Well, it's been a few days, so I suppose it's high time to file my
report on the Scotland trip.
As a reminder, I am the founder and editor of DargonZine,
a magazine
which prints the output from a collaborative writing project that is
dedicated to creating a writers' community and inspiring and growing
aspiring amateur writers. Founded in 1984, it is the longest-running
electronic magazine on the Internet.
Each year, one of our writers hosts our annual Dargon Writers'
Summit, a
weekend of writing and socializing in the host's home town. Our previous
Summits have all been in the US: Boston, Denver, Washington D.C.,
Chicago, New York, Pittsburgh, and San Jose. But this year we extended
the Summit to a full nine days in order for Stuart Whitby
to show eight of us around his entire nation: Scotland!
I'm not going to go into painstaking detail about the trip, but I did
want to summarize it and make a few observances here.
But before I get into that, some other pointers. First, my personal
site, OrnothLand, already has brief descriptions of what
we did each
day, with a handful of photos. Second, I'll be writing an exhaustive
travelogue, which will be available in the near future. If you're
interested in that, drop me a line at ornoth@rcn.com. But be warned: my
weekend
travelogues are usually about 30 pages, so this one might well wind up
being as large as 90 pages of text! Finally, as soon as I can get the
photos approved by the writers, a new 2002 Dargon Summit
page will
be available on the DargonZine Web site. Each of these will have a
slightly different take on the trip.
For now, I'll just summarize. Six castles. Two cairns. Two ruined
cathedrals. Watching our host jump off a cliff into a narrow, raging,
freezing mountain cataract. Reading ghost stories beneath an alien
orange full moon in a ruined castle on a cliff above the sea, the castle
Bram Stoker's inspiration for writing "Dracula". Flying eagles, owls,
falcons, and hawks at a falconry center. Wading alone into mist-shrouded
Loch Ness. Drinking forbidden absynthe, the wormwood liqueur favored by
19th century writers. Scrambling to keep a grip on the edge of the
world, a sheer 864-foot drop beneath me, as I climbed the face of
Arthur's Seat in Edinburgh. Taking a distillery tour and drinking more
beer and scotch whisky than wisdom would indicate. Seeing my own face
staring back at me from a Pepsi can. Haggis; neeps and tatties; bangers
and mash; Irn-Bru; and the omnipresent 80 shilling. Weather that
alternated between sun and rain every 20 minutes, every day, without
fail. A distillery pictured on the Scottish 10 pound note. BEUM! Deep
Sea World, the Fisheries Museum, scenic Crail Harbour, and some
fantastic go-karting (bruised myself heavily by driving so
aggressively). Rhonda setting off the hotel fire alarm. Late night talks
about relationships, family, and sex. Asking a young waitress to bring
me "Vanilla ice cream, nude". The religious experience of the mountains.
Rainbows everywhere, especailly Glencoe. Closing the 1000-mile
circumnavigation of the country in Glasgow, with lots of sidewalk
leering. Cutting 3 CD-ROMs with 2400 photos and video clips for
everyone.
But what really mattered in all that? What really impacted me?
Let's start with the countryside: it was incredible. Mountains that leap
up above you in piles of scree that defy the angle of repose, topped
with unbelievable cliffs, punctuated with frequent streams of snow
runoff that cascade down the face of the mountain in waterfalls,
spilling into the inevitable valley river or loch in a speeding torrent.
The endless, sumptuous green carpet of woods and farmland, punctuated by
the unique bright yellows of alfalfa in the fields, gorse and
forsythia on the slopes. The constant parade of picturesque and ancient
bulidings: proud cathedrals, self-consciously conspicuous castles,
long-abandoned farmhouses. But oh! the castles. The cold, passive
strength of a granite wall. The understated grace of the entry arch and
towers of a curtain wall. The sense of walking in the footsteps of Mary
Queen of Scots, Edward I, Robert the Bruce, and Rob Roy MacGregor...
Standing on an outer wall, hundreds of feet above the plain, sharing the
feeling of power that the residents of those castles atop the crags must
have felt. It was like wallowing in that sense of wonder that only a
good fantasy story can evoke, and being for once truly a participant in
those wonderful tales. The only words I can come up with to describe the
land are 'wonder' and 'majesty'.
Ever since I was a child growing up in Maine, I've had a very close,
spiritual affinity for the silent woods and the rocky crags. I wish that
I'd been able to spend less time on this trip as the leader of a noisy
group of tourists, so that I could spend a little more time to
appreciate, to experience a spiritual connection with the amazing places
that we visited. The closest I came was in our death-defying climb of
Arthur's Seat. Despite being implausibly steep and a wonderful challenge
to climb, it was a mere hillock in comparison to most of the amazing
landscape we traversed, including the breathtaking Ben Nevis, more than
five times the height of Arthur's Seat.
The other items of note all relate to my relationship with my
companions: my writers. One of the surprises was that I received almost
universal expressions of support for taking a more authoritarian role as
editor. This has always been anathema to me, because I view consensus as
the only way to instill a sense of ownership for the project in my
writers, and as a requirement for delegating work to others. However,
nearly everyone I spoke to balked, and suggested that I both rely less
on others for useful work, as well as take more of the decisionmaking
upon myself. I'm slowly allowing myself to be convinced, but it really
is a major philosophical shift for me. I do think that this would
integrate well with the board of directors structure that we are
establishing, in that writers who feel a strong degree of ownership and
want to have input can participate on the board, while other writers,
who don't have the desire or time to do anything but write, can do that.
The next step here will be figuring out how to present all that to the
group so that it goes over, without sounding like me trodding on toes.
But more importantly than the feedback I got about the structure of the
writing group were the relationships that we built. Over the course of
ten days together, we formed an intense, very personal bond. We talked
about our family histories and our childhoods; we talked about our
growth as sexual beings and our relationships. For my part, I was
comfortable enough to at least reveal to people my own two biggest
insecurities, and was rewarded with several very touching and surprising
responses. We offered one another compassion and understanding and a
closeness that I'd never felt before. At times it approached a sort of
sexual tension, but it wasn't dirty; it was more like an intimate
closeness that was far more meaningful than anything physical.
In the end, I was truly amazed by the wonderful friendships that have
about amongst this group. I'm really awestruck that almost two decades
after I founded it, the community of writers that I created solely for
my own benefit has produced such a strong, genuinely caring, close-knit
group of people. They really are my family, and I'm honored that
DargonZine, which I've always stated was my life's work, has brought
these individuals together and not just helped them as writers, but also
provided a cohesive, loving, supportive community for them.
The awesome landscape and impressive castles made Scotland a wonderful
vacation and great research for a fantasy writer; but it was the people
and the relationships we built that made it something magical. It's
awesome to see that this trip worked so well on all those levels, and it
still amazes me that I had some role in bringing it about.