Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Looking for a (quiet) place to happen...

Lately, I have in search of a quiet place to sit and do some writing and thinking. Not that my self-absorbed scratchings (or key-tappings) amount to anything more than just that, but I find it relaxing, kind of therapeutic and, dare I say, constructive. The problem is that I really need to be in a place that is devoid of distractions. This means that I cannot do much at home. There are far too many other things to do for a life-long procrastinator like me. When we lived at UBC (and at other times in the past) I used to take myself off to Koerner Libary and hide in a carrel on the 4th floor (Silent study: Literature).

Silent study at Koerner Library
In my other life I think I would be a librarian. I enjoy libraries and being surrounded by shelves of books. And, as I discovered long ago, unless it's time to cram students don't really have much use for them. But I have always loved the quiet; the tip-tapping of computer keys, the soft squeak of a highlighter pen, the occasional cough, or sigh, the shuffling of paper, whispers here and there; a general hush on all movements and sounds, "small, private noises which only served to define the silence" to quote Terry Pratchett. Time seemed to move a little slower. If I took a break I could stare out the window at people meandering in library square, or I could walk up and down the aisles and randomly select books with curious titles like, "Consuming fictions : gender, class, and hunger in Dickens's novels." (okay, that is technically procrastination). There were no other distractions like buying coffee or snacks. Open until 11pm. All printers and machines that have annoying beeps situated downstairs. Help desks and talking areas located on the ground floor or lower floors. Perfect.

I shouldn't make excuses, but breast cancer came along and my life got tilted and, though it has been months since the radiation treatments finished, I just haven't yet got back into the groove. I've hardly managed to do anything creative at all. Of course summer came along (more excuses), and I've been busy with the kids (blah blah). Essentially, I have been lazy.

So in the spirit of discovery I have been looking for somewhere local to sit for a few hours. The other week I thought I would try Calhouns on Broadway. It's a cabin-style coffee shop/restaurant that appears to be used mostly as a library or a place of study. Open 24 hours and used by enough people to create a kind of white noise. It seemed to be the answer to my search. If I go to a smaller coffee shop then I will inevitably be distracted by the conversation of the few people there...because I am nosey and will eavesdrop. I set out at around 7pm, enjoying the walk along Broadway; the end of day bustle as stores closed and restaurants slowly began to fill. However, when I entered Calhouns I was surprised to find it completely full. Every single table was taken up by people with laptops and crowded with scattered books and papers. No sign of anyone actually buying anything. No wonder UBC library was so empty! Not one free table. Apparently, Calhoun's is relatively empty at around 3AM. Given that I am up many a night at 3AM (it's my favourite time to worry) I should probably just go there. My anxieties could be accompanied by a tasty bite to eat and a hot beverage in quite pleasant surroundings. Something to think about.


Calhouns most of the time...
The interior of Calhoun's....at 3AM!
But that evening (and probably every evening) there was no space for me. I had to slope off to Kitsilano library. Local public libraries offer a certain charm  (I enjoy most libraries), but for various reasons they are not conducive to quiet "study". They also close early at 9pm and they don't usually provide areas for quiet study (the central library is an exception, of course). Another problem I find with the local public library is that they also seem to appeal to a curious mix of people who under other circumstances I might possibly try to avoid. For example, I find it difficult to concentrate at my shared (ugh!) table when the other occupant suddenly breaks out into manic chuckles, stops abruptly to glare at me with a crazed look in her eyes, before burying her head back into a well-thumbed gardening magazine. And even my ipod cannot drown out the sound of the nearby man in a shabby brown overcoat, hunched over some kind of package, snuffling and chewing open-mouthed on what I can only assume is food. Or the person at the other end of the library noisily clearing his sinuses. Nor the smell of the "computer guy" who is always crouched over one of the computers playing role-playing games (and I've seen him at UBC library too); emanating the kind of unwashed staleness reminiscent of a teenage boy's bedroom. And let's not forget the Loud-Irrelevant-Question-Asker, "THE KEY IS GONE AND THE WASHROOM DOOR IS LOCKED...IS THERE ANYONE IN THERE?" sigh...I think I will have to go back to UBC, which means driving...or biking. It would be good to make it a routine again. A resolution for the new year then. Although, I suppose even spending time looking for a place to go is a form of procrastination. I am hopeless.

Koerner Library, UBC


6 comments:

Katrina said...

I hear you - I've refined procrastination into an art form. In fact I have so many things I want to be getting on with (crafts, photography, writing, reading etc) that I often work myself into a right tizzy just trying to decide which thing to do....end result, I do none of them and inevitably end up going for a fruitless shuffle along W. Broadway - all the time feeling like I should be DOING the things on the list above. Ho-Hum.

Your description of the curious collection of people in public ibraries is spot on...in fact they are exactly what I envisioned already at the start of that paragraph. And not-forgetting the one person who just has to have their headphones on full blast -blaring loud enough to sned out the annoying tshhh, tssshhh, tshhh but not quite enough to ever make out the singer/song) - who feels the urge to squeak out an occasional couple of words of the lyrics, completely out of tune (of course!) Funnily enough, I remember the same regular 'inhabitants' in public libraries back in England too - how bizarre.

And I know just what you mean about the Calhoun's 'library'...I only ever go there because they let you use the washroom without hounding you to buy food/drinks - which is just as well really because a) there'd be nowehere to sit anyway and b) there coffee sucks and there food is expensive and bland. No wonder all the students in there take there own refreshments!

Happy hunting!

Katrina said...

Can't believe I spelt 'their' as 'there'in that last paragraph .....I know better!!!!!

Wendy Flawn said...

Wow, it is so cool that you are allowed out on your own after dark like a grown up! And have the energy to do so. Got to put that to use - hope you find somewhere soon. Do Art galleries do it for you if libraries are not coming up with the goods?

Wxx

Anonymous said...

@Wendy

She THINKS she's allowed out after dark on her own, but she should know better. She is kept at home under lock and key, hence the blog and her writings. It's her portal to the outside world that she longs to see and hold but we keep her nice and close at all times. She may get a day pass for good behaviour but I'm not sure if the kids will allow it! Until then she writes, dreams and writes...


:-)

Mark

Anonymous said...

@ Wendy...sadly art galleries are in very short supply here (at least the type that have tables) And they shut early. Vancouver's official bedtime is 9:30pm.

@ Mark...ha ha...funny. Who's dreamining? If I was kept under lock and key you'd be the one who would go insane.x

Victoria said...

Anonymous is my pen-name...