Tag Archives: Dream of Things Press

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.

 

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.