Observations from the Invisibility Cloak

When I was 28 and writing poetry, I wrote a poem lamenting the feeling that I was invisible because I was no longer the youngest, cutest thing on the block --- and I had become a mother. Now I'm in my sixties and really invisible. And I like it!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Traveling down the weedy path

I've had a week of enforced downtime now, with thoughts and observations chasing each other around like squirrels in the fallen leaves. Since the world was spinning out of control --- literally --- it was hard to read or write or watch tv for awhile, and that made me revert to an old favorite from childhood: listening to stories. Thank goodness for a public library with audiobooks.

I also had more than enough time to simply think. Stories have been a staple for me my whole life. I had parents who read to me every day, complete with voices and gestures. I also collected stories from life. I was one of those kids who would sit on the backstep or up on the stairs while the grown folks were talking. I was blessed with excellent hearing, and tried not to miss a word or inflection, even when I didn't understand the significance of their speech.

As soon as I learned to write, I delighted in writing stories. Most of them are mercifully lost to the sands of time, but a few examples lurk in boxes and files. I can remember following my mom around reading her my creation while she was fixing dinner or folding clothes. Every so often she would respond with "mmmhmm" or "oh my" and even I knew she was only half listening. But the fun of it for me was not the audience, it was hearing the words I had written spoken out loud, like a "real" story.

I became more self-conscious the longer I went to school. My writing usually got good grades because I was careful and knowledgeable about the mechanics. I have my father to thank for good grammar and wide vocabulary. But to have my work judged and given an A,B,or C (I never got lower than that!) was distinctly uncomfortable and limiting. I began to worry about criticism. I began to tailor my words for teachers. Just as, in art class, red cows and blue grass were not okay, writing that was too imaginative or too personal would not be acceptable.

The schism between public and private writing became fully delineated when I was 11 and started to journal in earnest. My early journals still contained stories, but they were tales that nobody else was invited to read, especially teachers. The main character was lonely or afraid, hiding from a thunderstorm because she couldn't get into her house. Couldn't turn that in because I knew a teacher would march that straight down the hall to Daddy's bandroom.

Now I am once again in the netherland between public and private writing. I still journal and nobody reads that stuff. Believe me, you wouldn't want to. But the novels I've written and sent into the world, my public writing, represents only a tiny fraction of what I want to say. They were the easy ones, the ones that could garner approval or at least acceptance, and if they didn't I would probably not know about it. But I'm over the newness of seeing my work in print and on kindle, and knowing that people I don't know would actually read it.

I stand at my crossroads. Hello Robert Johnson. (I wish!) Do I continue to keep it easy and light? Or do I go into the murkier places? Do I try to write for a particular slice of the reading public or do I write for me? I've been wrestling with this for months now. The current book is at a turning point and is tugging me in a direction I didn't intend to go. But these characters have been more insistent, more direct already, than any others I've written. I could easily follow the general outline and live happily ever after, and follow it up with another and another. Maybe I'd even find an audience and augment my retirement pay. There's certainly nothing wrong with that, is there?

Or maybe I follow the muse down into the labyrinth. I might end up with nothing to show for it. I might decide in the end, that it truly was just for me. I don't even know where it is leading, but I can tell already that it's not Hollywood.

I know the answer, of course. In order to preserve my personal integrity, I have to go full tilt. It's not an either/or forever. But for this moment --- and however long it takes --- the path that beckons is the one less traveled. And standing at the crossroads, it looks just a little bit scary.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Old folks, queued up


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This morning I am using my mother's cup. She doesn't remember this cup. Shoot, she doesn't even remember me. I took it out of the back of the cupboard this morning because all my usual oversize cups are in the dishwasher. I've never used it before.

I'm not sure where it came from or why. It's been around almost as long as I can remember. There used to be a matching Father cup, but it's long since gone. My mother used this cup for years. It's cracked and chipped; I was a little afraid to pour hot coffee into it. And now, because she no longer needs anything but clothing, it rests in my kitchen cupboard.

Until I took on the Mother-cup today, I had a thought in mind for writing ---- witty and political and ironic. Perhaps, I still do. But it is tempered with the reality of what it means to pass the mantle ---- or the goblet ----or the Mother-Cup.

There is a lot of head-swiveling change going on, it seems. Future Shock is well underway. Just look around you, consult the interwebs or watch the talking heads on tv. Not only is there change, it's happening relentlessly, all at once, AND ALL IN CAPITAL LETTERS!!!

One of the things you might hear people say ---- I've even said it myself ----- is "Just wait. All those old white people will die off and things will be ok."  Same-sex marriage. Immigration. War. Racism. Technology. Gun control. Grrrrrl Power.

All very well --- I can hardly wait. That is, until I stop to realize that ----- I AM THEM.
Oh-oh. I'm waiting for my own demographic to die off? That's another tune.

It's tricky stuff, aging and all. We don't all do it the same way. I look at those old guys on tv, with the balding, white-fringed heads, and I don't recognize them as my schoolmates. They're OLD. And too often, they're STUPID. We weren't like that, were we? What happened?

I've been told that I'm stuck in the Sixties. That's probably true. There's no reason for me to watch the Grammys or even the Academy Awards, because I don't know the players. But there are things I do know. Things I learned in the sixties.

MAKE LOVE, NOT WAR

PEACE IS THE ANSWER

DO YOUR OWN THING

QUESTION AUTHORITY

Then there's the old favorite, Turn on, Tune in, Drop out. But we'll save that for another time. 

My Mama's cup reminds me that every age has its learning, every generation has its challenges. I used to envy her the glamorous cocktail dresses, live jazz, drinking culture. That's what being a grown-up looked like to me. I didn't see the underside of alcoholism and broken relationships that went with it. I didn't witness lung cancer, unwanted pregnancies, conformity.

Those old folks I so cavalierly consign to the graveyard have faced their own barriers and emerged into a world they don't recognize. It's not the Sixties anymore, nor the Seventies, Eighties, Nineties.... 

Not everyone in my generation embraced love and peace, and it looks like many still do not. Yes, all the old white guys who are giving everyone fits in congress are gonna die out. Of course, that's also someobody's grandpa. 

My Mom didn't actually pass this Mother-cup on to me, she left it behind. I'm leaving things behind as well, material things (way too many!) as well as ideas, influence and love.

When all the old guys die off and it's a different world, take a breath and look around, because the next newest thing will be right behind you. And guess who will be the old guys then?