What was your writing process like?
My writing process was not a deliberate “I’m going to sit down and write a memoir.” I write personal essays – I always have – that take ordinary moments of my life and look deeply at them. While I was raising babies and young children, when I lost a cherished friend to breast cancer, those are the things I wrote about. Some were published, and later, after I wrote a piece musing about all the security at the first post-9/11 presidential election, they became radio commentaries on NPR and my local NPR station. (They can be heard as podcasts on my web site.) So while I was going through those days of rebuilding a life after my divorce, that’s naturally what I wrote about. When I later realized that they seemed to fall together into a theme, I conceived of the collection of essays on the subject. Only about twelve were written when I found an agent and got a book contract from HCI Books. After that I spent about six months going through notes, memories, and reworking old pieces, and filling in gaps, for what became the final collection.
I should mention that they were not written in the order that they appear in the book. They were written whenever the mood struck, or the topic was on my mind. Only after the entire collection was finished did I order them into a sequence that could somehow constitute a memoir. (This is how I teach memoir writing in the Westport Writers' Workshop I founded. I encourage writers to write about vignettes from their lives as the spirit moves them, and not to be constrained by sequential order.)
What advice would you give someone contemplating divorce?
That’s a tough one, because the whole point of my book is that I do not give advice –especially because I am not a family therapist, marriage counselor or divorce attorney. When I was going through my divorce, I myself did not want advice. All I wanted was to ask divorced friends who now appeared happy or successfully remarried, “How did you do it? … What was it like for you?” When you’re going through such major changes, the answers really have to come from inside oneself. Randy Pausch said it perfectly in his Last Lecture: “Don’t tell people how to live their lives. Just tell them stories, and they’ll figure out how to make those stories apply to themselves.”
Do you see perceptions about divorce changing?
No matter how modern our values, how far we have come, or how terrifically commonplace divorce is, I still see divorce regarded as failure, and a state of life to fear and feel shameful of. That is why I believe heart and soul that we who have gone through it must be there for the unhappily married (who fear it) and the recently divorced (certain they will never be happy again) to reassure them that just the opposite is true. This was my central mission in doing all the hard work to complete Happily Ever After Divorce: Notes of a Joyful Journey – to reach out a hand of hope to those people. I know it sounds hokey, but I truly mean that.
1 comment:
What a lovely, empowering interview. Thank you both!
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