Musings + Essays
12 Comments

Long Corridors.

By: Jen Shoop
"I am a product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms." - C.S. Lewis

My parents taught us to prize solitude and self-direction. Every weekend day and summer afternoon, we enjoyed (or endured, as the mood might have been) “Quiet Time” from 1-3 P.M. My four siblings and I were sent to our bedrooms to read, draw, nap, doodle, play on our own. Sometimes this felt like torture, the minutes dripping by like honey. My sisters and I would occasionally scamper from bedroom to bedroom, down the carpeted hush of the hallway, mice at play. But I also remember well the afternoons I’d repose in my cave until dinnertime, my nose in a Nancy Drew, called back to company only by the ringing of my mother’s dinner bell. I now see the imprint of their ways in my near-constant hunger for time alone, the fact that my vocation is a shrine to seclusion.

C.S. Lewis wrote: “I am a product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms, upstairs indoor silences, attics explored in solitude.”

I recently transcribed this musing onto a wafer of paper on my desk. His words both parade and parry, reminding me to celebrate the crooked path — the long corridor — that brought me all the way to the little white desk at which I sit in my studio, thinking. And they also nudge me, with some rebuke, to unclasp myself from the noise and clutter in which I so frequently nestle.

There is treasure in the tranquil.

The other day, I thought how beautiful Lewis’s words were as an aspiration for my own children. I wish them long corridors and upstairs indoor silences into which they can pour their imaginations.

Wishing you, too, long corridors and empty sunlit rooms.

Post-Scripts.

+I also wish you kinder seas. (Magpies often ask me for the exact wording of that quote – a great phrase to have in your pocket when someone needs some empathy in a tough time.)

+On moving back to my hometown of DC.

+Replantings.

+On creative habits.

+On not wanting anything to change.

Shopping Break.

+A great gift for a budding artist. I bought this, along with Faber Castell pencils, for mini this holiday! Oso and Me also makes really adorable colored pencil rolls that you can monogram. Sweet gift.

+These pearl boots were really popular in a combat style that is now sold out, but I love them in the knee-high shaft length. Chic chic!

+Been on a puzzle tear…currently working on this. SO cute. But how fun is this double-sided one from the same brand?!

+One of my girlfriends has one of these mini Hermes-inspired bags and I swear it looks like a million bucks on her.

+This ribbed metallic dress is SO chic and only $29.

+Wish this striped and embellished sweater weren’t already sold out in my size! Missed it!

+STILL not over this gown. Wow wow wow.

+Obsessed with the color and fit of this mohair sweater.

+Comfortable lounge set on sale in flattering black — I LOVE Eberjey for loungewear. You can also buy just the pants on sale here.

+Micro asked Santa for “an excavator” — we bought him this Bruder. I think I’ll bundle with these construction jammies.

+Love these acid-wash joggers.

+This affordable boucle jacket would look fab with jeans and a white tee.

+OK now this cookie jar is beyond adorable.

+These tumblers are so sophisticated. I want to pour some sort of cranberry cocktail in one immediately.

+Dream winter mule.

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M
M
2 years ago

I recognize this is not the point of the point, but do you do quiet time for your kids? We are on the cusp of “dropping the nap” and I would love to implement but..how!??

Michelle
Michelle
2 years ago
Reply to  Jen Shoop

When my son outgrew his nap I set up a CD player/streaming speaker in his room and he would spend 45mins to an hour listening quietly to an audio children’s book while building legos or similar. He called it his “storybox” and it was a huge hit. Even on days when it didn’t go that well it would result in 20-30 mins of quiet time. .

Anna
Anna
2 years ago

Love that quote, specifically because it roots that daydreaming, imaginative sense of wonder in a strong sense of place with so few words. I can so clearly see those spaces he describes in my own past and relate to the feeling of exploration.

Lisa
Lisa
2 years ago

Truly, such chills over this quote, knowing what a magical world that upbringing led to! This is the best encouragement during a season in our family when quiet time for my extroverted six-year-old can be such a battle. We are constantly promising him it’s a gift, not a punishment!

LML
LML
2 years ago

We also had “Quiet Time,” and I remember resenting it too. I really do think it’s good for children to have alone time each day, especially when I think about how many of my own quiet hours ended with me taking a nap which I probably desperately needed!
But now, as an adult, I treasure silence and my time alone. In fact, a huge reason I fear having children is because I don’t know if I can function without my own quiet time, haha! Kudos to all of the parents who have constant noise and interruptions – I don’t know if I could do it.

Claire Willett
2 years ago

That quote reminds me of another, from an essay Rivka Galchen wrote about her father for The New Yorker: “I believe that children arrive with their own life of the mind, and that to the extent that they get to spend time in that world which they themselves have invented—that’s pretty good. Much of the rest is roulette.” I’ve used it as a guidepost / reminder since reading!

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