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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Writing

Diving in the Gene Pool

05 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Genealogy, Writing

I didn’t go to Iowa to write about Daddy.

Yet writing memoir in a fiction class worked fine since similar rules apply.  While the learning  challenged me, the hardest part of Iowa has been returning to the real world where distractions exist and writing deadlines don’t.

Those who know me will attest I’m kindred spirits with the White Rabbit, as I’m always “late for an important date.”  I put off to the last-minute what I can and fill in the space with the rather-dos of life.   When desperately into avoidance, I settle for rather-not-dos.  Today, for instance, I weeded my front garden and my neighbor’s garden next door.

While I’ll not name my avoidance du Jour, I’ll confess ancestry research has become the mother lode of all distractions.  From the comfort of a computer chair, I swirl around in a digital whirlpool of documents.  Old census reports, immigration records and phone books, as well as a treasure chest of old newspapers for the entire state of New York.  It’s hard to come up for air when diving in the old gene pool.

Hours pass with nothing in hand.  Then, with a click of my mouse, I run across a rare find — a prominent 1943 newspaper article in the Schenectady Gazette featuring my Greek grandfather and his second wife.  The story is full of facts like their marriage date, where Papa and his wife had lived the week before, where Papa had parked his two children — my dear father and aunt.  Running across this jewel kept me going for another five hours straight in the hope of another big find.

While I didn’t go to Iowa to write about Daddy, I began my gene pool dives to feed my story of Dad.  My first day back from Iowa, I wrote this in my paper journal:

“I must not put away Daddy’s story.  It was alive Thursday night as I wrote it and Friday afternoon as I read it aloud to my review partners. So here are the things I will do to feed “it”.  I wrote of my desire to visit with Aunt Carol each week to record her’s and Dad’s story in detail.  I wrote of converting home-made movies my parents took from 8mm film to DVD.  I believe both will help ripen Dad’s story within me, while ancestor research will help fuel talks with Aunt Carol.

Today I pulled that old photo of my young grandfather with his sister Mary and brother Theo — the bookend at the top of this post. Lying beneath it, was another old photo of my young mother standing at a trade show booth, while three others sat beside her.  Had I not pulled out the top photo, I would never have known of one hiding beneath.

This sandwich of old photos becomes good analogy for what happens when writing memoir…or for what happens when diving in the old gene pool.  You begin with one photo or story and end with another.   Neither is more valuable.  Both work to tell the story.

Squeezing Summer

02 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, The Great Outdoors, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Oklahoma Gardening, Writing

Am I the only one to wonder how it can be August?

In between the grieving and many trips to my sister’s house and writing near cornfields and closer to home, I look up to find it’s August.

All the signs are here.  Back-to-school sales gearing up.  My Japanese Maple sporting sun-burnt finger tips.  Grassy weeds having a field day in my garden and me, Jimmy-crack-corn not caring whether they go to seed.

Summer use to last longer.   Summertime once kept the same schedule as the local municipal pool:  Opened Memorial Day.  Closed Labor Day.  In between hot punctuation points breathed three months of slower living; ninety-something summer nights to stay up late knowing one could sleep to noon the next day if they wished.

Somehow that’s all changed.  Now summer break last two months.  My grands are getting shortchanged and haven’t a clue.  Teachers too —  though I imagine summer days of spent yester-youth are recalled by some.

Fresh squeezed lemonade once kept August days bearable until summer itself was all squeezed out.  Now we squeeze out summer with air conditioners that allow us to bear down on business-as-usual in August.  My daughter reports back to school this week to prepare her room for a new crop of not-ready-for-prime-time kindergarteners.

But it’s me not ready for prime-time — me pressing on the brakes to slow down summer.  Me saying, “Not so fast Mr. August  — let me lap up a dish of summer once more before we crack open the books of everyday business.”

Today Kara and I are going to squeeze one more day out of summer break.  We’re going to lunch, then go splurge on a pair of summer sale sandals.  And like all the best of lost summertime days, one good explore will surely lead to another.  And we’ll get good and hot and inevitably end up with something cool to drink — maybe lemonade from Chick-Fil-A — before coming to our senses and seeking shelter in our separate air-conditioned corners of Oklahoma City.

Flip-Flop, Rain-Drop

24 Saturday Jul 2010

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home, The Great Outdoors, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Iowa Summer Writing Festival, Travel, Writing

I’m not sure if I’ll venture out before the shuttle comes.  It’s raining and I’ve lost a third of my rain gear, once made up of a  jacket and pair of flip-flops.

Holed up in my hotel room, I’ve been thinking about changes this trip will bring — how last night, my teacher thanked me for coming.  I’m wondering where “this” will lead.  Knowing that “this” depends upon me.

My teacher sensed what I did not confess:  I had risked by coming to Iowa.  Putting myself  ‘out there’ has never been easy.  Instead I flourish within an everyday security blanket of a few people back home.  This is what I like to say.

But this had been good.  It helped to get away.  Alone.  To be myself without props.  To see who I am.  Alone.

Alone and not alone.  Wanting to write but not wanting to write.  Fears of being good but not good enough.  Good enough for what?   Is it the publishing thing again?  Do I want that?

There are so many great writers.  I sat with a few in class this week.  Their words amazed, their speed at writing amazed more.  They shared their work with ease.  I too shared, but only when called upon.  And then not always.

I am not ready to recite a litany of what this week has given me.  I don’t yet know.  But there’s expectation, if not in myself, at least within others, that there will be change.  Imperceptible.  But there — like all those things we can’t quite “put our finger on.”

The words came into my mind just now — the other shoe must drop. It sounds corny, but given that I lost one of my flip-flops around town yesterday, I’m wondering about that lone flip-flop that remains in my purse.  Where will it land?  What use does one lone flip-flop have?

— FOOT NOTE —

After finishing this entry, I had two hours to spend.  I decided to go out.  What the heck, I thought, the worst that can happen is I’ll get wet.  Out the glass door, I rounded the corner and stopped.  Lying on the ground near a trash can was a flip-flop.  I leaned down, shook my head and smiled.  Claiming what was mine, I weighed the rubber sole in my hand before dropping it in my purse.  Then putting on my hood, I stepped into the rain.


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