Category Archives: Grief

How to Transform Grief into a Memoir: Interview with Artis Henderson by Dorit Sasson

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Dorit Sasson/@VoicetoStory

 

“I believe we are given the stories we must tell.” – Artis Henderson.

 

It is my pleasure to feature author, story mentor and radio host Dorit Sasson in this interview with memoir author Artis Henderson. Dorit and I met online and I have enjoyed her in-depth and insightful interviews on her”Giving Voice to Your Story” Radio Show. Dorit is also writing a memoir about her three years serving in the Israeli Defense Forces and blogs about memoir writing on her blog and on Huffington Post Books.  She is the author of  a story, “The Best Time To Get in My Way” in the anthology, Pebbles in the Pond: Transforming the World One Person at a Time.

In this blog post, Dorit interviews Artis Henderson on the writing process for her memoir Unremarried Widow, which began as an essay in The New York Times’ Modern Love column. This blog post will focus on the emotional narrative of losing her husband, a pilot for the US army in Afghanistan, and how the author was able to move past the emotionally difficult process of downloading “scenes” to create a memoir.

Note: This interview can also be heard in its audio format as part of Dorit’s radio show, “Giving Voice to Your Story.”

 

 

Welcome, Dorit!

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Author, story mentor, radio host Dorit Sasson

 

How to Transform Grief into a Memoir

 

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Memoir Author Artis Henderson

 

Dorit Sasson: How did you manage at first to voice the grief of your husband Miles and his memory in your memoir?

 

Artis Henderson: This is such a big question. Writing in general and writing a book in particular is almost like magic. I’m not even sure how it happened. It’s such a mystery how to turn grief into a story. On a personal level, when I had first signed the contract, when I knew the book was coming, I remember feeling very worried. I had a proposal but I hadn’t written the book. I talked to my editor and he said, “just tell the story.”

 

And so, that’s what I did. I sat down and started writing. I started at the beginning of the memoir when I met Miles and wrote straight through to the end of it. Of course there was lots of editing and rewriting, but I think the hardest part is just finding a starting place. Maybe that’s the answer.

 

DS: How did you get clarity as an insider and as an outsider when dealing with grief?

 

AH: I honestly didn’t consider the reader until after the book was written. As I’m writing it, I’m telling the story for myself. I never worried about who would be reading it. I actually think if I thought about this too much, I might have censored what I put down. I may have been shy or even embarrassed. My goal however in the long run, was to help someone else feel what I was feeling in those moments.

 

DS: How did the writing impact the grieving and vis-versa?

 

AH: Yes, the two are so intertwined. The book only came out in January 2014, and it’s a little over seven years since Miles passed away, so it hasn’t been that long. Writing a book was a really big part of my grieving process. I grieved for him so intensely on an everyday basis for a solid year, but then by the second and third years, I started focusing on the future applying to grad schools and then going overseas. So I actually had to put my grief to the side and then when I started writing the book, I think I realized there was so much grieving to be done. Writing the book took two solid years and I have to tell you, I cried every day. There was no part of the book that didn’t affect me. The encouraging part is that now I’m able to speak about him and about what happened without falling apart. I could not do that before writing the book.

I would trade everything to have Miles back in a second. But that’s not an option. It took me a long time to realize that. I kept thinking, “if I did everything right, he would come back.” But once I realized he wasn’t coming back for good, I realized I had a huge responsibility to turn his death into something good.

I definitely wanted the reader to feel me taking that heavy responsibility. I just wanted to be a more active participant in my life.

 

DS: How did you plan those scenes so you were really touching on those message or was this not intentional or were you just occupied with telling the story and speaking your truth?

 

AH: At first, I was just focused on telling the story, and the truest moments of that story. It was only after coming up with the arc was completed I realized was me coming out with this grief. I shyed away from this at the beginning.

 

DS: What kinds of tips or strategies did you use to help you get clear on your story arc?

 

AH: I had written a solid chunk of the book. I was worried and obsessed with structure. I spent so much time on the arc and I would map everything out and think about the arc all the time. But then as I was writing, I realized that structure comes from writing. I had to keep writing. So after 120 pages, I realized I needed more pages and writing. It was only then that the structure emerged organically from that material.

 

DS: How did you get unstuck from the writing?

 

AH: I handed in my first draft the year after I signed the contract. During that year, I wrote furiously during which I wrote 130 pages and handed the draft to my editor. I said to them, this is all I can come up with! I couldn’t think of anything else to write. And that was when I realized what a great editor can do for you. In that draft, she pulled out areas I needed to develop more. She asked questions and pointed me in some very clear directions. Once I had that, I was able to continue writing.

 

Thunderstorm over Karoo landscape, Nieuwoudtville, South Africa

 

As you can see from this in-depth interview, grieving is not a pre-planned process. Much of it happens side by side with the writing. When we allow ourselves to grieve, we open the doors to deeper expression.

***

Thank you Dorit for this thought-provoking interview about the power of memoir writing. This interview shows how writing helped Artis process her grief and, in doing so, serves as a template for the rest of us. It takes a great deal of courage and perseverance to face painful memories, but writing through the pain can lead to healing.

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 Dorit Sasson, an award winning speaker and author and creator of Giving Voice to Your Story radio show and website, is available for consulting, speaking and writing projects. She also blogs for Huffington Post Books and is currently working on her memoir about the years she served in the Israel Defense Forces.

Facilitator & Story Mentor: www.GivingaVoicetotheVoicelessBook.com

Radio Show Personality, “Giving Voice to Your Story”

Will I be giving voice to your story and platform over at Creating Calm Network?

NEW! Check out my Amazon Author Central Page! 

amazon.com/author/doritsasson

Twitter@VoicetoStory

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How about you? Has writing helped you heal? How have you handled the process of facing painful memories and writing through them?

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~
This Week:
Thursday, 7/10/14: 
” A Memorial to Our Beloved Lake House: A Memoir Moment.”
7 pm ET: I will be participating in a NAMW Roundtable discussion about Crowdfunding  through Pubslush with Amanda Barber, Sonia Marsh and Linda Joy Myers. You can sign up for this free roundtable discussion here.

Coming soon- memoir 4

 

Google+ Hangout Interview with Memoir Author Nancy Sharp: Both Sides Now

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Nancy Sharp/@BoldLivingNow

 

 

“Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak knits up the o-er wrought heart and bids it break.” William Shakespeare

 

 

I am thrilled to feature Keynote Speaker and Author Nancy Sharp in this Google+ Interview about her memoir, Both Sides Now: A True Story of Love, Loss, and Bold Living. This powerful memoir is about giving love and life your all then moving on with grace and strength to build a new life after loss and grief. It is a stunning tribute to the beauty of love and the resilience of the human spirit. 

 

My reviews can be found on Amazon, Goodreads, Shelfari and LibraryThings.

 

 

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 Both Sides Now has recently been selected  for The  2014 National Indie Excellence Award in the grief and loss category:

 

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and The 2014 International Book Awards Winner:

 

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Synopsis:

 

The past is simply part of our story; just not the whole story...On the very day that Nancy Sharp delivered premature twins, she learned that her husband’s brain cancer returned after eighteen months in remission.  Less than three years later, at the age of 37, she became a widow. But while many in that situation would crumble, Nancy had an innate ability to hold life and death in the same moment. She learned to “see beyond the frame’s edge.”  In BOTH SIDES NOW: A True Story of Love, Loss, and Bold Living, Nancy shares her unforgettable journey – one that offers enlightened understanding for living life to the fullest.  Her story is a gift to those looking to lift themselves from the embers of loss and adversity through bold living.

 

 

 

Welcome, Nancy!

 

Memoir Author Nancy Sharp
Memoir Author and  Keynote Speaker Nancy Sharp

 

 

 

Memoir Author Nancy Sharp on Her New Memoir, Both Sides Now:

 

KP: Both Sides Now is a very raw and personal story of loss and renewal. What made you decide to write your story as a memoir?

 

NS: It had to take this form in order to render my experience as authentically as possible. That said, writing the story took time, because, well, seeing takes time, healing takes time. I had already processed my husband Brett’s death, but the writing process required me to distill particular moments (scenes) that would best serve the narrative. Brett’s illness was a long one – nearly seven years from diagnosis until his death. No one wants to read about all the trials and tribulations of those seven years, or of the period of mourning that followed. Readers comment on the rawness of the writing in Both Sides Now. And yet I had to be emotionally detached in order to write. After all, this isn’t just my story. It’s everyone’s story. Because loss–no matter how narrow or broadly you define it–is universal. Both Sides Now is the giveback of loss, my own loss, and yet I wrote it as a gift for others.

 

 KP: How long did it take you to find your story?

 

NS: I first started to write the memoir following more of a traditional narrative using longish chapters and more of a straight chronological format. I wrote several chapters but felt stifled by my own words. I needed breathing space. Then it hit me that if I felt this way, surely my readers would need breathing space as well. Time to pause and reflect upon their own stories. I came to see that I needed to write the book in fragments because that is the way of healing. There is nothing linear about the process. Similarly, we needed white space to process and dream. The entire process was an evolution; I’d say it took a good three years to tackle the writing.

 

KP: Can you describe your writing process?

 

 

NS: Fits and starts with lots of 5 a.m. wake-ups in order to claim quiet time before getting my twins ready for school. I love the stillness of early morning.

 

KP: You wrote Both Sides Now is short chapters and you refer to your first husband  Brett in the second person, as “you”. After he dies, you change to the third person. What made you decide to use that structure and those points of view?

 

NS: I addressed the short chapters and fragments above, but yes, I did in fact alter the voice throughout the course of the book. Here’s why. Writing about Brett in the second person draws readers into our world in a very intimate fashion; they are right there with us, experiencing the wild swings of joy and sorrow. But when he dies, I felt that the third person would create necessary distance and perspective.

 

KP: What are your memoir takeaways, the message you most want to reach your readers?

 

 

NS: No matter what obstacles life presents… you must find ways to move forward. That is the gift of bold living.

 

 

 

KP: Can you describe your path to publication?

 

NS:  The publishing process is a very slippery slope. I do have a literary agent who did a terrific job trying to pitch the book to many different houses.  She received letter after letter complimenting the writing and the power of the narrative, but alas, none of these traditional publishing houses leapt at the chance to acquire Both Sides Now. Just because people like – even love – a story, doesn’t guarantee a book deal. There are so many extraneous factors involved. Had we persisted with smaller houses, I’m confident that the book would have been acquired. But then several friends of mine who are professional speakers urged me to retain control of the book, so that I would have the ability to reprint copies for years to come and not be beholden to a publishing house that might not do this (as is very customary). In addition to using my written voice, I use my speaking voice to reach others, delivering programs on loss, faith, second acts and bold living to a variety of groups. It was one of my MFA graduate mentors who introduced me to Mitchell Kaplan, founder of Books & Books and the Miami Book Fair International. He is also past president of the American Booksellers Association. Mitchell decided to publish the book under Books & Books Press, an independent publishing house. I’ve been very happy with the arrangement.

 

KP: Do you have any memoir writing tips to share?

 

NS: Writers must be exceedingly patient and flexible in order to visualize the right way to tell their stories. Experiment with structure and voice. Play with different forms. Reflect upon theme using a multi-sensory approach. Do these things and eventually you will discover the best way to render your story.

 

 

Thank you Nancy for sharing your memoir writer’s journey with us. I appreciate your practical points about writing a memoir. Your story has touched many people in a healing and hopeful way. Best wishes for your ongoing success reaching more readers.

 

Author Bio: 

 

Nancy Sharp is a writer and keynote speaker who frequently talks to large groups about loss, renewal, and bold living. She holds a MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College and writes regularly for The Huffington Post, and for numerous online media, national magazines, and regional newspapers. Nancy authors two blogs: Vivid Living: Life in Full Bloom…Thorns and All®, and Tasting Life with Nancy Sharp. Nancy lives in Denver with her husband, Steve Saunders, and their four children, ages thirteen through twenty-three. Learn more at NancySharp.net.

 

 

Author Contact Information: 

 

Twitter is @BoldLivingNow 
LinkedIn: Nancy Sharp

 

 

 

How about you? Have you experienced a major loss and found healing in writing about it?

 

Nancy has graciously agree to give away a copy of her memoir to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

 We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

 

 

This Week:

I’m over at Marian Beaman’s Plan and Fancy Girl blog with a guest post: “Kathy Pooler and Independence Day: Her Story of Freedom.” Hope you’ll stop by and leave a comment!

 

Thursday: 05/29/14:   “My Writing Process Tour”

 

Next Week:

Monday, 06/02/14: “The 3 P’s of Publishing a Memoir.”

 

 

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Halfway there and 81% funded!

My Pubslush Crowdfunding Campaign for my memoir, Ever Faithful to His Lead: My Journey Away From Emotional Abuse ends at midnight on June 11. This week I’m offering a special time limited award of a decorative journal to the first ten people who either contribute for the first time or for backers who can answer this question on Facebook or via email:

“When have you chosen to move on and not repeat your mistakes?”

 

By making a contribution you will help spread the messages of hope, resilience and courage to those seeking freedom from abuse. Here’s the link to the campaign:

 

 

http://pubslush.com/books/id/2076.

 

If you are unable to make a contribution, I’d love it if you would share this link with others.

 

Please join me in sharing the hope!

 

Thank you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From Grief to Healing, Part One: An Interview with Memoir Author Eleanor Vincent on Loving and Letting Go of a Child

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Eleanor Vincent/@eleanor_vincent

 

“The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places.”

Ernest Hemingway

 

I am very pleased to feature Eleanor Vincent in Part One of this guest post interview about her memoir, Swimming with Maya. Eleanor and I met online in the NAMW Facebook forum. I was so impressed with her memoir of loving and letting go of her beloved daughter, Maya, I asked to interview her in a guest post.

Swimming with Maya demonstrates the remarkable process of healing after the traumatic death of a loved one. My book reviews can be found on Amazon and Goodreads.

 

 This is Part One of the interview where Eleanor explores the themes in her memoir and shares the valuable lessons she learned from writing through her pain. 

Welcome , Eleanor!

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Memoir Author Eleanor Vincent

 

KP: You’ve written an honest and heart wrenching account of loving and letting go of your high-spirited daughter, Maya, in Swimming with Maya. When did you decide to share your story through a memoir? What is the main message you hope to convey to your readers?

 

EV:  My message is simple: celebrate life. Don’t sweat the small stuff. Let the people you love know how much you love them. Life can be over in a moment. This is a truth we all try to defend against, but Maya’s sudden death at age 19 showed me that life could veer off in directions I had never imagined. When the unimaginable happens, how do we go on? This is the question Swimming with Maya attempts to answer. How do we get back up after life knocks us down? As a memoir, my book is a very personal account of one woman’s journey. It is not a self-help book, but it is inspirational and motivational because it shows how I became more resilient than I ever thought I could be. I decided to write about Maya’s death just days after she died. I instinctively knew her death would completely reshape my life and that I had to write about it.

 

That said, I should note that I had been writing professionally for more than two decades when she died. In addition, I was working on my MFA in creative writing at Mills College at the time. I was well equipped to take on what turned into a ten-year effort.

 

 

KP: I was able to relate to your memoir on several levels—as a mother, as a single parent and as a health care provider. Your intimate portrayal of your decision to donate Maya’s organs seems to be a central theme. But you also weave in several other layers to the narrative, including your past relationships, your current relationship with your surviving daughter, the special bond you and Maya shared. How did you decide on what to include in this narrative?

 

EV:  That was a gradual process. At first, I just wanted to tell the story of Maya’s death and my decision to donate her organs and tissues. I never intended to go so deeply into my own past, my family, or my marriages and relationships. But readers in my workshops at Mills and then in my writing group kept asking hard questions about why the narrator made the choices she did as a parent. I quickly realized I would need to divulge much more personal material in order to write a believable narrative and create myself as a character in that narrative – one of the hardest tasks facing the memoirist.

 

Everyone’s life has a level of complexity. Because of my family background and my own subsequent attempts to cope with the dysfunction I observed as a child through therapy and spiritual work, my life has been extra complex. To understand the character of the mother/narrator in Swimming with Maya, the reader needs this information. I think our stories often ask more of us than we originally intend to divulge. In the end, I gave my all to the story, including creating a portrait of my own flaws and strengths as a human being.

 

 

KP: It seemed that Maya’s death prompted you to reexamine your role as a mother. What lessons have you learned in writing your memoir that you would like to share with your readers?

 

EV: I learned a lot about what it means to be a mother – and a lot more about how to write a compelling narrative. On the mother front, I always knew that being the mother of two daughters, Maya and Meghan, had been the most important shaping force in my life. Being motivated to be a good mother, a loving mother, caused me to reexamine and change many things about myself, including the painful process of going back and looking at the gaps in the mothering I had received.

 

But when Maya died, my heart and my ego shattered. Then I understood viscerally how very attached I was to my daughter – how fundamental she had become to my sense of self. I think most parents project their dreams and aspirations onto their children. Until you lose one, you do not realize the extent of this. Losing Maya forced me to grow into the person I wanted to be all along – a more loving, more compassionate, more resilient, and more trusting (paradoxically!) person. And it made me a far better writer. It also made me a much better mother to my surviving child, Meghan.

 

Even now, 21 years after her death, Maya continues to influence me. I am a better grandmother because of her. I enjoy my 3-year-old granddaughter Lucia more, and I’m motivated to spend more quality time with her, to be deeply involved in her life day to day, because I know what it means to lose a child. And honestly, Lucia reminds me of Maya. She has a lot of her spunk and creativity. I would not miss a minute of this!

 

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Maya at 19

To be continued…

 

Thank you , Eleanor, for sharing how your devastating loss helped you reshape your life and go on. You show us what resilience and courage look like.

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 Author Bio and contact information:

 

Eleanor Vincent is an award-winning writer whose debut memoir, Swimming with Maya: A Mother’s Story was nominated for the Independent Publisher Book Award and was reissued by Dream of Things press early in 2013. She writes about love, loss, and grief recovery with a special focus on the challenges and joys of raising children at any age.

 

Called “engaging” by Booklist, Swimming with Maya chronicles the life and death of Eleanor’s nineteen-year-old daughter, Maya, who was thrown from a horse and pronounced brain-dead at the hospital. Eleanor donated her daughter’s organs to critically ill patients and poignantly describes her friendship with a middle-aged man who was the recipient of Maya’s heart.

Her essays appear in the anthologies At the End of Life: True Stories about How we Die (edited by Lee Gutkind); This I Believe: On Motherhood; and Impact: An Anthology of Short Memoirs. They celebrate the unique and complicated bonds between mothers and daughters, making hard decisions as a parent – whether your child is 14 or 40 – and navigating midlife transitions with grace and authenticity.

Eleanor was born in Cleveland, Ohio and attended the University of Minnesota School of Journalism and received an MFA in Creative Writing from Mills College, where she occasionally teaches writing workshops on creative nonfiction and memoir.

She lives in Oakland, California. Visit her website at www.eleanorvincent.com or connect with her author page on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/eleanorvincentauthor

 

 

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Swimming with Maya book cover

Amazon link for ordering.

 

How about you? Has writing through grief helped you learn more about yourself?

 

Eleanor has agreed to give away a copy of her memoir, Swimming with Maya, to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Carol Bodensteiner! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive  a copy of  Grace Peterson’s memoir, Reaching.

 

Thursday, 8/1: From Grief to Healing, Part Two. Eleanor will explore how writing her memoir helped her to heal.