Archives for September2010


Crazy Bracelets…and other forms of kid culture….

On Thursdays, I teach a creative writing class to elementary-school kids. Lately, all the kids–most of them guys–have been showing up at my house wearing these crazy bracelets, animal shaped bracelets of different colors. One of the kids told me that he has classmates who have so many bracelets, they stretch from the wrist to the elbow.

It reminded me of friendship pins, a craze I participated in during 3rd grade. Friendship pins were nothing more than safety pins with a few beads strung on them, in different patterns. We wore them on our shoes, where the laces cross over, and I remember that my shoes were entirely covered by friendship pins. Not that I had that many friends, mind you. I made most of them myself. I just fell in love with the idea and the rest is history.

But I haven’t gotten invested in any other crazes. In high school, I was pretty much a dork, with zero fashion sense. I actually believed it was cool to be myself, but that meant I didn’t have a lot of friends because being myself in high school was actually really hard to do. I do remember one fashion craze at the time was wearing two different colored socks, for example, blue on top and red on bottom. I mixed it up a little. On one side, I wore blue on top and red on bottom, and on the other side, I wore red on top and blue on bottom. A girl in my youth group ridiculed me for it, which meant I had to keep doing it because I couldn’t possibly pretend that I cared enough to conform.

The adult world has plenty of fashionistas, and we didn’t seem to leave those crazes behind. Still, I don’t see as many of them, and we don’t participate in quite the same way. A few years ago, a friend gave me a Stephen Colbert Wriststrong bracelet, but his eyes were snapping with humor when he did it. Sure, I’ve worn it. But always with a sense of  irony.

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Life Expectancy South Africa & Zimbabwe v. the United States

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For the love of teachers

On Friday, I’m heading to Stanford to see my former advisor, Richard Roberts. It’s a good feeling to keep in touch with him, even though I probably see him only once a year, at best.

I met a graduate student at Stanford my first year there who was frustrated with another graduate student who didn’t plan on doing anything with her Ph.D. “She owes it to her advisor,” he said. “He invested all this time in her and now she’s just going to be a mom?”

I’m glad none of the advisors who have taken an interest in me have ever taken that attitude. Read More

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Infertility, Heartbreak, and the Ironies of Conception

I’ve just published Kimberly Schaye’s essay on struggling to conceive, “Watching for Rhinos,”  now live over at The Fertile Source. Here she talks a little more about infertility, heartbreak, and the ironies of conception.

1) For women who don’t want children, or who have never had a problem conceiving, it can be difficult to understand the pain and heartbreak associated with infertility. Can you talk a little bit about it?

I think the heartbreak comes from the fact that you go into it with so much hope. At first it doesn’t even occur to you that something thousands of women do every day – give birth – might not be an option for you. When it starts to dawn on you that something might be wrong, it’s scary. When the cause of my problem couldn’t be pin-pointed right away, I felt scared, sad and confused — and I had no idea how or when it would end.

2) How long did you struggle with infertility? What helped you cope with it and what would you have done if you hadn’t been successful in conceiving a child? Read More

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Love you forever

I think it is probably just me but I find this book–Love You Forever by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Sheila McGraw–a little creepy. Would a mother really go through town in the middle of the night and cuddle her 30 year old son while he sleeps and sing to him the way she did when he was two months old? No. And if a woman really did that, we would probably have her committed to a hospital.

This morning, trying to explain to Chris how I felt about this book, I asked, “Wouldn’t you be a little freaked out if you woke up in the middle of the night, and your mother was cuddling you like a baby and crooning a lullaby about how you would always be her baby?”

“Noooooo,” Chris said, in that way that only means, um, yeah I’d be creeped out. He continued: “I’d just be like, ‘Hi Mom! How are you?’”

I know, everybody finds this book so precious about the enduring love of a mother for her child and blahblahblah. I’m not buying it. Practically every family with small children that I know owns this book…and it just gives me the heebie-jeebies.

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Finally an injustice is righted…and latest news about AIDS in South Africa

Finally (!), Robert Mugabe’s massacre of tens of thousands of innocent Ndebeles in the early 1980s has been named a genocide. It angers me that it took 30 years to do it, while the murders of  a couple dozen white farmers in Zimbabwe have horrified the world and been plastered all over the news for the past decade.  Think Euopean and American racism didn’t play a role in the discrepancy? Think again. I’m grateful, of course, that people cared enough about those 20+ white farmers to pay attention, at last, to what was going on in Zimbabwe, but extremely frustrated that the world turned its back at the open pits of thousands of rotting bodies outside Bulawayo for three decades. I hope this means that somebody, somewhere, can move forward and prosecute the perpetrators (including Mubage) but….time will tell.

But everytime I think about what’s going on in Zimbabwe, and I get frustrated, I remember a conversation I had with an environmental planner, Simon, who lives in Zimbabwe and works there, and in Mozambique, and in South Africa. When I mentioned how afraid South Africans were of “going the way of Zimbabwe,” he said, “They would be so lucky.” I asked him what he meant. He said that Zimbabweans have figured out they can’t rely on the government (or, for that matter, the world) for anything. And so they are relying on each other, on common, everyday citizens.  The average Zimbabwean isn’t languishing by the roadside, waiting for the government to right itself and fix everything. No. They’re taking matters into their own hands, he said, and building community with the people around them.

And in another depressing news article,  Bill Gates–who is, according to the article, the world’s largest single donor for combating HIV-AIDS in Africa–has pointed out that funding dollars are insufficient to provide ARVs for all the HIV-positive folks in southern African. South Africa now has close to a million people on ARVs, but needs funding for up to three times that–and that money simply doesn’t exist. ““We have to be honest with ourselves,” says Gates. “We don’t have the money to treat our way out of this epidemic. Even as we continue to advocate for more funding, we need to make sure we’re getting the most benefit from each dollar of funding and every ounce of effort.”

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Sherman Alexie’s fabulous piece of advice

In the September issue of Writer’s Digest, Sherman Alexie offers the top ten pieces of writing advice he’s ever been given. My favorite is his #1 piece of advice–whenever you read a piece of writing you admire,  send a note of thanks to the author.

I wish people would do that to me. And the golden rule is “Do unto others…” So I’m adopting this piece of advice from now on. Thanks, Sherman!

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Ghost Towns in Nor-Cal

Last month, Chris and I took a mini-vacation up towards Lake Shasta in northern California to check out old ghost towns and to sample the local flavor. We got some of both by staying at the French Gulch Historic Hotel and poking our noses around Shasta and Cottonwood. Here are a few pictures from our time up north.

 

 

 

French Gulch, California

Chris in the breakfast room at the Historic French Gulch Hotel

 

The owners of the Historic French Gulch Hotel–our hosts, our bartender, and the ones who urged us to sing karaoke no matter how bad we were.

French Gulch cemetery (graves dating back to the late 19th century with a few people still buried there recently)

Shasta, California–a ghost town that’s been well preserved and is now a state park

The crazy bridge at Redding, California

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Writing, Adoption, and the Mystery of Birth Mothers

Over on The Fertile Source, I’ve just published Terri Elders’s short essay, “Dreaming as the Summers Die,” about her childhood longing to know about her birth mother, a longing that has sustained her throughout her adulthood as she considers the mystery of the woman who gave her birth.  Here, I interview Terri on her thoughts about writing, adoption, and her ongoing curiosity about her birth mother.

 Terri, your essay is a profoundly moving piece about your childhood curiosity, fear, wonder, and pain over your relationship with your “real” (that is, birth) mother vs. the mother who adopted you. What led you to write this piece?

 I write true stories for anthologies and I saw a callout for stories about adoptions from Chicken Soup for the Soul, and submitted it. It was not selected for that volume on adoptions. I later sent it to Cup of Comfort for consideration. It was not selected, but another story was, “Magic and Miracles,” about the actual day my sister and I went to court for our adoption.

Did writing it dredge up old memories or did it feel healing to consider this issue through art?

I always find it healing to write about relationships and experiences. I’ve been writing since I was a child.


Towards the end of your essay you mention that your master’s degree helped you understand adoptees’ need to seek out their birth mothers, their need for answers. What is that need? What do you think birth mothers can do to help meet that need? What do you think adoptive parents can do to help meet that need?

When I was at UCLA getting my MSW, Los Angeles County Adoptions was my first year field placement. The emphasis was on the child needing a home, the adoptive family needing to parent and the birth mother unable or unwilling to provide for an infant or child. I did some research on adult children seeking connection, and talked with birth mothers seeking to connect with adult children. Because I actually knew my birth mother, having been adopted by relatives, my case was a little different. That she’d disappeared and nobody knew what happened to her, is what made it all such a mystery. Later my older sister disappeared for nearly 30 years, compounding the mystery for me. Later I learned that she had several more children and grandchildren…I felt devastated. I still write about our childhood experiences together, but have not had an adult relationship with her. We exchange cards and gifts on holidays, but I’ve seen her once in 50 years. When people drop out of your life unexpectedly, it complicates the grieving process. Sometimes I think it’s easier to accept a death than it is to accept a disappearance. It’s that not knowing that’s so haunting. Adoptive parents can understand that some adult children wanting answers may be an innate need to solve a puzzle.
In your seventies now, do you feel like you have found peace with this issue that has haunted you over a lifetime—who was your mother and what part of her is part of you?

I’ve been trying to find peace with all the tangled relationships…writing about them always helps. My late husband died without forgiving his own mother, and a few others that he had felt crossed him in some way, and though he claimed he had no regrets about not forgiving, I suspect he did.

What are you currently working on (artistically)?

I’m working on a piece about forgiveness. I’m thinking of calling it “Forgiving Charles Dickens.” There’s two meanings to that title. I just returned from the University of Cambridge International Summer School, where I studied Victorian history and literature. I have a lot of stories to write from that experience, and one is about Charles Dickens and his inability to ever forgive his mother for trying to return him to the blacking factory where he worked while his father was in debtors prison, and how I think that impacted his future relationships with woman, and how he portrayed women in his novels.

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