Books

Found a fabulous new blog, Persistent Cookie, which seems as interested in books and quotations as I am. Thank you, Kari, I am glad to know you! And I will take up your book questionnaire:

1. A book that changed your life
The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand (cliched but true – a lesson about individuality and independence and where the boundary of selfishness is)
Waiting for Birdy, Catherine Newman (I am not insane. I am really not insane! And not alone!)
Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf (a woman’s life is fascinating, no matter how it looks on the outside)
The Wellspring, Sharon Olds (the most thoughtful and tender exploration of family, and specifically the mother-daughter bond, I’ve ever read)

2. A book you’ve read more than once
The English Patient
, Michael Ondaatje (for the sheer beauty of his language, by turns voluptuous and spare)
The Book of Qualities, Ruth Gendler (a quirky, wise book that treads the line between poetry and prose and spins pure, resonant truth from its creative imagery)
Crossing to Safety, Wallace Stegner (evocative story about lifelong friendship)
Operating Instructions, Annie Lamott (once before and once after having a baby)

3. A book that made you laugh
Home Game, Michael Lewis
How I Became a Famous Novelist, Steve Hely (cynical but outright hilarious)

4. A book that made you cry
Loving Frank, Nancy Horan (stunning description of a woman torn between her children and the great love her life, discovered too late)
The Time Traveler’s Wife, Audrey Niffenegger (part mystical, magical realism and part absolutely human, this is as good a story as I’ve ever read about loving someone for who they really are, flaws and all, and about the pain and longing for the way we wish things were but know they can never be)

Basically anything ever written by Laurie Colwin, Louise Erdrich, or Anne Beattie, all women who put into words the content of my heart exquisitely beautifully.

5. A book that you wish had been written
What Anne Sexton would have written had she lived to watch her daughters grow up and have their own children.

6. A book that you wish had never been written
Hard to say. I might go with you, Kari, and The Rules.

7. Books you are currently reading
The Embers, Hyatt Bass

8. A book you’ve been meaning to read
The stack/list is endless, but at the top right now: Raising Cain (Michael Thompson), Rage Against the Meshugenah (Danny Evans), Running in the Family (Michael Ondaatje), The Player of Games (Iain M. Banks), Life is a Verb (Patti Digh)

Holding on


Ronna Detrick’s post today called Holding On is ringing all of my bells. Oh yes I know this feeling. Sadly I have more of these edgy, dark, slippery days than of the sunny ones, and I want desperately to reverse this ratio. Sadly for me holding on sometimes does feel desperate, perhaps because I’ve been to the really dark place and am so afraid of going back. Perhaps because I am terrible at being out of control. Maybe it’s because I just don’t know how to trust myself. I don’t know. But I wish I had Ronna’s wisdom about knowing that the holding on place will pass, about having the trust and confidence in myself to weather it and the deep knowledge that I have the strength to stand on my own.

Perhaps that is the challenge of the next X years for me. Who am I kidding, perhaps? It is clearly, very clearly, that challenge. The universe is shouting it at me and I am trying my best to listen. May I learn to hold on without panic, to trust in myself, to know that I am good enough and strong enough to walk through the dark places.

Friends

Hilary and Terence’s (awesome) friend Launa is keeping a marvelous, funny, gorgeously-written blog about her experience living in France for a year with her husband and two daughters. Launa’s writing has that ineffable humorous-and-wise combination that speaks to me best, and her blog is now one of my very favorites.

Today she wrote about friends. About how being in a totally foreign place has made her thoughtful about both making new friends and about those old relationships back at home. Her story of sitting in the sunlight and combining her various hard-copy address books, parsing who makes it into the new version and who does not was hilarious and spot-on.

Wherever you go, it is your friends who make your world.
– William James

(incidentally, another wise expatriate)

Of course I identify with Launa’s primary discourse about learning to make friends in a foreign country and language. The move I remember most clearly is that from the US to London in January of 1987. That was not great. I’ll never forget when my parents told Hilary and I we were leaving. I believe that was when you must be mistaking this for a democracy really took hold in my family’s private iambic pentameter. We moved in the middle of the school year to a country where we knew nobody, went into local schools as the only Americans…. and, well, it was tough (incidentally I just typed democrazy by accident and thought … hmm, there’s something to that).

I will never, ever forget walking into my classroom with a girl named Stefanie was assigned to greet me at the front door. She pushed through the double swinging doors and cleared her throat. 25 girls, all hopelessly glamorous and foreign-looking, turned to stare at me. Stefanie, with the dry delivery I would learn was characteristic but not unfriendly, announced, “This is Lindsey. The new girl. The American.” She then turned and vanished into the crowd. I’m not sure I’ve ever been as mortified as I was right then.

So when Launa talks about making friends in new places I can relate. The language barrier is of course different in England, and my friend-making in Paris was early enough that I don’t recall much of it. I do remember the French school, the heavy green door, the rabbit hutch in the courtyard, and a sleepover where I got so homesick that Mum had to come and rescue me. But the memories of struggling to make friends are not as vivid for the Paris years as they are for those spent in London.

The next layer of Launa’s meaning is where my mind is today, though. As she discusses who endures from address book to address book, which friends manage to stick with us through life’s perambulations, I find myself thinking about the same things. Maybe it’s also because I just finished After You, a lovely novel centered on a pair of lifelong friends. Maybe, too, it’s because my spirit will always run on the academic year calendar, and September reminds me of the friends I made in those expansive years.

There have been three fertile periods of friend-making in my life. The first was my childhood friends, my “family friends,” who really functioned more as siblings than anything else in my early life. These friends flanked me through those first important years, though the relationships were driven as much by our parents’ friendships as by anything individual to us. I am not in daily touch with any of those friend-siblings these days, but they remain close to me in the way of people who have shared formative life experiences. Like, perhaps, people who went through trench warfare together. I also had dear friends from my grade school (one of whom I saw last week and realized that Grace is about to be the age we were when we met – holy holy holy!).

The second was college. High school, fractured as it was between England and New Hampshire, was quite fraught for me. I had some good friends in London but we have dropped out of touch, proving to me that the weight of different cultures and the ocean was too heavy for the fragile bonds we shared. At boarding school I pulled into myself for a variety of reasons, and I remember those two years as some of the loneliest of my life. Yes, I had friends, and people with whom I shared the long cold days; one of my very best friends now I met there though it was really in college that our friendship blossomed into what it is now. But I spent a lot of time alone, too, running endless miles in the snowy woods, black trees silhouetted against gray sky, and writing essays and reading books in my tiny bedroom.

College changed all of that. I arrived at Princeton desperately lonely, full of insecurities and fears (yes, believe it, even more than now). I don’t think I had realized the extent to which those two years in New Hampshire saddened me. I was desperate for a place to call home, a group of friends into whose embrace I could relax. Oh, and how I found it. To this day, Princeton remains the place I was happiest. There was standard college drama, of course: sadness, frustration, embarassment, heartbreak. But oh, my friends. I was and am still surprised that such extraordinary women wanted to be my friends. Some of this was, of course, in reaction to the cold years at Exeter. For sure. But it mostly just my lonely heart gratefully opening to the warmth of Princeton, to the spring sky riotously full of magnolia blossoms, to orange tee shirts and mardi gras beads, to young women singing “oh what a night” at the top of their lungs at a dive Chinese restaurant.

Those four years were healing, and the friends I made there will always be the dearest of my life. Anne Patchett writes about how true friends are “native speakers,” and I find myself recalling how at Princeton we basically invented our own language. We were teased for abbreviating everything, and indeed, we did. Abbrevs, T and a P, TDF, the chalice, DTR … I could go on. Those of you who know what all of those things mean know who you are. And you speak my language.

And many of these college friendships have endured, grown thicker and stronger and more sustaining even as we move further away from Princeton. We have passed through early professional choices, graduate school, weddings, divorces, more weddings, babies. I’m not sure I can say it better than I did, in a letter addressed to these wonderful women, several years ago:

“There will be and are other incredibly special friends, but as a community you all are ground zero: yardstick and safe haven, the people who knew me when I was becoming who I am.”

The third rich period of friendship in my life was around pregnancy, delivery, and the transition into motherhood. This passage is so complex, the particular dilemmas and issues of life with a newborn so detailed and specific, that the people I shared it with have become dear friends. These friendships developed in the context of family and children, and the women I have grown close to in that fecund place full of abundant concerns and anxious questions are deeply special to me.

It strikes me that it is not an accident that our truest and most lasting friendships are forged during times of life transition; we are closest to those who have shared experiences that changed who we are. Whether it was childhood, college, or becoming mothers, this is true for me. There are other examples, individuals who have shared things with me that contributed indelibly to who I am. In this way, a very few other people have become a part of my own self, their voices permanently embedded into my private narrative.

The truth is, though, as I read about Launa crossing off names in her address book, I know I am familiar with the pruning too. With the way that some friendships wither as others grow, sometimes with no difference in attention paid. Some people grow apart from us while others draw nearer. There are a few sustaining threads in my life, people whose story I know will always run next to mine, friendships whose sturdy support I lean on routinely. I have many friends but know that very few truly know me. That handful of people are dearer to me than they know. This is hardly the first time I’ve thought about this, but I believe it remains worthy of comment. The remarkable individuals who have the brave forbearance to stick with me on this journey deserve much more acclaim and celebration than I am able to give. All I can say is the simplest words, but also the ones that mean the most:

Thank you.

What it is …

“Its about knowing when it is time to lay something to rest.
Its about understanding what no longer serves you (or, perhaps, what never even did) and finding a new way instead.
Its in ignoring the lure to remain a victim and taking a look at what you can do instead of remaining stuck in fear and blame.
Its in surrounding yourself with people and activities that bring you to your best, and keep you from collapsing within and fading away.
Its in having enough integrity to care for yourself in the best way possible and ditching that ridiculous “sacrificing self for others” mindset. What good are you to anyone if you have just drained your life force?
Its about remembering the times you were the most happy, the most content, the most at peace, and finding the right recipe for your soul. Its allowing yourself time and permission to enjoy those things that spark your heart.
Its in being open to experiences you never dreamed of, and allowing yourself the freedom to have an adventure no matter how small it may seem.
Its in giving yourself a flipping break for once, and putting a muzzle on the voices in your head that try to make you believe you suck, or are not capable, or that you always fail, or aren’t worth it… (to hell with those lies).
Its about asking for help.
Its about learning to receive.
Its about healing your life.

Its possible. It really is.”

Oh Jen Gray, thank you for these gorgeous words. I am so glad I found your blog, full of exquisite words and images and deep wisdom. Thank you.

Little Gifts

This is a truly marvelous reminder of the little gifts we can give each other. Of the way small gestures and kindnesses can have an enormous impact.

In this time of inclement weather inside my own head, one of the most reliable ways for me to feel happy is to reach out to others, to soothe and offer warmth and to be as generous as I am able. This post is an excellent reminder of that.

Small offerings, the best I can do: Remembering to ask how a doctor’s appointment went. Sending along a book that made me think of you. Listening to Gracie tell a short story in a long, long, winding, roundabout way. Refraining from reaction even when my instinct is to snap. Baking a casserole for a family in grieving or busy with a new baby. Sending a birthday card the old-fashioned way, in the mail. Giving a gift just because I hoped it would make you happy.

Also, the hands in the photograph are wearing the same bracelet that I wear, adore, and never take off.