I have wanted to start a blog for a while, but it took two different kinds of pushes to get me going. One was the specter of the New Year’s Resolution. Every year I make the same resolutions: to get in better shape, to eat healthier food and drink less Chardonnay, and to write more. Anyone who knows me, knows that I’m in excellent shape and that I will probably always drink more Chardonnay than I should. So that leaves eating more healthily and writing more. I actually tend to gravitate all on my own to healthy, unprocessed food, so really the only resolution that makes sense is to try to write more. So here goes: writing in a 21st century mode, halfway between the secrecy and freedom of a journal, and the formality and possibility of rejection associated with sending my work out. But another push to starting a blog was reading my friend Elizabeth Meese’s posthumously published book, Dreaming the Dreaming: Family Fictions. In this book I’m startled to read Elizabeth’s renderings of her complex and troubled relationship to her own mother: “My mother was the original talking head, way before anyone had heard of one. Her brain stood (in) for her. All she needed in an audience was an ear connected to a brain (and not a very big one). It still amazes me how someone with perfect eyesight could talk through every movie I ever tried to watch at her house, every newspaper or book I tried to read, or conversations with anyone else. I was an ear.” I both winced and laughed when I read this passage. And it did a strange and wonderful thing: it threw my own relationship with my mother into high relief. I remembered a moment when my mother and I were talking on the phone, as we do several times a week, and I was trying to describe a feeling I’d had, as a result of something uncomfortable that had happened with my sister. I was feeling around for words, trying out different metaphors, and after a few minutes of me struggling, my Mom said simply, “I see you, Wendy. You know that. I see you.”
First, always, and more than anyone, my Mom sees me. She knows who I am and I know who she is. What a remarkable thing. This rarely happens, in my experience, even with blood relatives.
She knew me so well. She still does. What a gift. But it made going off to public school for the first time, where no one saw me, kind of a catastrophe. And, to carry the metaphor into the literal, I couldn’t see the blackboard at school, for by the age of seven I was legally blind, but I didn’t know what I couldn’t see, or that I couldn’t see.
I would need her to help me figure that out.
Lovely post, Wendy! Congratulations on your new blog!
Love.
Well-done Wendy! Such good words to remember for all of us: really SEE each other (and ourselves) for who we really are.
Put you on my RSS feed, girl. Keep this up!
Really enjoying the blog, Wendy, and this post in particular. Quick question: Is Elizabeth’s book out? I can’t seem to find it anywhere, so I’m guessing that it might not be. Is that right?
Betsy, Sandy published Elizabeth’s book herself, so I have one of the few copies. I’ll ask Sandy if she ever plans to make it available. I read it in two sittings and loved it. Thanks for reading!