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!

DSC_0292
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!

 

mayateen100res
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.

***

 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

 

 

SwM cover
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.

 

Freedom From Spiritual Abuse: An Interview with Memoir Author Grace Peterson

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Grace Peterson/@gracepeterson3

 

“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.” Maya Angelou

 

I am very pleased to feature Memoir Author Grace Peterson in this interview about finding freedom from spiritual abuse.

Grace’s turbulent childhood, with her father’s violent temper and mother’s apathy, their divorce, and her relocation with her mother and siblings to Hawaii, where she experiences racism and violence, sets the stage for this incredible real-life tale of abuse, brainwashing, and ~ ultimately ~ the long journey to recovery.

At seventeen, Grace experiences love for the first time, but is soon unable contain the traumas of her past. Seeking a remedy from what she perceives as a spiritual problem, she enlists the aid of Brock, a charismatic exorcist and cult expert. Grace stumbles into a world of esoteric rituals, Luciferian doctrines, and New World Order conspiracies.

This gripping narrative illustrates how children adapt to a hostile environment, can grow up misreading their untreated traumas, and, while searching for answers, fall prey to unscrupulous charlatans who heap more damage onto an already wounded soul.

My reviews can be found on Amazon and Goodreads.

 

 

Welcome Grace!

 

 

 

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Memoir Author Grace Peterson

 

 

 

KL: Tell us about your memoir , Reaching and what made you decide to write about it.

 

GP: Thank you, Kathy. It’s a pleasure to be here.

I wrote Reaching to illustrate how the environment I was raised in contributed to my anxiety and how a misread diagnosis only compounded the problem. As young, impressionable, lost adults, my husband and I found a sense of belonging in the Christian church. But when a mental health crisis made it impossible to function, I mistakenly believed I was demon possessed and sought help from an exorcist.

 

KL: What are the main messages you want to convey through your story?

 

 

GP: One of the important things I hope readers will grasp from reading my book is the slow, methodical process of indoctrination. Brainwashing doesn’t happen instantly. A person doesn’t wake up one day and say, “Gee I think I’ll get brainwashed today.” Because it can be very subtle and address a need the person has, they often aren’t aware they’re being indoctrinated. People like me, with a skewed world view are more likely to find themselves under the influence of charlatans and their institutions.

I think with increased awareness there will also be increased compassion for those with mental health challenges and who are seeking healing from spiritual abuse.

 

KL: What was is like for you to resurrect all the painful memories of not only your spiritual abuse but of the childhood abuse that seemed to set the stage for your vulnerability?

 

 

GP: The entire writing process took over four years. I was a stay-at-home mom at the time with my youngest two in high school so I had a lot of time to devote to it. I spent many months completely immersed in my world. I’m a little obsessive/compulsive that way.

I’m not sure how it happened but I was able to distance myself from a lot of the emotional conflict and just write. However call it moodiness or hitting a nerve, there were times when I absolutely hated what I wrote. The entire project just sucked. Plucking words onto my computer screen somehow broke that emotional barrier and made my history real. But rather than grieve the events themselves, I would despise my writing. Then somehow I’d process it all, calm down and write some more.

And this may seem weird or egotistical but when I think about the events of my past, I feel emotional pain, yes, but I also feel a sacred connectedness to that part of me that lived through it all. It was that veiled enigma, that mystery of sacredness that kept me focused on writing to completion. I didn’t want to disappoint her.

I wanted to give her a voice to tell her story.

 

KP: You have a very distinct and honest writing voice and are able to effectively convey your point-of view from the different phases in your life. I found your use of present tense to be very intriguing. It made me feel closer to the story. How did you find this voice?

 

 

GP: Thank you, Kathy. Back when I was still toying with the idea of writing a book, I read a lot of memoirs. Most of them were written in first person/present and because I could relate so well to the words of the authors, I knew it was the format I wanted to use as well. I’m glad you were able to connect to it.

 

KP: Do you have any memoir writing tips you learned from writing your memoir that you would like to share?

 

GP: Writing memoir is a lesson in self-awareness. Allow the process to change you, mold you. Unless you’re under a deadline, there is no rush. Take your time and enjoy the process of stringing words together into a well-crafted story and believe that the time to share it with the world will happen exactly when it’s supposed to. Take time to live and feel those words and understand the nuances within the topics you’re writing about. Remember and feel. As you engage yourself in the process of reading and revising, you’ll not only become a more skilled writer, you’ll be more honest with your readers. And you’ll be better equipped to undertake the challenges of post-publication publicity.

 

KP: Do you have any final thoughts you’d like to share?

For anyone who is interested, I have three “boards” on Pinterest devoted to images of the locations and objects mentioned in my memoir. While searching the web, the most pleasant discovery was the Pepsi commercial (circa 1975) featuring a little blonde-headed boy (who reminded me of my brother) frolicking with puppies. It was incredibly validating to view it again after 30 years and confirm that my memory was correct. You can view my boards, including the Pespi ad by going to: http://pinterest.com/gracepete/boards/

 

Thank you ,Grace for sharing your memoir writer’s journey with us. Your brave story of recovery from mental health issues and religious/spiritual abuse will give others inspiration and hope. I also appreciate your memoir writing tips.

***

Author Bio:

Grace Peterson is an author, garden columnist and blogger. She is the proud mother of four grown children and four friendly felines. She has been married to her best friend since 1980. Reaching is her first book. Her second book, Grace In The Garden will be published later this year. She can be reached by commenting on her blog, www.gracepete.com or email: grace@gracepete.com.

 

Reaching  front cover
Reaching book cover

 

Reaching can be ordered from Amazon

 

How about you? Have you ever survived an abusive situation and decided to write about it?

 

Grace has agreed 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~

 

Announcement: Congratulations,Mary McFarland! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Donald Dempsey’s memoir, Betty’s Child from Wow! Women on Writing.

Next Week, Monday 7/29 and Thursday 8/1 Memoir Author Eleanor Vincent will discuss ” From Grief to Healing: Loving and Letting Go of a Child” in a two-part interview. She 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

WOW! Women on Writing Book Tour: A Review of Betty’s Child by Donald R. Dempsey

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

I am very pleased to be participating in WOW-Women on Writing’s Book Tour with this review of Donald R Dempsey’s stunning debut memoir, Betty’s Child.

 

Betty's Child Cover
Betty’s Child cover

 

Official book synopsis:

Donny Davis is struggling to coexist with his mother, a single woman who moves from place to place, always just a step ahead of the law, scamming churches, and running bad checks. She has already been incarcerated for these self-same illegal activities, but refuses to alter her lifestyle; a lifestyle that includes bringing home men she knows little or nothing about. One of these men eventually assaults Donny. He feels trapped, as his mother makes excuses for her boyfriend’s actions, but he fears more for his younger brothers than he does for himself. Scarred and sullen, Donny shamefully attends the church his mother is scamming. He stays silent, but something within him begins to rise up, and his youthful indignation swells to an outright full rebellion. As his life with his mother grows ever more fraught with peril, Donny’s world begins to completely unravel. His beloved dog is taken from him. One of his younger brothers is brutally attacked. He loses the few friends he has when the family is moved by the church they attend. And then, the very pastor who has control of them begins to accuse him of his mother’s sins.

 

Betty’s Child is the story of one young man’s ordeals with poverty, religion, physical and mental abuse, maternal insanity, and the dire need for confidence and direction as he attempts to come of age.

 

My Review:

 

Donald Dempsey writes with such piercing honesty and graphic scenic detail in this debut memoir that I had a hard time initially getting into his story. It wasn’t that his story was not engaging, it was that the subject matter was so painfully raw, it made me feel uncomfortable. How could a mother continually neglect and abuse her three sons to serve her own demented needs and furthermore, how could a preteen have the maturity, resilience and even a sense of humor to counteract her manipulations and insanity? As in Frank McCourt’s Angela’s Ashes, the reader can taste and feel the sense of poverty and despair as Donny struggles to grow and develop in an environment that is emotionally and physically-abusive not only as a result of his mother’s instability but also from the steady stream of undesirable men she brings home.

Through it all, I become increasingly more attached to Donny as a spunky twelve-year-old who is doing his best with what he has. His strength of character comes out in many ways as he navigates around the dangerous, drug-infested neighborhood , fighting off bullies. Donny serves as the protector for his younger brothers and learns to fend for himself, often skipping school and getting involved in stealing. A church member and his wife attempt to help Donny find God and although he resists, he ends up reluctantly participating in the rituals. The degree of insanity, neglect and abuse from his mother continues while she manipulates the church and its people to help support the family. This further enables her to continue in her scams and the neglect of her children. When Donny tries to confide his mother’s scamming habits to the pastor, the pastor sides with his mother and accuses Donny of being the instigator of his mother’s problems.

Dempsey recounts several horrific events with such passion and feelings of grief that I felt bereft and despairing right along with him. There is something within Donny’s character though that lurks in the background, a foreshadowing of hope for a better life someday. Donny’s character is resilient and resourceful and he shows a compassion and sense of humor that allows him to overcome any obstacle. He does not sugar-coat any of the abusive events he has had to face and he admits that some of the events in his life still have an impact on him. Rather he shows that despite even the most horrific circumstances, one can endure and go on to live a full and stable life.

Betty’s Child is an honest and believable portrait of what child abuse, neglect and poverty look and feel like to a child. It also delivers a message of hope and healing that one can overcome childhood abuse. The sensory details, authentic dialogue and honest reflections make this a gripping debut memoir.

5 out of 5 stars

 

Donald Dempsey with son Gavin (1)
Memoir Author Donald Dempsey with son Gavin

About the Author:

Don Dempsey experienced childhood abuse and neglect first hand, but went on to have a fulfilling family life as an adult and to own his own business. “If you’re lucky, you make it to adulthood in one piece,” says Don. “But there’s no guarantee the rest of your life is going to be any better. Abused kids are often plagued by fear and insecurity. They battle depression and have trouble with relationships. In the worst cases, abused children perpetuate the cycle.” But Don is living proof that you can overcome a childhood of abuse and neglect. “You start by letting go of as much of the guilt (yes, abused kids feel guilty) and as many of the bad memories as possible. At the same time, you hold on to the things that helped you survive. For me, it was the belief that you can make life better by working at it and earning it. It helps to have a sense of humor, too.”

 

Find out more about the author by visiting him online:Betty’s Child website: www.BettysChild.comDonald Dempsey Facebook: www.facebook.com/donald.dempsey.3

 

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

 

A Copy of Betty’s Child will be given to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing

 

 

 

Next Week: Memoir Author Grace Peterson will discuss her recently released memoir, Reaching in a guest interview:”Freedom From Spiritual Abuse.” She will give away a copy of her memoir to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

 

What is Your Authentic Refreshment?

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

” Silence is creativity’s best friend, and solitude is refreshment for our souls.” Naomi Judd

 

Author’s Note: This post is an adaptation of an interview that was originally presented on Dawn Herring’s blog, Your Authentic Refreshment on 6/28/13

 

You met writer and #JournalChat host Dawn Herring in her guest post last week, “Do You Recognize Your Authentic Voice?”.

 

Welcome back , Dawn!

biophoto Dawn Herring

 

Dawn is hosting a series on “My Authentic Refreshment” on her blog.

 

She defines Authentic Refreshment as “engaging in refreshment that is authentic to your personality, preferences, purpose in life, the kind that enables you to appreciate yourself, validate emotions and feelings, and nurture your soul.”

When Dawn asked to interview me about my “authentic refreshment”, I looked forward to taking the time from my busy schedule to explore the ways I incorporate authentic refreshment into my life.

 

Here’s what I said:

 

How I authentically refresh:

 

The three things that come to mind when I think about what charges my batteries, adds positive energy, inspires and helps me keep a fresh perspective are: Prayer, Journaling and Positive Visualization.

 

 

This excerpt from my second work-in-progress memoir Hope Matters: A Memoir of Faith, reveals my prayer roots and ways I have used positive visualization:

 

As a “cradle Catholic” I was brought up with all the traditions and ceremonies of the Roman Catholic faith; so prayer has always been a part of my life. My faith slowly matured from a religion to a spiritual journey where I felt God’s presence in a personal way. It wasn’t until I was diagnosed with a life-threatening illness, Stage Four Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in 1996 that I sought and found an even deeper relationship with God that sustains me in my times of trial. Journaling and positive visualization also added to my authentic refreshment in a meaningful way, especially during this cancer journey.

 

“On December 19, 1996, worsening shortness of breath and a dry cough had precipitated an early morning trip to the emergency room. As I was pacing near my stretcher, waiting

for the results of the CT scan of my chest, realizing something serious was happening, I cried out in desperation,

 

‘Dear God, please give me the strength to do whatever it is I need to do for this is the battle of my life and for my life.

 

A peace beyond understanding flowed over me and stayed with me throughout my eventual diagnosis of Stage Four Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and my two-year treatment course which included chemotherapy, radiation and a peripheral-stem cell transplant. I allowed myself to be open to accepting help from others–meals, gifts, prayers. God had answered my plea to “do whatever I need to do” to fight the battle.”

 

Throughout my treatment, I journaled my feelings and worked on positive visualizations. On March 17, 1998–Ash Wednesday–the night before being admitted to New England Medical Center in Boston for a peripheral stem-cell transplant, I wrote a list of twelve positive visualizations: attend my friend’s wedding in May, visit my friends in Wisconsin and Missouri during the summer dance at my niece’s wedding with hair in October, etc. I even leafed through an LL Bean catalogue and ordered out an outfit–denim shorts and a gingham blouse in my normal size–that I visualized wearing in the summer.

 

And every single visualization came true.

 

 

Here’s the specific process I use to prepare for effective positive visualization:

Finding a quiet, distraction-free space and time to think and journal, playing soothing background music to get in the mood, taking a hot bath in a darkened bathroom with a lit candle, prayer time and playing the piano.

 

 

 

A list I created and visualized during my illness:


My anxiety and sense of vulnerability–fear of the unknown–over traveling to Boston to start the process of my peripheral stem-cell transplant prompted this list. I wrote these visualizations in my journal while sitting in the hotel room the night before my scheduled appointment at the medical center where I was to discuss the details of the procedure with the transplant RN, see the Oncologist who would do a bone marrow biopsy, see the Cardiologist who would make recommendations since previous chemotherapy had damaged my heart. The visualizations helped me to center my thoughts on the positive rather than the myriad of potential negative outcomes. It worked!

 

 

The frequency of my authentic refreshment:


Positive visualization, prayer and journaling helped me to tap into positive energy during a time when my prognosis was uncertain. It worked so well that I have made it a part of my daily routine. I try to journal daily, even if it is jotting a few thoughts down, but I usually pick up my journal when I need to reflect on my feelings or reactions to something that has happened.

 

My preference for refreshing– solitude versus sharing with a group:

 

Often times positive visualization, prayer and journaling are solitary activities, but any of these can be shared when it feels right. I did have an experience while undergoing chemotherapy that steered me away from sharing temporarily. I had attended one meeting of a cancer support group facilitated by the staff at the cancer treatment center. My expectation was that I might not feel so alone if I talked with other cancer patients. The exact opposite happened. I felt dragged down by the negative energy and pessimism in the group. I wanted to focus my limited energies on the hope of survival not the despair of the diagnosis. I never went back.

 

 

Ways I enjoy and sometimes experience surprising benefits of my authentic refreshment:

All three authentic refreshment activities I have engaged in have grounded me by offering self-awareness, solace and clarity. Sometimes I have been surprised by an insight or recognition of a pattern. Often it has helped me sort out and frame my thoughts. And we are what we say we are, even if we have to “fake it til we make it” initially!

 

 

Engagement provides me with validation of emotions and feelings:

My authentic refreshment provides a safe and sacred place to pour out my deepest feelings and needs.I do not need to worry what others may think or deal with their responses. I can feel free to unload it on the page. Then when I read it back, it may take on a different shape than when it was grinding away inside me. Somehow labeling a feeling feels validating and empowering.

 

When I can identify what I’m feeling, I can decide on actions I may need to take.

 

 

Nourishment of the soul is also a benefit:

These activities help me to get in touch with myself. I am taking time out of a busy day to pay attention to what I am thinking and feeling. I am honoring myself as I would honor a best friend or someone I love. This helps me get in touch with what I need to nourish my own soul–reinforcing healthy boundaries, helping me embrace my unique humanness, and helping me stay connected to what matters most.

 

 

How my authentic refreshment personally empowers me:

By reaffirming my values and beliefs, I can act with more confidence. By being clear on my own feelings and boundaries, I can offer the same to others–allow for differences and respect each other’s differences. It reminds me of a quote (author unknown), “You can’t meet the needs of others if your own needs aren’t met.”

 

 

A final word for others looking for their authentic refreshment:

Learn to trust your feelings. Stop, listen and take time every day to get in touch with yourself and your needs. Find a way that works for you to learn about yourself and honor your own story.

 

How about you? Have you found your authentic refreshment in your life?

 

I’d love to hear from you. The comment malfunction has been fixed so please leave your comments below

 

 

 

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Mary Beth Coudal! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Dawn’s e-book, The Birthday Wall: Create a Collage to Celebrate Your Child.

 

Wednesday, July 17: I will be posting a review of Donald Dempsey’s riveting new memoir, Betty’s Child as part of a Wow! Women on Writing Book Tour. A copy of the memoir will be given to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing of commenters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Do You Recognize Your Authentic Voice? A Guest Post by Dawn Herring

Posted by Katheen Pooler/@kathypooler with Dawn Herring/@journalchat

“The authentic self is the soul made visible.”  Sarah Ban Breathnach

I am very happy to feature writer ,artist and host of #JournalChat  Dawn Herring in this guest post. Dawn and I met on Twitter when she invited me to her weekly #journalchat on Twitter (Thursday 2 pm PDT), a delightful  and enlightening  weekly exchange about all things journaling. If you are interested in journaling, you will enjoy this Twitter chat.

Welcome, Dawn!

biophoto Dawn Herring
Author and Journal Writer Dawn Herring

 

Authentic Voice

“I knew it was you! I recognized your voice.”

Whether we’re talking on the phone, leaving a message or calling out to a friend we’re meeting for lunch, people often know us by our voice.

Certain vocalists or talk show hosts or teachers we hear are often recognized by voice because their voices have a distinct quality that sets them apart.

Voice through text has the same possibilities especially if we’ve read something an author has written before. The tone, the word choice, the style of writing speaks to their natural, authentic voice.

And in some ways, when we hear or read an authentic voice, recognizing the value and elements that resonate, it speaks directly to our own.

But how do you know when you have found yours?

Whether you’re writing a memoir, poem or essay, or talking to a friend, speaking to an audience, or even singing a song, you know when you’ve discovered the voice that is authentic to you, your personality, your preferences and your purpose.

It carries a certain timber; it reflects your values; it speaks your heart with honesty and candor.

And all of this comes with practice.

A suggested practice approach is journal writing; if you journal every day, it will help you hone your voice, whether written or spoken.

 

The following ideas may resonate and feel relevant to discovering your authentic voice:

 

  • Practice lines of poetry or song lyrics or borrow from a song that resonates with your heart. Then speak or sing them.

 

  • Write dialogue from a conversation you had with a friend that held great meaning for you. Apply what you’ve written to a scene for memoir.

 

  • Describe an unexpected conflict or challenge in detail, whether yours or someone else’s; determine the possible trigger of this conflict and what changes should be made in reference toward resolution. Pay close attention to any intuitive senses you pick up which will speak to your authenticity.

 

  • Express your opinion on a topic that resonates with you either because it makes you laugh, cry or even rage.

 

  • Use an image you’re drawn to as a prompt for written or emotional exploration to dig deeper into the soul; ask yourself its meaning for you right now, what it reminds you of and why.

 

  • Ask yourself a question that has been nagging at you and determine an answer that reflects your authentic values.

 

You may be surprised with your journal writing discoveries as you tap into the Real You. Give yourself the time, space, and approach that opens your understanding and enables you to validate your emotions and feelings and nurture your soul in the process.

 

When you’re getting started with finding your authentic voice, you can learn by noting written or vocal voices of others and determine what sets their song, speech, essay or memoir apart from the rest.

 

This will help you determine, with contrast, what makes your voice authentic to you no matter how you exercise it.

 

Whether in word, image, or song, Your Authentic Voice will shine as you gain a fresh perspective on your story and point of view and give space for expression that comes from the heart.

 

Thank you Dawn for showing us how journal writing can help us to find our authentic voices. It is an important reminder that we need to keep practicing through writing prose, poetry or song to be able to hear our own voices and know they are true.

 

Author’s Bio

Dawn Herring is a writer, artist and host of #JournalChat Live for all things journaling on Twitter. Her thematic focus is on journal writing, refreshment, positive change and personal empowerment. She has been published in her local city newspaper and in newsletters and on websites and blogs featuring journal writing and self-care. She publishes her weekly Refresh Journal for a fresh perspective in all of life dimensions. She is the author of The Birthday Wall: Create a Collage to Celebrate Your Child, a how-to on creating visual collage to celebrate your child’s birthday, a family tradition she keeps with her daughters and grandboy. She offers private Refresh Sessions to help you discover Your Authentic Refreshment.  Her blog is Refresh with Dawn Herring: For a Fresh Perspective and her website is dawnherring.net.  Her Twitter is @JournalChat and@DawnHerring. Her Facebook is JournalWriter Freelance where #JournalChat Pick of the Day and Pick of the Week are featured. She always reminds folks not to forget to refresh themselves.
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The Birthday Wall by Dawn Herring

 

 
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How about you? Do you recognize  your authentic voice ? How did you find it?
We’d love to hear from you.
Please leave your comments below~
Dawn has agreed to give away a copy of her e-book, The Birthday Wall: Create A Collage to Celebrate Your Child to a commenter whose name will be  selected in a random drawing.
Monday, 7/15: A reblog of “My Authentic Refreshment Interview” from Dawn’s blog
Wednesday, 7/17: WOW! Women on Writing Book Tour: Review of  the memoir, Betty’s Child by Donald Dempsey

 

 

 

 

 

Crooked Lake Memories: A Memoir Moment

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

“Perhaps the truth depends on a walk around the lake.”  Wallace Ste

 

IMG_20130630_214005_010 Keula Lake sign
Keuka Lake sign

 

Keuka Lake is one of the Finger Lakes in western New York State. Because it is Y-shaped , instead of long and narrow, it has been referred to as Crooked Lake. Keuka means “canoe landing” in the Iroquois language and “lake with an elbow” in the Seneca language. It’s about 20 miles long and varies in width from half a mile to two miles, and is teeming with salmon, bass, trout and perch. Surrounded by well-groomed vineyards on rolling hills,  it has many wineries in the heart of Amish country. ( Wikipedia/Keuka Lake)

The Story Behind the Story…

My siblings and I grew up about 20 miles away and were often invited to our friends’ cottages ,wishing we could have our own family cottage.

In 2000, after years of my younger brother Tom badgering our parents to get a cottage on Keuka Lake, Dad relented,

“Okay, go ahead and look,” Dad said one Saturday morning, never expecting him to find anything.

Lake front property was at a premium but Tom , my other brother Gary and their wives were determined.

They drove up and down the East and West Lake Roads for several hours. With the prospects dwindling for finding anything remotely appropriate that would fit into our price range and adequate size for our family, the four were about to call it a day.

Then my sister-in-law Trish spotted the small sign as they were on their way back to Corning. Craning her neck  backward and pointing, she flapped her hands on the driver’s headrest,

“Let’s turn around and check it out.”

An elderly lady in a long skirt and with a bandana wrapped around her head was picking up some twigs on the beach when they drove into the driveway and parked the car on the top level. She waved to them from the beach which was two levels down.

They all got out of the car and looked around, then looked at one another in silent anticipation.

The lady, Mrs J was an 80-year-old widow who was anxious to sell the property and wanted to leave everything behind—tools, motor boat, all the furniture in the cottage, beach chairs, picnic table.

“We need to talk with our Dad and we’ll get right back to you.”

Squealing and chattering, they climbed into the car and began strategizing how they would present this to Dad. Dad was a child of the Depression and was very careful about saving and spending his money. It would be a hard sell.

After  several sessions and a few nights of lost sleep, Dad  continued to struggle with how he was going to pay for it.

The “Hail Mary pass…

“Dad,” Tom pleaded , “When you die you will leave us all your hard-earned estate and we’ll buy a cottage at the lake. We’ll sit around and talk about how much you would have enjoyed watching the sunset and seeing your grandkids play in the water. If we get this cottage now, you can experience it all for yourself.

When  Dad woke up the next day, his decision was made. He would sell some stock. He would buy the cottage but the four siblings would be responsible for the taxes, and maintainence. Deal!

And that’s what he did , a few days BEFORE the stock market plummeted. We always said, Dad lived with the angels.

 

Making memories…

That was in 2000 and Tom was right. Dad did get to enjoy 10-years worth of sunsets and family fun at the cottage before he left us in 2010.

 

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Collage of Keuka Lake memories, 2007

 

The family endures…

 

Each of the four siblings gets one vacation week at the cottage with their families and friends.  Boating , water skiing , swimming, playing cards, fishing off the dock .We sit on the dock or  wooden swing on the beach to watch the mother duck and her entourage of ducklings  glide across the water. We reminisce, laugh, cry. Huddled around the bonfire we reconnect and soak in the love of family and friends, forgetting our cares and worries, if only for a moment.

Last week was my week and the most fitting tribute I can think of comes from this poem by my youngest brother ,Gary:

 

The Crooked Lake

For our family, sons and daughters

Thank you for the peace bestowed by misshapen waters.

Where rocky shores draw boundaries

If distant memories and current quandaries

Whose vista leaves one thinking of life

Intertwined with inevitable and continuous strife

The hills and vineyards tower over the water not aloof or too proud

But protects the lake with a majestic shroud

Our lives, not easy, most human with turns and bends

Like the lake itself gives us pause to make amends

Good times, tough times, changes for sure

The crooked lake is our sanctuary that helps the family endure.

 

 

photo (3) Rainbow over Keuka Lake while grandson rides the paddle board
Rainbow over Keuka Lake while grandson tries out stand-up paddle board,2013

 

photo (4) Keuka Lake Sunset
Keuka Lake sunset, 2013

 

Cousin reunion at the lake with my brother Gary (the poet),
Cousin reunion at the lake with my brother Gary (the poet), 2012

 

 

 

 

How about you?  Do you have any “crooked lake” memories in your life?

 

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

 

Announcement: Congratulations to  Lynne Spreen! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Sharon Lippincott’s e-book  The Heart and Craft of Writing Compelling Descriptions.

 

On Thursday, July 11:  Writer and #JournalChat host Dawn Herring will discuss ” Do You Recognize Your Authentic Voice?

 

 

From Blog to Book: An Interview with Sharon Lippincott

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Sharon Lippincott/@ritergal

 

Don’t tell me the moon is shining. Show me the glint of light on broken glass.” Anton Chekov

 

I am thrilled to interview author and writing coach Sharon Lippincott on how she turned blog posts into a marketable e-book and paperback.  Sharon and I met in 2009 through The National Association of Memoir Writers(NAMW) and have been following each other ever since.

Her recently released e-book and paperback, The Heart and Craft of Writing Compelling Descriptions, is rapidly gaining international attention as an excellent resource for writers from many genres who want to take their writing to a deeper level. My reviews are on Amazon and Goodreads.

Welcome back, Sharon!

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Life  Story and Memoir Writing Coach and Author Sharon Lippincott

 

 

KP:     Please tell us about your book, The Heart and Craft of Writing Compelling Descriptions.

 

SL:      The book is a compilation of forty-eight blog posts relating to description writing. Collectively, they cover the gamut from using adjectives to pruning dead “would.” Several posts include tips for widening windows of awareness and using vocabulary you already have. These tips will add zest to your writing and life in general.

 

KP:     Your The Heart and Craft of Lifewriting blog posts are always rich in descriptive details so I’m not surprised you have packaged them so effectively into a book.

What made you decide to tackle this ambitious and creative project?

 

SL:      Three years ago I compiled a shorter anthology of posts about description and on a whim I thought I could pop that into a .99 Kindle book “in about three hours.” I immediately ran into snags. All my blog posts include images, and those proved to be a huge challenge in eBook format. The simple solution took weeks to discover.

Meanwhile I discovered two dozen additional posts and all forty-eight needed editing. Thank goodness for my awesome writing group buddies!. More writer friends kept my feet to the fire until the cover worked. With the additional posts, the book was long enough to justify a print version, and the rest is history.

 

KP:     I know your knowledge and skill with the technical aspects of being an author have come about from your sheer determination and initiative to master the how-to’s.  I have known you to be very generous with sharing what you have learned with others.

What tips on learning the technology would you share for those of us who may not have the same “technical fortitude” as you to take on a project such as this.

 

SL:      I do love being a tour guide for segments of the writers’ journey!

 

Tip #1:  Learn to use Styles in Word and you have the keys to the publishing kingdom. Once you get the drift, you’ll see how easy it is to begin with predefined styles while writing your draft. They are mandatory for uniform layout, and if you hire someone to do that for you, your groundwork will save the designer time and you money

.

YouTube has hundreds of tutorials to help you understand and use styles. Download your free copy of the Smashwords Style Guide from Smashwords.com. The process it describes works for both print and eBooks. Your time investing in learning to use styles will pay huge dividends.

 

Tip #2: Find a strong group of writing buddies and trade critiques. You’ll learn from each other, and your stories gain depth from additional perspective. Join a group online or form your own. Paid editors are great if you can afford them, but they are most valuable as icing on a cake leavened by group input.

 

KP:  Can you briefly outline the steps you took to turn your blog posts into a marketable book?

SL:      I did not follow a smooth path, but here is a list of things that must be done for any book, whether paper or pixels:

  • Select posts or stories (write content for new book).
  • Arrange anthology parts in logical order.
  • Edit! and proof-read! everything. Many times. Get help with this, whether paid or from qualified writing buddies.
  • Study published books for placement of copyright info, Table of Contents, etc.
  • Finalize design details.
  • Prepare cover.
  • Prepare promo material.

 

Here the path diverges. Save a second copy of your file before proceeding. For print prep:

 

  • Add blank pages as needed for proper layout.
  • Insert headers, footers and page numbers according to design.
  • Convert to PDF layout.

 

For eBook prep:

  • Check with Kindle and ebook consolidators like Smashwords.com for latest instructions.
  • Create new Table of Contents with hyperlinks instead of page numbers.
  • Add bookmark for TOC.
  • Save as HTML (filtered). This is optional, but recommended.

 

KP:     Are there any tips you’d like to share on marketing your book?

 

SL:      Start working on your book description when you start writing. Do NOT leave this for the last minute! Get lots of input.

Send out emails asking skilled reviewers if they are interested in receiving a review copy of your book. Do this a month or more before your planned launch date, and let them know when you want them to post (as soon as the page goes live). Ideally you want at least ten great reviews posted before you formally announce the book.

 

KP: Do you have any final thoughts you’d like to share?

 

SL:      There has never been a better time to publish. You want your book to be awesome, but don’t invest more than you can comfortably afford to lose. The reader pool size is stable, and the number of books is skyrocketing. Give it your best shot, rejoice in a monumental achievement, and be happy with whatever results you achieve.

 

Thank you , Sharon for sharing so many helpful details about turning blog posts into a book. Your expertise is greatly appreciated and your enthusiasm is contagious!

 

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Author Bio:

Sharon Lippincott is an evangelist for lifestory writing and memoir and the author of four books including The Heart and Craft of Lifestory Writing. Her most recent, The Heart and Craft of Lifestory Writing Compelling Description helps writers transform blah stories into brilliant ones.  She teaches memoir and other writing courses online and in Carnegie Mellon University and University of Pittsburgh Osher programs and cohosts the Life Writers’ Forum YahooGroup. She is founder of WE WRITE! Creative Writing University in Pittsburgh and serves on the National Association of Memoir Writers advisory board.

She blogs at http://heartandcraft.blogspot.com

email: ritergal@gmail.com

Twitter @ritergal

Amazon: http://ow.ly/k1l2U

 

H&C Description Cover 600
The Heart and Craft of Writing Compelling Descriptions book cover

 

Sharon has agreed to give an e-book copy of  The Heart and Craft of Writing Compelling Description, in the format of your choice, to a commenter whose name will be chosen at the end of the week in a random drawing.

 

How about you? Have you thought about turning your blog posts into a book? We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

Announcements: 

Congratulations to Lorenzo Martinez and Audrey Chin. Lorenzo is the winner of Singing to Silence by Pam Richards and Audrey is the winner of The Woman I’ve Become, an anthology compiled by Pat Lapointe.

Congratulations to  Barbara McDowell Whitt. You are the winner of Mary Gottschalk’s memoir. Sailing Down the Moonbeam.

 

This Week:

I’ll be  over at Sarah Freeman’s blog Write by Gracewith a guest post on “God’s Grace in My Life” starting on  Tuesday, July 2.

 

Next Week: 

“The Crooked Lake: A Memoir Moment” on Monday, July 8

“Do You Recognize Your Authentic Voice?” , a guest post by #journalchat host Dawn Herring on Thursday, July 11