The Write Stuff

tag-youre-itMy blogmate (now there’s a dreary moniker) and dear friend, Carla, “tagged” me in the Writing Process Blog Tour. As Carla described it in her post last week, it’s kind of like a chain letter only not stupid and kind of fun because you get to share your thoughts about your writing process.

So I’m tagging it forward and tapping two of my most entertaining Facebook friends/bloggers to go next, Danielle Hatfield and Shannon Frady Warren.

Don’t cringe girls, it’s not like I challenged you to pour cold water on your head.

So, buckle up, here we go … Continue reading

The Big See

big c raven

Anyone who has actually watched someone die knows it’s never as beautifully scripted as it is depicted in the movies or television. Sure, we’d all wish for a great soap opera death where we appear in soft lens and tell everyone gathered around our beatific bed that we love them so much and then we gently close our eyes. Cue music, fade to black. 

I just finished watching the final two seasons of “The Big C” – a Showtime series that got death right – the good, the bad, and the funny. Yeah, you read that right. 

Don’t freak out, I’ll explain in a bit.

“The Big C” begins with the main character, Cathy, played by the extraordinary Laura Linney, receiving a diagnosis of Stage 4 melanoma – as in lights out. So before we even get to know her or care about her, we learn she’s not long for this life. What a courageous premise for a television show – to spill the beans on the ending right up front. 

The four seasons of the series take us through the final seasons of Cathy’s life. As in real life, each season brings a mix of hope, disappointment, fear, and love.

By the final season, we care deeply for Cathy, and I confess to wishing for a Hallmark Channel ending with a miracle cure. Fortunately, I let go of that magical thinking long enough to watch some stunningly authentic scenes – scenes that reminded me a lot of my own parents’ deaths, both from cancer in 2002.

Cathy achingly longs for her family, especially her teenage son, to be okay when she’s gone. I saw that same look on my mother’s face a few months before she died.

She was several months into chemotherapy and radiation for lung cancer (no she was not a smoker) and in hideous pain that the strongest of drugs couldn’t seem to moderate. I was leaving her for a few days to return to my home in North Carolina.

Before I hugged her goodbye, I said, “I’m sorry you’re in so much pain.” 

She replied, in her raspy radiation voice, “I’m sorry you’re in so much pain.” 

That was the only conversation we ever really had about her impending death – but it was enough and I have thought about that moment a hundred times in the past 12 years.  It was one of the most exquisitely honest moments we ever shared and I doubt it would have happened if she had not been so gravely ill.

Cathy’s home Hospice nurse explains this phenomenon to Cathy in her final days when she tells her, “When people are close to dying they open up like flowers.” 

My mother was a steel magnolia – she was stoic and reserved with her feelings but the journey of dying let her drop so many of the barriers she kept around her for so much of her life.

She also had a deliciously dry sense of humor that was only heightened by cancer. I’ll never forget sitting by her bedside during one of her many hospital stays, as a social worker read over several questions from a clipboard. 

“Mrs. Ore, are you feeling depressed?” she somberly asked my mother.

“No, but I’m going to be if you keep asking me these questions,” my mother replied. 

After the earnest social worker left the room, Mom and I giggled like teenagers at a slumber party.

Don’t get me wrong – there is nothing remotely funny about cancer but imminent death does create a space for an authenticity that seems so elusive in every day life and I treasure those moments with my mother. They are like pieces of sea glass – precious and clear – and I get them out and hold them from time to time. 

It’s no spoiler to tell you how “The Big C” ends. The surprise is how much a show about dying celebrates living. 

mom final 

The last photograph of me with my mother, taken in Maine, September, 2002. 

sea glass 

 

Tag – you’re it

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I’ve been tagged. And I’m honored to be “it!”

Thank you, Jacinta White, for tagging me in the Writing Process Blog Tour. For those of you unacquainted with the concept, it’s kind of like a chain letter, but without the threat of something earth-shattering happening to me if I don’t send it to at least 10 friends. This is much more fun and with zero guilt involved.

Here’s how it works: You get tagged, you answer some thoughtful questions about writing and then tag two other bloggers who then repeat the cycle.

On August 21, check out the fashionable and talented Robin Reetz and my witty co-blogger Addison Ore to learn about their writing process. And for the record, this is not a shameless plug to promote Bookends, but an opportunity to highlight Addison as a writer. She can hold her own. Honest.

So here we go … Some thoughts on writing.

What are you working on?  
Right now, I’m working on trying to make writing part of my daily life again. One way I’m doing that is through this blog with my dear friend Addison. I thought partnering with her on this creative venture would be like having an exercise buddy – someone to hold you accountable and keep you motivated.

December 2009 331How does your work differ from others of its genre?  
I write from my heart. Most of my writing is creative nonfiction, a genre I’m drawn to because of its raw nature and honesty and its ability to emotionally connect with others; that’s always my goal. I want people to feel things deeply. There’s power in sharing the personal. It can inspire others to share their experiences and spark a dialogue. At the end of the day, we all crave human connection and writing provides a perfect vehicle to satisfy that craving.

Why do you write what you do?  
I write because it makes me appreciate life. It helps me pay attention to the details. It allows me to express myself in ways that I otherwise couldn’t. I write simply because I have the desire. I have a bit of an obsession with wanting to record the world around me because I don’t ever want to forget how the sky looked that one summer in Ohio or what my grandmother’s hand felt like in mine.

How does your writing process work? 
I’m one of those people who has trouble shutting their brain off. I’m constantly processing and analyzing. I search for meaning every day in my life, which serves as my pipeline for writing material. I live inside my head a lot, so I keep a journal to help me empty my brain and process things on paper. I also keep several notebooks that I free-write in. I find my writing flows easier from me when I put pen to paper as opposed to hammering away on a keyboard. I sometimes play soft music in the background while I write (right now I’m listening to the “Amelie” soundtrack) and I usually have a warm beverage nearby. Writing prompts are my best friend. They’re often my go-to when I need to wake up my brain or just feel compelled to write but don’t have a particular topic in mind. Writing prompts often lead me to something larger and take me to a place I never expected to go.

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Acrimony to Matrimony

boyhood 

“That was so gay.”

It takes a lot to render me speechless but those four words did just that yesterday afternoon. They were spoken by the sixty-something year old woman sitting behind me in a movie theater.

My wife and I had gone to see Richard Linklater’s critically acclaimed film, “Boyhood.” The movie was filmed over 12 years and centers on a young boy named Mason. We literally watch him grow up – from 6 to18 – during the course of the film. It is a remarkable and moving cinematic experience.

The woman sitting behind me clearly did not agree with me or most major film critics and shared insightful comments like “this is so boring” and “there’s no plot” and “what a stupid movie” throughout the film.

I gave her my best “I’m going to stab you” look about the third time she did this but she appeared immune to my Bette Davis eyes.

Why would you go to a 2:44 minute movie if you had no idea what it was about? And why would you talk out loud like you were in your paneled den sitting in your Lazy-Boy Recliner eating Funyuns? (Okay, I might be projecting here.)

So when the film ended and the credits began to roll she stood up to leave and made her pronouncement, “That was so gay.”

My head snapped as I looked to my wife to see if she had heard what I had. The mortified look on her face told me that she had.

People were pushing out of the theater all at once and by the time I had regained blood flow to my extremities and stood up, she was gone. I rushed out to the lobby to find her but she had disappeared. See Divine Intervention.

My wife and I were meeting some friends (yes, gay) for dinner and I was practically foaming at the mouth as we walked to the restaurant. I was mad that I hadn’t said anything to the woman and I was wounded. It had been a very long time since I had witnessed such a blatant exhibition of callous ignorance and casual bigotry.

I was still thinking about it this morning when I woke up but I didn’t have time to gnaw on it because we had to get ready to go to a wedding. Our friends Chris and Kami got married in NYC in June and had a ceremony and reception for local friends today.

Hearing these two wonderful women exchange vows was probably the most perfect antidote for the venom of the matinee madwoman yesterday. Chris is a doctor and Kami is a college professor. And they have met their match in the best sense of the word.

In the hallway outside the reception there was a table with a big jigsaw puzzle made from a photograph of Chris and Kami taken on one of their many adventures. They are standing with huge smiles between some alpacas and native children in Peru.

Another table had a pile of flat rocks and markers on it and we were asked to write sweet messages to the newlyweds.

That was so gay.

Damn straight.

puzzle

rocks