Archive for January, 2025

Impasse…

January 20, 2025

Some gaps may not be bridgeable…

Two peaks with a widening gap between them. On one peak shrouded in dark clouds are two people looking in one direction; on the other, a solitary figure looking out over a serene sunny landscape. Sometimes, you just can't follow other people's paths but must set out on your own and blaze your own trail. And sometimes the gaps are not bridgeable no matter how hard you try

Painting by the author

Journal entry, 1982: “Impasse”

“The point in a conversation that is an impasse – both love each other very much. Both want desperately to make each other happy. One doesn’t want to hurt the other with his opinion but feels compelled to say it.  The other wants desperately to agree, to be able to agree so all can be happy again, but can’t.

Both search to say something that would make it better…want to find those magic words. And “I love you,” may be true, but isn’t enough – it doesn’t dispel the present problem. The love is there, but so is the problem – each looks to the other to back down – to say the one thing they long to hear just to make the problem go away – but can’t, and each knows the other can’t but just hoped they would…and at this point no one knows what to say – all you can do is just walk away – confused – emotionally drained – completely mystified as to a solution.”

The missing link

How do you go from being a submissive, beaten-down child in an abusive family system to a healthy adult who stands up for herself? When does that miraculously happen? It’s not like you leave that house, flip a switch, and suddenly you’re an independent, healthy, assertive human being. In there somewhere is a missing link in the maturation process — years of trial-and-error efforts to heal and learn how to become that adult.

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What Kind of Visuals Am I Using…and Why

January 11, 2025
Painting by the author of the author as an infant in a pink snow suit sitting on the hood of her parents' 1954 Chevy Belair sedan
Painting by author – Author as an infant on hood of her father’s car

Driven to paint

Before I share below a sampling of the visual elements I am using in my book, I thought I would share the “WHY” I not only used them, but HAD to use them.

Rebuilding my life

The book incorporates the story not only of the abuse I endured, but also of my journey from my parents’ house—the depression and despair—to my rebuilding, and my creating of a meaningful life.

Even after the initial crises of my escape and recovery with the help of good therapists and friends, I would return for rounds of therapy off and on throughout adulthood. Given all of the life lessons I had missed out on during my early phases of life, I looked at it as “preventive maintenance.” Why “wing something” when I wasn’t sure how to handle it and risk messing it up, then have to fix it? Better to learn as I went along.

The traumas of life

This approach worked well, and I thought I had finally put the past to rest…until midlife. Menopause hit. My husband almost died. The dog did die. My son left for college. All at once. But even worse, those new traumas blasted open a well of trapped emotions I never realized were even there. Like opening Pandora’s box, it unleashed a flood of unresolved depression, anxiety, flashbacks, nightmares…severe PTSD. At the time, I had no idea what was going on. Desperate and having major anxiety, I began working with a skilled trauma specialist who was and remains a godsend in my life.

This was fortunate because, in addition to everything that I was dealing with, I also began navigating the last chapters of my parents’ lives and their deaths. It was then that I realized just how much work I still had to do.

The past comes calling to claim its due

Those first decades of adulthood had been about building a life. Now, it was about returning to the past to address the well of unfinished business and unresolved pain that had come forward to claim its due. It had patiently waited a lifetime…my son came first all those years. But now, it was time for me…and that long-suffering child.

However, I had no tools to reach the pain, to know how much was there, or to express it. I only knew its presence through the agony of body memories and nightmares. That was when I made the discovery that art heals.

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Structuring My Memoir…Start With the Visuals

January 4, 2025

Picture of a huge sheet of paper with story details mapped on it; also a pen, and a box of index cards of notes, and another folded sheet of paper with life timeline on it
Photo by author

How to tell the story

Aside from making order out of chaos by deciding which of life’s millions of details to include or leave out, there is the issue of how to order the book and tell the story. I am still working on that. But at least for the first draft stage, I have a rough outline to follow as I write.

Introduction & “in media res”

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