. Write, I shall. But while here, I will tell you about Iseyin; about weekly sessions with students from
Ready?
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