Writing to Remember

hotelI write for several reasons. Some days I write because I’ve stepped into a place, and my heart has stopped. My breathing turns short and shallow and I know there is a story to be told.

And some days I write for a few of the same reasons Margaret Atwood has said she writes:

To set down the past before it is forgotten.
To excavate the past because it has been forgotten.

I am forgetful. Painfully so. I often call one of my sisters or my best-friend-for-ages and start the conversation with, “Do you remember…?” Both my children were born on the 22nd day of their respective months, I am sure, because some power in the Universe knew I would have trouble keeping track of birthdays. On a given day, I cannot recall what I had for dinner the night before.

I accept my cloudy memory. But this past weekend, while on a trip with my sisters and my cousins, it became clear just how insufficient the brain can be when storing and recalling events.

When you’re in the thick of immediate family, conversations turn intimate. One night, we talked about my mother, her death, those days when we went through her things. I brought up how my sisters and I discovered cash in her linen cabinet buried under the towels, waved my hands and talked about it with complete confidence. But then my sister stopped me and said, “No, that didn’t happened at her house. We were at the bank. It was hidden inside her will. In her safe deposit box.” Until then, I could see–plain as day–the three of us standing in her bathroom, a hand lifting the towels, and someone saying, “Look.”

Both my sisters agreed we were at the bank, and of course it makes more sense. As they described their own recollections, my brain began to put the pieces in the right order (and place) again.

Still, it was strange. I kept asking, why when I remember that moment would I put us in the bathroom instead of at the bank?

Today, I’m asking: Does it matter?

Last summer, I took a one-week workshop on writing creative nonfiction with Lisa Romeo, in which she talked about that exact aspect of writing nonfiction: our fallible minds and why some details don’t matter. In her lesson, she asks:

Are you — when you are writing memoir, personal essay and other forms of creative nonfiction — creating an official document, meant to preserve in perpetuity the accuracy of a specific event down to the last detail? …what matters and what doesn’t to the story you are telling?

I’ve written the beginnings to an essay about those weeks after my mother died, partly to “set down the past” and partly to “excavate the past.” Now, when I go back to that piece for rewrites, I will have to ask what helps or halts the story (meaning what do I need to include or what can I leave out). Would it matter to a reader where I stood more than what I saw? More importantly, what is the story I really want to tell? Sometimes in a personal essay, the when and where matter much less than the why.

What do you do when memory fails?

Memories, Stories, & Poetry: Threads that Bind Us

“I was taking it all in, / filming the heart”
~ from “Take Two, They’re Small” by Cristina Norcross

In the last few months, the senior citizens in my creative writing class at Harwood Place have become very interested in poetry.

author photo1 medium 2013I know a lot less about poetry than I do other genres, so I invited Cristina Norcross, poet and editor, to lead the group this month. I told her the numbers tend to run small with three or four people in attendance. But after word got out that I had invited a published poet to meet with them, eleven (!) eager faces gathered around the table, some core members and some new to writing in general–a room full of enthusiasm!

Cristina is a gentle soul and an all around creative spirit. She came with paper, pencils, and prompts and stirred up memories that translated into 6-word memoirs and vivid descriptions. And, as so often happens in this group, writing fosters relations. One woman, who had never attended the class but recognized a few faces, told me later that she heard things she hadn’t known about the people sitting next to her. That is the thing I enjoy most about this group, witnessing the discoveries that lead to connections. That, and so  much more.

Memories, stories, and poetry. An hour well spent on a Saturday morning.

Just for fun, here’s the beginnings of a poem I wrote after Cristina led us through a guided imagery exercise.

Sipping Turkish Coffee

Cardamom and grit
and a small, porcelain cup.
The drink is bitter
But the day sweet.
He sits across from me
Pachouli, a page-boy haircut,
A nervous grin.
The windows that frame him
Pull at the sunshine,
Light up the floor,
the table,
the faces
of his mother
on my left
his father
on my right.
Glowing.
Excited.
They must have known.

~

Are you a poet? You could be. Try one of Cristina’s prompts: What did you give away that you miss now? A favorite toy or jacket? A pair of shoes that no longer fit, but you still love them? A CD that you gave to your cousin?

5574872-5fa61a87b3c20a918ac7f7e198ae8542-fp-1395665841Cristina M. R. Norcross is the author of Land & Sea: Poetry Inspired by Art (2007), The Red Drum (2008, 2013), Unsung Love Songs (2010), The Lava Storyteller (2013) and Living Nature’s Moments: A Conversation Between Poetry and Photography, with Patricia Bashford (2014).  

Her works appear in North American/international journals and anthologies.  She was the co-editor for the project One Vision: A Fusion of Art & Poetry in Lake Country (2009-11) and is currently one of the co-organizers of Random Acts of Poetry & Art Day. Cristina is also the founding editor of the online poetry journal, Blue Heron Review (www.blueheronreview.com).  

Her new book, Living Nature’s Moments: a conversation between poetry and photography(Vox Novus Press, 2014) by Cristina M. R. Norcross and Patricia Bashford, is available online from Blurb.  Signed copies are available on Etsy. Find out more about this author at:www.FirkinFiction.com

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Writing about Place

hotel

It’s not just about showing the reader a particular exterior landscape. It’s about giving them a particular interior landscape. ~ Cathy Day, “Teaching Tuesday: Setting”

If you’ve taken a writing course or workshop, you may have been given the prompt, “Where I’m from.” The first time I wrote with those three words in mind, I went back to a place and time in my youth when I was just beginning to notice family dynamics, beginning to identify but not quite understand:

Where I’m from is a two-lane road that winds into a cul-de-sac where the house on Hix still stands. As the front door opens, a long, low creak breaks the silence and makes you wonder, for a second, why we never bothered to grease the hinges.

The house is full of light and seems peaceful. And, it is most days. But down the cold, tile steps of the entryway and off to the left is the kitchen. There, bathed in the morning sunshine, I sit with my mother and her mother and the Sunday paper and watch them cut out coupons.

No one speaks, yet there is heavy presence. Not angry, but resigned. Weathered. Cognizant of something fragile, I eat my cereal with care.

Without my grandmother asking, my mother gets up and refills their cups of coffee.

“Can I get you some breakfast, Mama?” she says.

“No, baby, I’m fine.” Then quiet again, except for the sound of scissors tearing into paper.

It’s funny to see what details come to mind when writing about place (whether you’re interest is fiction or non). There’s so much I could have described: the two-story house with floor-to-ceiling windows, the pasture out back, and the creek beyond. But, it makes sense after I read Cathy Day’s quote above why I might consider more intimate details. I appreciate those kind of details even more, after studying this article by Dorothy Allison on place (published online at Tin House). Allison breaks it down with clarity and power:

[Place] is who you are and what is all around you, what you use, or don’t use, what you need, or fear, or want.

. . .

Place is not just what your feet are crossing to get to somewhere…it is something the writer puts on the page–articulates with deliberate purpose. If you keep giving me these eyes that note all the details–if you tell me the lawn is manicured but you don’t tell me that it makes your character both deeply happy and slightly anxious–then I’m a little bit frustrated with you.

. . . . Place is emotion. . . .

Place is people.

I’m thinking a lot about place these days; I’m writing historical fiction, where the landscape is integral to the story. As I struggle to bring into view the time period and what characters see on the outside–the exterior, I keep thinking about the aspects of the character themselves that will breathe life into their interior landscape as well.

Questions that appear at the end of Cathy Day’s post help, questions which certainly probe a writer about the “brick and mortar” details but ones that help the writer investigate deeper. Such as:

  • What are the conflicts between neighbor and neighbor?
  • Who is happiest about living or being in this place? who is least happy? (I might add: why?)
  • How “modern” is it in comparison to the world around it? Is it behind the times? Or does it have its finger on the pulse of fads and fashions? Do the people here look up or down at any other place?

Click HERE to read more of Cathy Day’s post, and HERE to read the full lesson on place by Dorothy Allison.

What strikes you most about place?

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