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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Writing

Hold the Side Effects

07 Sunday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Writing

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Writing

Once, not that long ago, the mere thought of doing something was as good as doing it.

But today I’ve trading thinking for doing – and I know I’ve hit the mother-lode in avoidance when the kitchen and cooking become a refuge.

All the doing has kept thoughts at bay though, including this one made by a writer-friend of J.D. Salinger, which I ran across in The New Yorker a couple of days ago.  Lillian Ross writes:

“Over the years, Salinger told me about working “long and crazy” hours at his writing and trying to stay away from everything that was written about him.  He didn’t care about reviews,” he said, but “the side effects” bothered him.  “There are no writers anymore,” he said once.  “Only book selling louts and big mouths.”

It’s not the conclusion I find as bothersome as Salinger’s comments about “the side effects.”  But rather than thinking about it, I’m just “working ‘long and crazy’ hours” in the kitchen, filling up my freezer and fridge with meals.

Meat Loaf, Roast Beef, Irish Beef Stew and Swiss Steak — with no side effects.

Wholly Listening

04 Thursday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care, Writing

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Writing

Regret closes in.

What door did I just close?  What would have happened had I not been so quick on the tongue-trigger?  What might have been said had I waited in silence?

Of course, conversations happen fast.  The words of another don’t quite sink in before the moment is gone.  It’s only later that the loss is felt, only later that regret fills in the hole of what might have been.  And as much as we’d like to retrace our words back to the time of impending revelation, the opening we glimpsed too late  is gone.

It’s funny — in an ironic, sad sort of way —  that it was just last night when I was talking to my husband about when, in my writing, I most sense the presence of the Holy.  Inevitably, it comes through telling stories of  times when life catches us by surprise, when we forget ourselves enough that we simply react, without fully processing what it is we should do.  Or what it is we should say.

For a moment, we are immersed by whole truth.   Unbridled hurt or anger flares up and life shakes lose a tear.  We feel naked and exposed.  Or sometimes we’re just so darn giddy that if we don’t embarrass ourselves by our victory jigs (after we’ve come to our good senses), then we have surely embarrassed friends or family or complete strangers with our demonstrations of foolish and unabridged joy.

Sacred moments catch us by surprise, and often, I realize only later that I may have closed a door on something important.  It happens more often than I would like and perhaps, more often than I know.  Last night it happened with my brother’s unexpected call.

Jon never calls on Wednesday and never so close to bedtime.  Looking back on it, I guess he was in the midst of  a whole-truth moment, where he simply had to tell me something, in spite of the fact that he was calling at the wrong hour or on the wrong evening.

I can’t recall Jon’s exact words but he called to thank me for bringing a holy listener into his life.  Jon wanted to tell me about  their first meeting and how much he had enjoyed being with Jim.  On some level, I sensed the weight of  unprocessed longing in the words expressed and the words that may have come next.  But I’ll never know since I jumped into the silence with words that should have waited on the weightier words of my brother.

Silence is indeed golden.  It helps us be better listeners.  It gives us time to absorb.  It gives the one speaking time to clarify and expand.  If truth is resting on the tip of a tongue, silences invites the truth to slip out in the open.

With silence, our listening can become whole.  And in the  listening, when the speaker loses all track of  time and forgets about the listener and for a moment, even forget about himself, the listening become something else.  Holy.

MAGIcal thinKING

26 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Soul Care, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Arthur Andersen, Everyday Life, Joan Didion, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Writing

Last night in class, I was asked the question that always makes me squeamish: “Are you a writer?“

When I get this, I hedge with words like ‘wannabe’ or ‘trying to be’ or ‘someday, I hope’.  But before I could grow my hedge, my questioner — a perceptive and articulate soon-to-be-spiritual director — went on to explain her reason for asking; members of the church she pastors suggested she begin writing the stories she tells so well.  But it was what came next, said with a nervous chuckle — maybe not these exact words, but something akin to them — that caught my attention:  “Who am I to think that I can write?”

Well, okay then.  My friend and I share common ground, since members of the Texas church I use to attend did the same thing to me.  And once it started, it didn’t stop.  It wasn’t the same people as much as it was a similar message  that I heard over and over, like a baton handed from one runner to the next.  And then, that same haunting question I once volleyed back — “Who am I…?”

So last night, I did my friend a favor by cutting to the chase.  “Yes.”  “I write… but not for money.”

I told her how writing came to be part of who I am.  I told her it began with a work stint in St. Charles, Illinois, when I was twenty-something  and young in my tax consulting career, that I wrote training curriculum for the now defunct international accounting firm, Arthur Andersen & Co.  And after this, I wrote position papers to help defend  cross-border tax strategies for a publicly traded multi-national company that employed me.  And that now, many years later, I write for the pure magic and fun of it  — sometimes a gardening article, or a prayer meditation for a class I lead   — but most of all, I told her about writing my life in this year-old blog.

People began filing into class, so we never finished our conversation.  But had there been time, I wish I had told my friend this:

“If you ask about writing, try to answer through writing.  Just write. Just write to an answer; don’t waste precious time (like I did) thinking about writing or wondering if you should.  Begin a blog.  Or record your life in a paper journal.  Or maybe both — because paper journals are less confining than words that draw public breath.”

This, for starters, is what I wish I had said.

And then for the main course, I would promise to send her a copy of Marilynne Robinson’s five rules on writing, because they inspire with their truth.  And then I would invite her to ponder Ranier Maria Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet.  And perhaps I would share other  ‘how-to-write’ books, like Annie Dillard’s “The Writing Life.”

Then, if willing to be bold (or foolish), this layperson might put tongue-in-cheek or foot-in-mouth and ask her pastor friend if there wasn’t some old fart in the Bible that hadn’t dared to ask the same question of God, in the opening chapters of Exodus — which, when I think on it, is rather ironic, given that our next move, upon asking this question, is often to turn around and run.

“Who am I…?” —  Moses dared to ask God at the burning bush.  You may recall where that question led Moses —  stuck in the desert with a huge mass of whining distant relatives for forty biblical years without ever stepping foot in the promised land.  And then like a Baptist preacher, I would say…, “Friend, I beg you — don’t miss out on the promised land.  Just write.“

And then for dessert, if she were still listening, I would offer my friend evidence of a great writer, — a really, really great writer  —  who at times, asked the same Moses identity question of herself.  In black and white, I hold her admission of doubt in my lap; it’s tucked in her memoir on grief, written soon after the death of her author-husband  John Gregory Dunne.  In her own words,

“I remember one last present from John.  It was my birthday, December 5, 2003.  Snow had begun falling in New York around ten that morning and by evening seven inches had accumulated, with another six due.  I remember snow avalanching off the slate roof at St. James’ church across the street.  A plan to meet Quintana and Gerry at a restaurant was canceled.  Before dinner John sat by the fire in the living room and read to me out loud.  The book from which he read was a novel of my own, A Book of Common Prayer, which he happened to have in the living room because he was rereading it to see how something worked technically.  … The sequence is complicated (this was in fact the sequence John had meant to reread to see how it worked technically), broken by other action and requiring the reader to pick up the undertext in what Leonard Douglas and Grace Strasser-Mendana say to each other.  “Goddamn,” John said to me when he closed the book.  “Don’t ever tell me again you can’t write.  That’s my birthday present to you.”

If Joan Didion experienced doubts about her call to write, then surely all writers do so at one time or another.   And like Joan, even when our writing is nothing like Joan’s, we answer the question the only way we can.  Just write.

But maybe I wouldn’t have said any of these things to my friend.  Who am I, after all?  I’ve no wise words like the MAGI nor can I issue the  commands of a KING.  I’m just a writer who is braver in writing then I am in person.

But there’s no harm in writing her to come check out WordPress.com, is there?   Nor, I think, is there a problem with inviting her to put on her magic thinking cap and just…

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