Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Linda Brendle/@lindabrendle
” It breaks my heart to see her disappearing a piece at a time into the abyss of this disease.”– Linda Brendle, A Long and Winding Road: A Caregiver’s Tale of Life,Love and Chaos, 2014.
As a health care provider, I know that caring for a loved one who suffers from Alzheimer’s and/or Dementia is one of the most challenging conditions faced by families. When I read about Linda Brendle’s memoir of not only caring for both parents, one with Alzheimer’s and the other with Dementia, but taking them on a seven-week road trip in an RV, I knew I had to read her memoir and learn more about her experience.
It is my pleasure to participate in Linda’s Virtual Blog Tour and to feature her in this guest post about her memoir, A Long and Winding Road: A Caregiver’s Tale of Life, Love and Chaos and the five principles she learned through her writing.

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

Five Principles I Learned in Writing My Memoir
About My Memoir:
A LONG AND WINDING ROAD: A Caregiver’s Tale of Life, Love, and Chaos is the story of a seven-week, sixteen-state RV trip. It is the story of the drama and hilarity that happen when two new RV owners and two people with dementia spend fifty-three days inside a four-hundred-square-foot box on wheels.
I didn’t really set out to write a memoir, but when I became a real hands-on caregiver, especially after Mom and Dad moved in with us, I often went to my aunt for advice. She cared for both her mother and her husband for many years, so she had experience to back up her advice. One thing she told me was to keep a journal, because one day my experiences might be of help to someone else. I didn’t write every day, but after a particularly trying episode, I would write about it and post it on Facebook. People responded positively, and that encouraged me to continue to write.
When we planned our epic trip, I decided to keep a daily journal. A couple of weeks into the trip, I mentioned the journal to Christian Piatt, my son and a fellow writer. He suggested I expand it into a story, not just of the trip but of our lives. He continued to work with me, encouraging me to put more of myself into the story and helping me find ways to focus my story.
The main way to focus a memoir is to decide who your target audience will be, what kind of people you imagine will ultimately read your book. In my case, my target audience was the sixty-eight million Baby Boomers who are at or nearing retirement age, the twenty-three to fifty-two million caregivers, depending on your definition of a caregiver, and the eight million RV owners in the United States.
Once you have identified your audience, the next step is to determine what you want to tell that audience, what message you want to communicate to them. While you may think every detail of your life is extremely interesting and significant, unless you are a mega star or a super celebrity, you will need to give your readers a reason to care about your story.
In my case, I wanted to touch those who needed encouragement, inspiration, or a little laughter in their lives. My book offers an entertaining read to anyone who loves a good travel story. However, it also offers caregivers the comfort of knowing they are not alone, the permission to admit that caregiving is hard, and the realization that sometimes you just have to laugh. It encourages them to take care of themselves and to continue to have a life of their own, and it offers the hope that, with God’s help, life can go on in spite of emotional difficulties, divorce, financial setbacks, and similar challenges.
While I was writing my memoir, I never really stopped to think about some of the steps I went through until recently. When one Twitter friend asked where I found the courage to write a memoir, and another asked how I dealt with sensitive material regarding friends and family, I spent some time pondering the process and wrote an article on the subject.
I’d like to share five principals I followed in writing my memoir.
1. Know your motives. Why are you writing your story? Do you have a purpose in mind, or do you just want to vent and air your dirty laundry? There is a market for both types of memoir, but the first is less likely to get you in trouble with your loved ones.
2. Tell your own story. If you’ve ever studied conflict resolution, you’re probably familiar with “I” messages. In any disagreement, it is important to speak about your own actions and feelings instead of assigning blame to someone else. In writing my memoir, I tried to tell my own story and leave others to tell theirs.
3. Make your characters likable. The author of a memoir is not actually creating characters. However, she does have the ability to make her characters sympathetic or not, depending on how she presents them.
4. Forgive before you write. When you sit down to write about a person who has hurt you in some way, be sure you have forgiven that person before you put your hands on the keyboard. As the author, you have complete control and can tell your story so that your readers will understand without a doubt who was the injured party and who the villain was, but you also have to be sure you’re prepared to accept the consequences. Is vindication worth ruining a relationship?
5. Speak the truth in love. If a memoir author skirts the truth in order to spare feelings, her story will not ring true. On the other hand, as she tells the truth, she must do so with love.
It took several years for my manuscript to grow from a handwritten journal to a published memoir. There were lots of edits and lots of growing pains–maybe the next one will be easier.
***
Thank you for sharing so many valuable memoir writing tips, Linda. Your five principles will resonate with anyone who has the desire to write and share their story.
Author Bio:
Linda Brendle began life in a tiny west-Texas town that was so small the only clinic was on the second floor above a hardware store. She retired sixty-four years later to another tiny town in east Texas. In between she lived in and around Dallas and Tampa. She has one son and two beautiful grandchildren, and has been married to David, the love of her life, for fourteen years. She is a life-begins-at-fifty kind of gal. She received her Bachelor’s Degree at fifty-one, learned to ride a motorcycle at fifty-five, and finished her first book after she started collecting Social Security. She can’t wait to see what the next couple of decades bring.
Author Contact Information:
Twitter @lindabrendle
Website: lifeaftercaregiving.wordpress.com
Facebook: Linda Robinson Brendle
Links to the Book:
ALAWR up on UK Amazon! http://www.amazon.co.uk/Long-Winding-Road-Caregivers-Chaos-ebook/dp/B00LDV3W50/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1404173365&sr=8-1&keywords=Linda+Brendle
US Amazon with a review http://www.amazon.com/Long-Winding-Road-Caregivers-Chaos-ebook/dp/B00LDV3W50/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1404173447&sr=8-1&keywords=Linda+Brendle
How about you? Have you ever had to care for a loved one with Alzheimer’s or Dementia and written about the experience? Do Linda’s memoir writing principles match your experience?
Linda and her publisher at Anaiah Press have graciously agreed to give away a copy of Linda’s memoir, A Long and Winding Way to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing of commenters.
We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~
Next Week:
Monday, 7/21/14: “Finding Forgiveness While Writing a Memoir” by Memoir Writer Joan Z Rough

Sounds like a wonderful story of a trip that had some stories that will bring laughter and revelation of how to deal with fun and disasters at the same time. I am in the process of writing a memoir and the tips given are very relevant and helped me in the process of writing. The book should be an eye-opener to those who are beginning the caregiver role for their parents or significant other.
Well-said, Kathy. Linda’s memoir is everything you mention– a mixture of happy, sad, bittersweet moments and a very realistic glimpse of caring for parents who’s health is declining. it’s a topic that any of us who have been blessed to still have our parents into their elder years will appreciate.Thanks for stopping by and sharing your thoughts.
Thanks for sharing Linda’s tips with us, Kathy. I will take them to heart as a write my rough draft.
ALWR sounds like both a travel memoir and a caregiver memoir and I like how Linda has trageted her audience. Many caregivers will find solace in this memoir and I have forwarded to it my mentor in my writing group, Bobbi Carducci because she has just gotten a contract on her caregiver memoir as well.
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22725719-confessions-of-an-imperfect-caregiver
I Look forward to reading Linda’s memoir.
Hi Clar. I’m so happy Linda’s tips will help you in your own memoir writer’s journey. I agree, Linda has a captive target audience. Thanks for stopping by and sharing the link to your mentor’s memoir. Best wishes as you forge ahead on your journey. Keep us posted!
Kathleen, thank you so much for being such a special part of my blog tour. I love your website and appreciate the opportunity of sharing with your readers.
Blessings,
Linda Brendle, Author
A Long and Winding Road:
A Caregiver’s Tale of Life, Love, and Chaos
Hi Linda, It is truly my pleasure to feature you and your wonderful memoir. As you can see from the comments,your memory and its message have resonated with all of us. Thank you for your great tips. I wish you much success with your book.
Blessings,
Kathy
Thank you for sharing Linda, having lived with my mother-in-law during her last couple of years with dementia I have a new tiny understanding, nothing like what you lived though, but a new appreciation for care givers.
Welcome,Leslie! Thank you for stopping by and sharing your story. I’m happy you found Linda’s post helpful.
Ok now,
I very often feel the new bee and odd one out in several circles because ‘Africans’ like myself should have no business writing those kind of memoirs in which ‘dirty linen is washed’.
That said, I am happy to be learning so much and to be surprised at how I did a lot of things right when writing and publishing my memoir.
For example, I probably unconsciously incorporated all five of Linda’s tips above. I am caring for my own self but I know how hard it is to care for one of those our ‘yummy’ grannies given that my ailing grandma lives with us. That is, in Cameroon although I fled from there last year.
That is sort of what my memoir is all about, its title is even more audacious: My Unconventional Loves: My Hurts, My Adulteries, My Redemption.
I tell my story, I tell it in love and with maybe both motives above but I tell it in total forgiveness of myself and all.
Thanks for sharing, your memoir is hence added to my virtual pile of ‘must reads’ – if only for the laughs promised.
Welcome, Marie! I appreciate you stopping by and sharing your thoughts.
“I tell my story, I tell it in love and with maybe both motives above but I tell it in total forgiveness of myself and all” is a very poignant and powerful guide to memoir writing. Congratulations on publishing your memoir.I’m happy Linda’s post resonated with you. Hope to see you here again!
I cannot even imagine such a journey. My parents are both 90. Mom has Alzheimer’s and Dad cares for her at home. He has finally begun to accept some help, but no cross country trip or even a luncheon date is within their realm of possibility.
Linda, absolutely amazing. I look forward to reading your book.
Christina
Thanks for stopping by and sharing your story, Christina. I think you’ll find Linda’s memoir to be a valuable guide in caring for your own parents, even thought you won’t be taking them on a cross country road trip in an RV. I agree with you. Absolutely amazing!
This looks like a great read that would appeal to so many readers of midlife because who hasn’t faced dealing with the issue of dementia in caring for aging loved ones. Thanks, Kathy, for connecting us to Linda.
Yes, Pat, Linda’s book is a great read as well as a great resource for those of us dealign wit elderly parents. So happy you stopped by. Thanks.
Your experience echoes what my coauthor and I did telling his story. We wrote in a novelistic style, and did change some names/details to protect the privacy of people involved, also to consolidate characters. At the end of the day, how much to involve those people impacted is a highly personal decision, and a whole series of blog posts could be dedicated to the issue. We did- and didn’t. Great information!
Welcome, Lisa! Thanks for stopping by and sharing your thoughts. I agree it is a highly individual decision who and how we include and portray the real-life people who play key roles in our personal stories. Revealing our truths is a challenge for all of us writing memoir; a complex and often convoluted process. We all find our own way through it. I appreciate your comments.
What a wonderful and informative post! I like that: speak the truth with love. I think that goes for people who have hurt you, too, relating to #4. So nice to see a caregiving memoir focus on the beauty and fun of the relationship. As a daughter who cared for her mother with Alzheimer’s, I know that road is a particularly difficult one, but there are many sweet and lovingly funny moments (and poetry!) to be found along the way. My best wishes to Linda – and to all caregivers.
Linda, your memoirs and poetry are a perfect example of “speaking the truth with love”.Both you and Linda are ministering to caregivers through your words. I love the “sweet and lovingly funny moments” you both share through your stories.It gives hope and consolation to those whose loved ones are suffering from dementia. Thank you very much for stopping by and sharing your thoughts.