Why I’ll Never Write My Memoir

Life can evolve much differently than we expect.

I often fall back on the old adage to explain life’s twists and turns: “(Wo)Man proposes. God disposes.”

I started writing this blog over a year ago to grease my writing wheels. One day – I told myself – I would write the “great North American memoir.” Admittedly a grandiose ambition, but if you are dreaming anyway, dream big say I.

I wasn’t sure what I expected to learn by writing a daily blog for a year. What I eventually learned surprised me. In terms of writing my own memoir, my lust and ambition had subsided.

I realized I had already written a memoir, in fact, but not in a conventional way. My memoir was written down in a thousand daily journal entries in dozens of journals.

In plaintive emails to friends and supporters. In counseling sessions. Family not so much. Family was more often the subject of painful emails than the recipients.

When the time came for me to set out on a blog writing journey, my intention was certain. I would eventually gather all the words I wrote after that pivotal year and compile those musings in a book that was sure to become a New York Times bestseller.

That bestseller would put me on par with revered writers Mitch Albom and Anne Lamott and dozens of other insightful spiritual and psychological authors whose wisdom I’d ingested over the years.

As you can tell, writers must have considerable hubris and ego to believe sharing their words and insight might have any universal appeal.

I had an unstable and violence-riddled childhood. My parents were unstable and troubled. So they passed on what they knew to me and my two sisters. In logical order, those qualities carried on in me through adolescence and young adulthood and beyond.

Underneath all of the emotional muck that had built up inside me over years, I held onto a single belief: I was worth something and would one day make a contribution to the world that would justify all the pain and upheaval I had lived through and caused.

That once seemed like a noble, if presumptuous, ambition. I now realize that it was an acquired survival strategy. A decades long “Hang in there” mantra that kept me moving forward when I all I wanted on many days was for the ground to open up and swallow me whole.

For the life of me, I could not figure out how a seemingly bright and well-meaning sort, such as myself, could go through daily life and repeatedly make so many dumb and incomprehensible life choices.

I couldn’t figure any of it out until I learned about the impact trauma and neglect can have on a child’s delicate and emerging psyche. I couldn’t figure any of it out until I learned there such a thing as “personal boundaries.”

More pointedly was the learning that it was up to me to set those boundaries for myself and my life and that those boundaries were supposed to be inviolable. And if they were to be preserved and strengthened, it would be my job to do so.

Duh.

How odd these revelations must seem to “normal” readers. Those who grew up with “good enough” parents who provided the necessaries of life and a safe home environment without fanfare or expectation of laud.

Only much later in life did I come to realize my narcissistic mother had an addictive and almost pathological need to hear what a great job she was doing and had done for her children. It was her survival strategy and often tenuous attachment to sanity.

My life today is 180 degrees from the life I lived as a child. I have everything I need and much of what I want. I have a strong and loving relationship with an equally flawed and delightful human being in my husband.

I chuckle a little when I realize my assertion about enjoying a happy marriage would have had as much currency in my family as claiming the moon is made of green cheese. Incredulous and ridiculous my mother would surely say. Yet, here we are.

I am not old enough to have arrived at the rigorous stock-taking phase in old age about what my life was, the part I played in it and how I feel about it all. In truth, some chapters and paragraphs are too painful to revisit. But not all by a long shot.

I had an interesting balance of experiences, adventures and learning opportunities that balanced out the tragedies. There are many stories from those positive experiences that are worth sharing.

Trips to Europe, Egypt, India, Nepal in my youth. Argentina, the Arctic, China, Korea and Hong Kong in mid-life. And now the biggest trip of my life by marrying, pulling up stakes in my home and native land and immigrating South. Who knew it could be even more educational (if by times utterly perplexing) than any of my earlier travel adventures?

Writing and publishing “the” memoir has receded in importance. I have internalized the lessons learned by wrestling with the myriad of issues my childhood forced me to confront and deal with.

That I did more or less successfully is infinitely more gratifying than seeing my name and image plastered on a book cover in bookstores across North America. (Remind me, by the way. Are there still bookstores out there? I’ve been out of touch.)

I now know that all published works are a compilation of applied intellect, imagination and creativity. Even and perhaps especially, memoir. I now write when Spirit moves me to write. Like today.

As for my childish dreams of fame, fortune and global admiration by millions of strangers? That ambition has been traded for the hundred daily satisfactions and frustrations of a happy and peaceful daily life filled with loving friends and family of choice.

For me, that is a more than satisfactory trade-off for the bright lights and big city.

Been there, done that.

The Wizard in Us

I got to thinking about the film The Wizard of Oz recently.

Its’ message is that if we but look, believe and dig deep enough, we all have the heart, brains and courage inside of us to accomplish our dreams.

The movie is also really good at showing us how many nefarious forces and distractions can get in our way to achieving those dreams.

Even when we realize that Dorothy was only having a bizarre dream after being konked in the head in a tornado, the movie’s message of self-belief, perseverance and resisting evil are universal.

As The Cowardly Lion, Tin Man and the Scarecrow learn, the qualities of love, courage and brains we need to move forward in our lives are already inside us.

My current insight and thinking is that we are also the wizards, too. Or we became one. We had to portray a false persona that was more than we actually were just to survive and succeed.

“Faking it ’til we made it, “ we often used to say. That was the way many learned to accomplish our dreams.

Along the highways of Florida, billboard after billboard promotes the seemingly magical powers of lawyers to gain vast sums of money for their clients. these clients have inevitably suffered some misfortune usually in a car accident that was someone else’s fault.

It is the same on Florida TV. Ad after ad after ad with clients expressing their undying gratitude to this lawyer or that for the hundreds of thousands and often millions they gained in compensation thanks to Lawyer Dan.

These ads are smoke and mirrors. Obviously, the ads don’t feature the clients of the lawyer’s losing cases. And so, with every new ad or billboard, the message is drilled into the consciousness of potential future accident victims everywhere.

“Dan’s the man. We don’t worry cause Dan will save us if we get in trouble.”

How desperately people seem to need saviors and heroes. It is a hangover of childhood when Mommy and Daddy constantly hovered around to protect us from every bump and bruise.

It is a hard day when you learn those omnipotent parents were only human beings just like everyone else. They just happened to be the hand we were dealt in the parenting department.

On the threshold of adulthood, we begin to become wizards ourselves, just like Lawyer Dan. We learn to breathe fire and brimstone and promise vengeance and restitution and show the world how big and scary and serious we are.

Moreso when we know we aren’t very big and scary at all. Which explains a lot about bullies.

An advantage of getting older is that we can start to shed the persona we forced ourselves to become to make a living and keep body and soul and likely a family together.

I see it in peers getting older. They are more open and relaxed about a lot of things. Trifles that used to bother them a lot matter less and less. The very fact of being alive becomes a more important priority. Especially as they begin to watch friends leave the planet.

We become wise. We realize that aspects of who we once were in large part concoctions. Just like the wizard of Oz admits his own powerlessness to Dorothy and her friends, we begin to let go of our own camouflage.

It opens a path to living life as who we really are. A gift of aging we are told with which I tend to agree.

So let the potential future car accident victims put their faith in Lawyer Dan and believe he is looking out for them and will have their backs. They will find out soon enough whether their particular fact pattern justifies their faith in the lawyer’s “magical” powers to restore them.

Or Jesus Christ will rise from the grave one more time to save their souls. Or a politician will improve their lives and save them from misery as s/he has promised s/he will.

I much prefer watching the daily drama of life unfold than I did when I was stuck behind the paywall. I can watch from a distance and keep my own counsel.

It has been enough to try to save my own life, let alone the lives of countless other victims. I make no such boast now.

As a young person, like many of those accident victims, I desperately hoped there was a savior out there. It turned out there were no wizards out there qualified to do the job.

As a young person, like many of those accident victims, I desperately hoped there was a savior out there for me.

It would have saved me a tremendous amount of painful work and effort. But that’s the inherent payoff for learning to grow your own self up.

Like the Lion, Scarecrow and Tin Man learned, achieving what you want in life is strictly an inside job.

Better Than This

I habitually make broad unclear distinctions between “little me” and “mature me.” The distinctions are often blurry and hard for me to act on in the moment.

I want to be a paragon of peace and tranquillity. I really do. However my troublesome and messy human tendencies frequently get in the way and foul up my plans.

I would love to spend the holidays awash in feelings of unlimited love and kindness that the season promotes. I really would.

So when an offhand remark hits me right in the gut and tears well up in my eyes, I am not at all good at dismissing the insult. I will, of course. But it will take time.

I have learned to manage disappointments in this way. I prepare to receive what I am pretty sure is bad news. The bad news lands. I absorb it and try not to react right away. That gives me time to feel and work through my uncomfortable reactions.

Sometimes I play a game in my head of timing how long it will take to for the negative feelings to subside and go away completely. I think about how I am likely going to feel the next day and in the coming days and calculate whether the insult has had sufficient impact to last until then.

Maybe it was an “it will only resolve next week” kind of insult. I am never 100% sure in the moment.

Whatever the time frame, I am forced to move through uncomfortable feelings with the hope and knowledge that they will eventually go away.

Part of me wonders why I can be so thin-skinned. A trauma history likely. My emotional boundaries often seem to be as strong as cheesecloth. Easy to penetrate.

Or maybe it’s because I missed the crucial development stage of learning self-regulation in my childhood. I’m working on it but like many other things taken up for the first time in adulthood, it is harder to learn and stick to.

It is Boxing Day. (When I was younger, I imagined that it was a special day when some sort of big and public pugilistic contest was regularly held.)

Since my day started off a bit rocky with a bit of an emotional boxing match, that minor altercation will define the day for me. I am still in deep insult processing mode.

The holidays are a special time of year certainly. They also take place in the midst of our regular day-to-day lives. The New Year approaches with its annual opportunity to think about the year gone by, let go of the old that we are happy to bid farewell to and welcome in the new… whatever we think awaits us.

I look forward to the annual changeover as I do every year.

I should be well past processing “little Margot’s” hissy fit of today by then.