What She Wants

file0001757461943She wakes early on a Sunday, when she wants to sleep in, and mumbles that an hour and a half of Yoga is asking too much. Still, she moves downstairs in bare feet and loose clothing and quiet. She hopes, begs, prays that it will stay quiet.

Sliding in the DVD, she steps onto her mat and waits for Mr. Exercise Guru to appear. He is loud and moves too fast to be a real yoga instructor, but he promises strength and balance and “the ride of your life.” And, she wants all that, the good and the exciting, wants to clear her mind like he says she should. But, she fast-forwards through his pep talk, knowing time is of the essence; sooner rather than later, someone in her house will stir.

Three stretches and one Warrior pose into the routine, she is sweating and meditating and grateful for the solitude, when the door to the TV room creaks open. “You’re doing Yoga?” her son asks. She sighs and he sighs, and then he plops onto the couch. He knows his morning cartoons will be delayed now, but he stays anyway. Watching Yoga on TV is better than watching no TV at all, he says.

With this audience at her back, she stumbles through Crescent poses and painful Right Angle stances and too many Downward Dogs to count. He offers pointers and critiques. Fluffs a pillow, pulls at the lint in his sock. He asks for breakfast.

She relents and hits pause.

When she returns to Yoga, she settles into breathing and balancing and holding. Through the Tree stance and the Royal Dancer. She is good at the Royal Dancer. And, she wonders, in another life, could she have been a ballerina?

Having finished his breakfast, her son wanders back in and finds her gasping and grunting with her leg out in front in a toe lock. He laughs and dances the Limbo underneath her wobbly thigh. Twice.

She refuses to do the Half Moon.

“You should try, at least,” he says.

She skips past the Crane.

“Impossible,” she tells him.

They both do the Happy Baby and rock.

Well into the final stretching, her breathing rhythmic and her son quiet again, she falls into a calm. She is bent over, enjoying the feel of a hamstring well-worked, when the door creaks open a little wider this time.

Tiny feet travel the floor to her mat, and a small arm slips around hers. Bending over, too, like her mama, her daughter says there’s not enough room for them both, says she needs the mat.

“Yoga has become a group event,” she says out loud, more to herself than to her daughter, “Five more minutes.” That’s all she needs. “And, no talking,” she says. “Sit on the couch with your brother—and, no fighting! After, you can have the mat.”

She lies flat, then, and closes her eyes and breathes deep into the Corpse pose.

Five seconds.

Tens seconds.

Fifteen.

“Why are you so quiet, Mommy?” her daughter asks.

“I’m supposed to be quiet,” she says. “I’m not supposed to move.” She sighs. She opens one eye. “So, shhh.”

She breathes.

She concentrates.

She feels them both move in close.

Her son sits on one side and walks his fingers up her arm. Her daughter leans against her shoulder and feather’s her mama’s eyelashes with her tiny index finger.

They are quiet.

And, reverent.

And, meditative.

And, somewhere between the yin and the yang – between two, small bodies – she finds her center.

* Photo credit: Roxanneh on morguefile.com

Happy Mother’s Day.

Redirect: Writing in Short Form

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Today I’m guest blogging for Rochelle Melander, the Write Now! Coach, and talking flash nonfiction:

There are certain stories my gut wants me to put down on paper.

Like the one about the summer I turned twenty-two, when I climbed into a tiny Isuzu Trooper and rode in the back seat all the way from Norman, Oklahoma to the Catskills of upstate New York. So much changed for me during that trip, change embodied in the vision of Pennsylvania’s vibrant green hills rolling along side me like waves.

Or how, the week after my mother died, I desperately clung to whatever artifacts of hers I could, from her bible to that pair of gaudy glasses she wore in the late eighties. Why did she keep those glasses, and why couldn’t I let them go?

And then, the story of how, preeclamptic, I gave birth to my son three weeks early, in a state of frenzy. Then, I walked around in a slight haze of post-partum depression for the next six months, so much so that getting him and myself from the upstairs to the downstairs floor of our house by day’s end was cause to rejoice. In a ball of tears. Because everything about motherhood frightened me.

I want to write these stories. In fact, I’ve tried to write all three. But, I’ve struggled to transform the power of those memories onto the page.

Read more from my article, Writing in Short Form: The Power of Flash Nonfiction on Rochelle’s blog.

The Importance of Memoir and a Prompt

file4041257130846When I first set out to write seriously, I cranked out essay after essay, believing I could never make up an entire story from scratch, much less a novel, but I had plenty of life experience to share. Now, I write mostly fiction, more confident in my imagination and much less so in my own memory (and the amount of intrigue in my oh-so-exciting experiences). But, since I started my once-a-month creative writing class with Seniors, I’ve been diving back into memoir, flash nonfiction to be exact, and I’ve learned a couple of pertinent lessons.

Writing short memoir is damn hard.

Hard, not only because of the compact aspect of the genre, as the story must fit nicely within a small word count, but because every time I sit down to write a bit of my own self onto the page, it comes out clunky, dramatic, or flat. Or, maybe just dramatically flat. When I read my simple stories out loud to the Senior citizens at the table, I wonder what they must think; I can never match the extent of their tales from lives more rich in history. My gut reaction is to fall back on fiction, where I can dress up my experiences with more exciting details. But, here’s the other thing….

Writing memoir, in short or long form, is critical.

One of my favorite quotes right now comes from E. L. Doctorow in a lecture he gave on Historical Fiction at the City University of New York (CUNY) :

What is the past if not the present and the future?

Sure, he’s talking fiction, but this particular message rings true for memoir as well. I don’t need to tell you the importance of listening to the stories from an older generation. We learn much by studying and honoring people and events rooted in our past, more than revelations as to how much we’ve changed (or not, as the case may be). Bruce Feiler, in this New York Times essay, writes about the effects of family narratives on children, pulling from research by psychologists, Marshall Duke and Robin Fivush:

[C]hildren who have the most self-confidence have what [is called] a strong ‘intergenerational self.’ they know they belong to something bigger than themselves.

As humans, we need the stories from our past, from a family member’s struggle with mental health, to the birth of a first child, to the discovery of a father’s short stint in a band when you’ve never know him to be musical. Ever. Those histories belong to us. They teach us how to live life on life’s terms, how to embrace the unknown, and how to see others in new ways.

We, that is I, must take the time to unwind these memories, however difficult, however banal, and turn them into stories to share.

The Prompt

Long car rides. Pit stops. Getting lost.

This prompt comes from Hippocampus Online Literary Magazine and goes on to read:

There are many types of travel, but this wanderlust-filled issue will feature those that have one thing in common about getting from point A to pint B: Four wheels. Five, if you count the steering wheel.

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If, once you write this piece, you’re interested in submitting, the guidelines are here, and the deadline May 31st.

* Photo credit: [Man on beach] Shelling, by veggiegretz on Morguefile.com