Wednesday, March 28, 2007
MY WHOLE LIFE CHANGED WHEN...
Those are storyteller's words, the kind of words that make you slyly tilt your head to steal the essence of someone else's conversation if you happen to overhear them in public. Or of if spoken directly to you, they are words that invite you to lean closer, to listen more deeply, to prepare to hear a secret.
The first time I heard them was in a wondrous little restaurant called The Good Harvest Cafe in Crescent City. Marilyn had recommended it, and since I was in her home town, I knew I wouldn't be disappointed. The huevos rancheros with avocado were the best ever.
But this isn't a post about food. This is about Serious Life Transformations, and the occasional necessity of eavesdropping to get them.
While Ted read the paper, I sipped my coffee and took in the scenery. The couple at the next table were middle-aged, and appeared to be on some kind of a date. Their body language was restrained, and they were telling each other their lives, as people do in that situation. Condensing. Highlighting. Perhaps embellishing a little.
Finally, the man said, "My whole life changed when I decided that every time I was tempted to complain about the state of the world, I would stop and do something instead. Even if it was something really small."
He then described how he'd moved into a subdivision where everyone drove bicycles instead of cars, and started some kind of solar company. (I'm fuzzy on the details, but being an eavesdropper, I wasn't allowed to ask questions.)
I'm not sure what his date who was eating buckwheat pancakes with no syrup and water thought about his story, but the eavesdropper who was devouring her huevos and sipping coffee from a huge mug has been thinking about it ever since. And in some small, but amazing way, my life was changed, too.
The second time I heard those mystical words was in Chicago at one of those sparsely attended readings that writers are supposed to find so humiliating. But if there had been more people present, I might never have gotten to hear Heather's story about her years in the peace corps in Bulgaria.
My whole life changed when I saw how people dealt with hardship in that country. If the power went out, which it did frequently, or they couldn't get where they wanted to go, or things didn't go their way, they didn't fume or yell at someone or wring their hands like we sometimes do. They just dealt with it. Living among them, I felt like I grew up.
Hmm...now that I think about it, her story wasn't all that different from the man in the Good Harvest Cafe.
And once again, my life changed subtly in the hearing of it.
The third time was also in Chicago (obviously a profound city) when a guest at my friend Susan's party told me her life had changed when her husband retired and decided to take a Great Books Course.
As the books he consumed altered, and excited her husband, the wife found herself growing hungry for what he had. She entered college and earned a degree in English Literature. Her only motive? A love of learning and an avid desire to open herself to the transformation truly great books offer.
So here it is, the existential question of the week: When was the last time your whole life changed?
thank you for writing this post.
Then, suddenly, I was flooded by three moments of significance: (1) when my big sister sat me down to tell me that I needed to go away to college, and I felt angry at her for pushing me around, but I listened and did it; (2) when Jim and I were courting, and we were driving home after backpacking in the Smokey Mountains, and he said, "I'm not ready to make a commitment," and usually I would have been crushed by such words, but instead I said, "Can't you think of something more original?"; and (3) when my friend Etta cajoled me to come to the writers' teas she was hosting, and I said, "I'm not a writer. I'm an editor," but she kept after me, and made me come.
Love,
D.
That wasn't the last time my whole life changed but more of an example of a major forst shift that allowed others.
Thanks Patry for your curious nature and for making me think and feel.
I guess for me it's always about food. ;)
marilyn: That was life-changing for me, too, though I didn't know it would be. For one thing, if I hadn't started the blog, I never would have been in The Good Harvest! In fact, I'd still be a woman on Cape Cod who'd never seen the Pacific Ocean.
daisy: Marriage and motherhood may have happened 20+ years ago, but I'm willing to bet that both still change your life in new ways on a regular basis.
susan: As you can tell, I was quite inspired by your friend, Domenica--as well as several others int he fascinating group you assembled.
I especially liked your number 2. To me, it translates as realizing you never have to be crushed by another's words again. You can talk back to them, and maybe even change the result.
And of course, I'm now feeling much indebted to your friend, Etta.
delia: Just reading your liberating words could make anyone feel more courageous. It reminds me of the time when I made the decision to just be myself--not to feel as if I had to hide the fact that I was a waitress from my writer friends, or
my crazy writer dreams from my waitress friends. And you know what happened? No one cared. The Maybe-I'm-not- good-enough, or Maybe-I-won't- fit-in feelings were all in my own mind!
colleen: As much as I wish you were still down the street in Hull, it's so clear that the real Colleen who inspires and delights so many every day flowered and continues to do so in Floyd. I love the way you've kept your brothers alive in some way--allowing people who never met them (like me) to feel their charm and courage, and even experience some of the pain of their loss. THat is the true power of the word.
sara: Of course, you know that every time you make a "must have" recommendation, I immediately go and buy it. I don't even bake much these days, but now after reading about the pastry brush, I suddenly feel that my life won't be complete if I don't have one.
fred: The birds change my life every day too...not to mention just thinking about your wife's cooking.
k: Now I have to know more! Though it's not obvious, I see a definite connection with your first book, Stalking the Divine--which I recently read for the second time.
Of course, like any pastry brush, this one has many uses besides brushing egg white on cookies and scones before baking, though it's so trouble-free you may find yourself doing more of that or even (like me) inventing recipes that will give you more excuses to do things like that. It's quite heat-resistant, though, so you can also use it to brush liquid or goo of any kind on anything you might be cooking, including roasting or frying meats and vegetables.
I think it comes in yellow, too. Incidentally. ;)
I dropped the old fears, the old reactions, the old pretend life, and breathed new.
As for the last, you've given me at least three posts. Thanks.
Again.
zhoen: Somehow, I sense that transforming moment at 0300 in everything you write. I like how you describe it. Well, huh. Can't wait to read those next two posts...
But the major life altering event hands down would have to be when my son was born of course.
k: Do you have any idea how much I love that story? I especially love the Ford Escort you hardly knew how to drive, but which took you exactly where you needed to go. Who says there aren't mysterious guiding forces in the universe?
Off to do yoga, then do something...
xoxo,
Tish Cohen
Only I don't know (yet) how it's changed -- because I'm still busy trying to get back to normal.
(Hmmmm. If everything changed, how do I expect things to get back to normal?)
The least profound person in Chicago, your friend, Curmudgeon
curmudgeon: I can almost hear the change in the "voice" of your comments and on your blog--and I'm afraid to say it's a profound one. What is it about Chicago that seems to make you all think so deeply? The cold? The presence of water all around you? The amazing architecture maybe?
Amy: A great writer's trick, as I'm sure you know, is to always leave your readers desperate to hear more. Thanks for reminding me exactly how it's done. *I'm also wondering if this somehow connects with the premise of your novel.
as you might have guessed, the last time was when circumstances knocked me on the head with a hammer and told me that i better begin to live more healthily!
I was in the hospital with my Spouse Equivalent. Her daughter was about to give birth. She did. A little angel appeared, and she hasn't stopped changing my life for the better since.
Pretty sappy and mundane, perhaps, but for a childless man a very big deal. I wish I could offer up something more exotic or deeply philosophical, but I can't.
gerry: It may occur every day, but I can't think of anything less sappy or mundane than the birth of a child. The fact that your life-changing angel was not connected to you by blood makes your story even more powerful.
So today, a friend and I had a conversation about someone we were concerned about. Then through the conversation, we understood her better. Now we're resolved to reach out to her. Our world changed, now maybe hers will, too.
One that I can still hear is this curled sneer of disgust from a friend when I was a teen saying "everyone doesn't think like you do you know. You don't know everything". I was totally shocked. I was genuinely sure I nearly did. Ahhh, youth.
My whole life changed when Ethan was born. not just because I became a mother, but having Ethan set in motion a series of events that led me to where I am today...
I would be on a much different path if I did not have Ethan when I did...even if I did eventually become a Mother, I don't feel I would have sought out something more which led me to blogging...
XO,
Melba
tinker: Blogging was a huge one for me, too.
pearl: Redirecting has been my challenge since I got home. Ever since I eavesdropped on that date in the Good Harvest, I've been hearing that man's voice, and trying to turn every complaint into an action. Not easy! I never knew how often I was inclined to complain!
robin: You've also shared that quiet and patience with so many of us. Just today, I was excitedly showing off your bobcat to Ted. (He was most impressed.)
herhimnbryn: What an adventure! Where did you move from?
melba: I like the way you describe it. The thing that changes your life is not one thing. It's a chain of events and decisions, each one leading to the next...
p.s. I almost enrolled in a program at Goddard College at one point myself. We might have met if I had, but apparently, like this comment, that meeting had to wait for the right time and place: the blogosphere.
I've had a lot of life-changing events (plenty of story fodder!) but the most recent, of course, was the sale of my novel.
Over one weekend I went from aspiring writer, to author.
You know how it is. :)
Therese: Someday we have to get together and compare notes on that amazing moment! `
Susan
"another me."
Links to this post:
<< Home




