What to Do When Life Rains on Your Parade
- At August 29, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
5
This is not a post about literal rain which, as a Northwest-type, I embrace with either a pink raincoat or a really big hummingbird umbrella. (Note: Most Northwest-types do not carry umbrellas, but then I was not born and raised here, so…)
If you’ve been following along with me here on the blog, you’ll know I’ve had some major weirdness going on in the health department that continues to be worrisome but that we’re working towards 1. getting a diagnosis on and 2. getting some treatment for active symptoms. On top of that, I’ve had some dental emergencies (oh, the fun of turning forty – all your teeth turn against you!) and some extra virus attacks (bronchitis, sinusitis, and a real, actual stomach flu in the last six weeks.) Oh, and the continuing news about the bad economy and maybe an upcoming war with Syria isn’t exactly a blast of hope and cheerfulness.
But I realized that my schedule will fill up with unpleasant things, and sometimes I have to cancel things I want to do (like the reading in Portland) which would have been fun, but that doesn’t mean I just give up and say “well, there’s no space in my life for anything fun or good.” No, because when life gets really tough, that’s when you need the fun and the good and the positive most of all. So I took a hard look at my schedule in post-Labor-Day September (a whirlwind of readings, doctor and dentist appointments) and decided that what I really needed was a good old-fashioned getaway for a weekend to a place I loved, maybe San Juan Island or Port Townsend, now that the tourists will mostly be gone and the weather will still be that cusp-of-fall weather (although hopefully sans the mugginess we just can’t seem to escape this month – very unusual for Seattle!) I decided to stop reading depressing books I wasn’t really enjoying anyway and move on to books that will be more enjoyable to read. This is the time to watch things that make you laugh (hence my MST3K DVD rentals from the library), to not be too hard on yourself (though I feel my lack of productivity for the last several days immensely – I haven’t been sleeping, writing, or sending anything out…did I mention I haven’t been able to sleep so my ability to think clearly is also lessened, my apologies if I’m rambling here) and to focus on the good, the pink raincoats and hummingbird umbrellas of life. Because life will pick you up and shake you around in its grip if you let it. The way to maintain your horizon is to remember that despite everything, there is still something beautiful, something fun, something hilarious around the edges of your life that you might miss if you don’t keep your eyes open. When I get well enough, I want to take a spontaneous day trip out to the Tacoma Zoo, where Serval kittens, clouded leopard cubs and baby tigers are waiting, to the Seattle Art Museum, where they have an exhibit on futuristic Japanese fashion.
At forty I have been around long enough to note that the worst thing that depression takes away from you – as a writer, as a human being – is the ability to look forward to something. Long-term health struggles can bring on the same feelings of hopelessness and anger and apathy. I’m frustrated when I can’t do things (like travel to a reading) that I was looking forward to, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to give up on trying to do the small things that make me happy. The Poetryworld can also make you feel small and hopeless. But we can’t let these things – being sick, being depressed, or feeling like a failure at something we’re trying to do – define us. We choose how to define ourselves and we control what we dwell on. I may be sick in bed today, but I can dream about being a superhero. I can write a review of someone’s book, I can send work out into the world, I can try to write something that challenges me, I can call a friend I love to talk to, or even something simple like thinking about a short trip to the ocean (and its whales, otters, and seals) in September.
Missing You, Portland and What to Do When Plans are Thwarted
- At August 26, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
I’m so sorry to say, Portland friends, that I will not be making it out to Portland tonight for my reading with Kelly Davio at Annie’s Blooms due to being too sick to travel. I hope you still go to catch Kelly Davio reading from her new book, who is not only a terrific person but a wonderful writer! I hope to make it back out to Portland to visit soon.
I had big plans for fun this last weekend, but ended up spending most of it in bed, sleeping through my less than stellar symptoms (sneeze, cough, stomach ache, etc.) I watched old MST3K DVDs Glenn got me from the library, tried to read my writing magazines but didn’t have quite the mental energy for that, and also tried to look at submissions and my review pile of books. Sometimes our best laid plans get thwarted, and when that happens, I try to move to the next best thing on my list to look forward to. I’m looking at a crowded reading schedule in the next two months, mostly for things like Jack Straw and anthologies and the like. I’m hoping I will be well enough to go to most of it! How is it almost September again?
But September is usually a favorite month for me, a time when my preferred weather (cool and less sunny) prevails and I feel the energy of the new season starting. I mean, in Seattle our weather is usually rain, rain, rain – then three months of sun in summertime – then rain, rain, rain again, we don’t have the dramatic seasonal changes that made the mountain of Tennessee, the back woods of Virginia or even Ohio seem to light up with color and the smell of wood smoke. This time of year means new beginnings, hope, getting out my cardigans and jeans and boots and putting away the sundresses. I am thinking of moving on, of new projects I can be excited about, about shaking off the past and embracing the future.
What a Difference a Week Makes and Scrambling Towards the Future
- At August 24, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
First of all, thanks to Susan Rich for featuring my profile for “Poet at Your Table” at her blog. Here’s the link: http://thealchemistskitchen.blogspot.com/2013/08/meet-poet-at-your-table-jeanine-hall.html
Also, check out this cool video for Unexplained Fevers’ publisher, New Binary Press, on YouTube for the Guinness Foundation Grant Contest: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=0cUrrxsoB4o#t=10
My book has a cameo or two in the video, and it’s great to see James O’Sullivan talking about his press in person! (He’s in Ireland, so I haven’t had a chance to meet him IRL yet!)
So, it’s been a crazy week. After vowing to devote myself to fiction for while, a couple of things happened that have veered my attention back to poetry again. Isn’t that always the way? Had to have an emergency dental filling (not recommended for fun,) but still on the watch for a new permanent dentist since my beloved former dentist retired. Had a second opinion about the worrying health problems that have been bothering me lately, which gave me a pro-active plan going forward and a bit more peace of mind. But it’s all been a little stressful. I’ve been wishing I could just worry about one thing at a time, but that’s never how things roll. In business news, I’m happy (as a former-Microsoftie) that Steve Ballmer has finally retired – I’m hoping they get in someone great, maybe even a female techie! That would be a nice change. I’m thinking about projects I want to start this fall, about AWP coming up in Seattle, about how to generate some income, too, maybe getting back into more freelance writing (practical me has been warring with idealistic me lately, in my head.)
Speaking of worrying about one thing at a time…I’ve also been thinking about book launches, how to make them successful, what we as authors can do to help books sell. I really liked Robert Brewer’s discussion of his experiments with pre-sales here: http://www.writersdigest.com/whats-new/pre-selling-the-poetry-collection. It’s interesting, for each of us, and for each book, I think there will be a different success story. The stuff we worry about at the beginning – the quality of the book itself, of course, being the primary concern, then finding the right publisher – gives way to worrying about author photos, blurbs, and appropriate cover art, which then gives way to the process of actually trying to sell the book. You never really quit working or worrying for at least two years. Like a baby! (I mean, I’ve never had a baby, but I assume the first two years are pretty on-all-the-time.) I feel like I haven’t really even finished launching Unexplained Fevers, but I’m already thinking about my next book (and, to be honest, I’m working on the book after that, too!) I haven’t quite finished my tenure as Poet Laureate of Redmond, but I’m planning on what I’ll do after that is over as well. Sometimes we just have to focus on one step at a time. Get the testing first, then get the next test. Fill the worst cavity first, then worry about the next one. Focus on one book, then hold your breath until the next one gets taken.
Burning Out, Burning In and The Twelve Dancing Princesses
- At August 20, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
So, after my last post, I bet you’re wondering what I’ve been up to.
It’s my own prescription for burnout – I’m cheating with another (shhhh) genre. It’s fiction.
I’m starting small, with short stories. I’ll write a thousand words, then another thousand. For me, that’s a lot of words, because poems usually end before the page is full. The stories are sort of in the vein of the kind of poetry I’ve written – fairy tale influences, and science, and medical weirdness. It’s got mutants and transforming magical women. It was really a slow start – I’d been making bobs and weaves at short fiction for a while, but ending up with mostly prose poems. I’ve tried a little bit of memoir, and abandoned it. But now I feel okay about letting myself write 1500 word stories, 2500 words…I haven’t got one up to 5000 words, yet. But I’m getting there.
I mostly write these stories late at night, after I’ve gone to bed. That’s when the idea for a story “hook” or a certain line will come to me, and I have to grab my laptop and write. It’s what I’ve been doing that’s screwed up my sleeping patterns, making me grumpy during daytime appointments at dentists, physical therapy, physicians. I barely hear what they’re telling me, because I’m waiting for the magic to whisper to me again, when I put my head on my pillow. I think it might be a kind of enchantment that I’m caught in, like The Twelve Dancing Princesses – everyone sees them go to sleep, but when they wake up in the morning, they’re exhausted and pale, with worn-out dancing shoes by their beds.
Reading in Kirkland, a kind blog review, and waning summertime
- At August 10, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Thunderstorms last night and heat lightning today remind us that it is late August, though this kind of hot, muggy weather is more appropriate to my midwestern-southern childhood homes than the Seattle area. Nonetheless, it’s a reminder that the summer is winding out. This has been a busy and stressful summer, and maybe a bit too hot for my inclinations, so I’m not sorry that it’s almost over. I’m ready for turning over new leaves, literally and figuratively.
I have to include a link to this thoughtful and perceptive review of Unexplained Fevers at this blog: http://rememberingwonderland.wordpress.com/2013/08/09/book-review-unexplained-fevers-by-jeannine-hall-gailey-4-55/. I was even more impressed with the review when I checked out the web site and saw that it was authored by an eighteen-year-old girl. I think she’s well on her way to professional book reviewing!
Besides a new critical cavity (yee0ouch!), which means I have to find a new dentist right away and get it filled – my old one retired a few weeks ago, of course, you know, bad timing – I have a slew of doctor’s appointments – the ones I had to reschedule from last week’s flu as well as a few new ones, this week. Think good thoughts for me, especially Monday, when I have a long stressful test and a follow-up with a specialist. Today and tomorrow I am entertaining in-laws from Ohio and trying to make a full recovery from this flu, which has seemed to want to stick around longer than usual.
I’ll be reading with Kelly Davio at the Grape Choice in Kirkland on Thursday night, which is also Ladies’ Night there, so come out, get yourself some wine, relax, and listen to some poetry!
Reading August 5 at 7 PM at Station Bistro in Auburn, WA
- At August 04, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Hey guys! Thought I’d let you know about a cool reading out at the Station Bistro in Auburn tomorrow night at 7 PM with fellow Redmond poet Dawn-Marie Oliver. More info about the reading here: https://sites.google.com/site/stripedwaterpoets/poetry-at-the-station-bistro
And, the Auburn Reporter ran this very cool article about the reading here, so check it out too!
http://www.auburn-reporter.com/community/217414661.html
I’m thinking about mixing it up and reading from all three of my books! It’ll be a fairy tale/comic book/anime poetry collage!
Wonder Women Betrayed: The Secret to (not) Having it All
- At August 03, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
In which many plates, spinning in the air, are dropped at once
Debora L Spar, the president of Barnard College, released a book that of course attracted my attention with its title – Wonder Women: Sex, Power, and the Quest for Perfection. In it, she makes the argument that, essentially, my generation learned as children – because “Barbie can do anything!” that modern women should. That there is pressure to have a perfectly groomed size 4 body, have a sizzling sex life AND a stable marriage AND perfect children (because dammit, fertility is part of the myth of the woman who has it all) AND a smoking career on which she is “leaning in” and climbing that ladder – oh, and if you can’t be organically raising your own garden and chickens, cooking like Ina Garten (who used to be a nuclear policy advisor to the President of the United States, so…) and making your house more valuable by DIY retiling your bathroom and custom environmentally-friendly landscaping, well, you aren’t really a woman at all.
I am here to tell you perfection is not possible. As a perfectionist myself, this is hard to admit. I was a bright kid, reasonably attractive and ambitious, and expected a lot of myself, namely, almost everything in the above paragraph. But this week’s, let’s say, challenges, highlighted a lot of my own clinging to the myth of the perfect woman.
So, this last week, this is what I had lined up: a visit with a friend to discuss our exchange of poetry manuscripts (reasonable enough, right?), followed the next day by the arrival of in-laws so we had to make the house seem clean AND attractive, followed the next day by a four-hour trial by fire of expensive medical testing and then meeting with specialists to discuss that testing, followed the next day by taking the in-laws for a tour of the city, followed by…Plus, I also expected myself to do the usual Poet Laureate work, my freelance work, scheduling, e-mailing, writing, sending out things, revising work, and etc. All while looking reasonable attractive, beaming a radiant grace towards all people, and etc.
And here is where all the plates were pretty much dropped, when life got in the way.
The night after my friend’s visit, I was visited by a less welcome guest – a fairly horrible gastroenteritis, otherwise known as stomach flu, that lasted several days. So there went any entertaining, plus my looks sunk about ten points with the flu-related lack of grooming, and failure to be a charming hostess to the in-laws, and I had to cancel the important and expensive medical testing and specialist appointments, which had been hanging over my head causing stress which I’m still trying to reschedule, and I got the bad news that the AWP panels that I had been asked to be on were rejected. Plus, remember, very little sleep and no solid food. So, the week felt to me like an abject failure, making me feel like I should give up on everything and feeling very grumpy towards the universe at large.
Most of the time, to the outside world, my life can look sort of like success, at least, I gather this from people asking questions about “how I’m handling so much success.” (Um, mostly by stifling laughter at that question.) My friends (and strangers) tend to exclaim charmingly about my happy marriage (but remember, I can’t have kids, so nix that from the equation of perfect woman.) And my marriage is pretty happy most of the time, but it’s not PERFECT. I have a reasonably attractive husband with a steady job who is kind and does the majority of the housework and cooking. But I have to remind people that our marriage was built over years – the first years were stressful and took adjustment, and my health struggles have necessitated that Glenn take over what most husbands would consider the “woman’s work.” We are lucky that we like each other quite a bit after nineteen years and are still happy to kiss each other at the end of the day, though I doubt we’d win any Cosmo “hot marriage” quizzes.
Career-wise, this week, though I felt like a failure because I had two rejection slips and the rejection-y sting from AWP, I had a very nice article in the local paper about my work, my mother pointed out proudly on Facebook that my name appeared on the front AND back cover of the 2014 Poet’s Market, and I found out that I’ll be part of a featured event at ArtsCrush, a local arts thing in Seattle I am really excited about, with two gifted artist and poet friends. I should have felt happy, like a success, right? But instead, I felt depressed and like a big loser because of all those dropping plates. But the expectations of doing everything and doing everything perfectly are going to cause a whole generation of women, if not anxiety, then a general dissatisfaction, that frankly, we shouldn’t have to worry about.
I mean, women in the past (and this includes women as recent as my grandmother’s generation) were happy if half of their children survived til 18, they had enough food on the table, and their homes didn’t burn to the ground in a prairie fire or they weren’t disfigured in a factory accident or by tuberculosis or something. They didn’t expect to look nineteen when they were forty-five, dazzle their families and friends with their homemaking skills AND careers. They didn’t have to worry if Joan at work was backstabbing them when they had to leave early to take Kitty to her doctor’s appointment. I was thinking about this, and I was thinking, even in my Facebook and twitter posts, even here, I worry people will disapprove or find me lacking. Which is crazy, right? “If I don’t have a perfect perky attitude from dawn til dusk, then no one will buy my books” I think the reasoning goes. “If I ever show a crack in any facade, people will lose all respect for me.” I believe this is why women are discouraged from crying in the boardroom. (And yes, I’ve done it. Act shocked all you want. It did get my team an extra week for their deadlines AND extra budget for staffing. )
The only way to free ourselves from the expectations of having it all and being everything to everyone is to start at home. We shouldn’t expect it of our mothers, our sisters, our friends, or ourselves. If you look at another woman and she seems to “have it all,” be comforted in knowing she probably has areas where she struggles, too. If X is a gifted cook and warm mother, it should be okay if she isn’t also a shark financial consultant with a stuffed 401K. If Y is a whiz at astrophysics, it’s okay if she only gets her hair and nails done once a year and she never bothered to get married at all and her house is kindly called “a disaster zone” by friends. If Z is a writer with a happy marriage but struggles with her expectations of her career and her finances, will never win awards for her homemaking skills, isn’t going to be able to have the perfect kids or any kids at all, sometimes has to cancel things last minute because of her health problems, maybe we should cut her a break. It starts with you and me. Let yourself be great at the things you are great at, and let everything else go. Then we can stop judging each other for falling short of perfection and having to make hard choices, too.
A Little Good News for Amanda, A Newspaper Mention, and How to Bring the Fun at AWP
- At August 02, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Amanda Auchter’s The Wishing Tomb, which I reviewed back a few weeks ago here, has won the 2013 PEN Center USA Literary Award for Poetry. Go tell her congrats!
There was a nice article in my local paper, The Redmond Reporter, about my small contribution to the wonderful anthology I mentioned in my last post, the Like One anthology. http://www.redmond-reporter.com/news/217822101.html
I woke up yesterday with massive stomach flu, which was inconvenient because 1. the in-laws arrived yesterday from Cincinnati, and 2. I was supposed to get a very long and involved hospital test today, which I had to reschedule. I guess there’s a little irony in rescheduling a medical test because you’re too sick to make it. The downside is, I’ll have weird anxiety dreams for another couple of weeks. (My latest one had me standing on top of skyscrapers in New York City talking to my little brother while the buildings crumbled to black dust beneath our feet, with me saying, “I guess all our financial plans will come to nothing.” Yup, that’s my kind of stress dream…) The upside, I lost five pounds and got caught up in my “lying around like a zombie watching Zombieland for the nth” time.
Today the AWP panels were posted. I was really sad that our geek-friendly town’s AWP had hardly any panels for on subjects like speculative writing, geek poetry (and the accompanying fairy tale/comic book-related writing,) etc. I think they had two faintly geeky panels, and they were both all male. Boo hiss. My hometown AWP had let me down! I had a ton of friends on good panels, but still, I felt jilted by Seattle AWP’s lack of interest in the speculative/pop-culture side of writing. So, what I usually tell people who want the “folks in charge” to do something different is, go out and make your own thing! I don’t know if I have the energy to run my own writer’s conference, but maybe I can do an offsite “party/reading/something awesome. Any of you want to get together and plan something?
And this gets into a larger question – how do you actually have fun at AWP, without stressing out? I find large crowds intimidating and brain-dizzying, although I consider myself kind of an extrovert, AWP is usually exhausting (and really taxes my ability to match names and faces – something I’ve never been great at in the first place and it only gets worse as I get older and know more people) and the “fun” can be sucked out by awkward or rude encounters (because, let’s face it, a lot of writers are not great at socializing gracefully) or just worrying or trying to “network” but let’s face it – why go to these things if not, I don’t know, to celebrate the good parts of being a writer with other writers? How to hold on to that idea at what can sometimes be a sometimes-sordid, booze-filled schmooze-fest? Seattle is a great town for writers and readers, full of coffee shops with smart people inside and good bookstores (Open Books is a must-visit for poets, it will not disappoint) and filled with a kind of a spiky, rainy cool, alternative art and comic shops and robots. How to take advantage of that and really enjoy the city? I recommend, at any AWP, sneaking out to visit the city’s art museum, or zoo, or weird shops or unique dive-y restaurants, because that will be what you remember when you get home, with your stack of lit mags and friends’ and strangers’ books. Please comment and leave your advice about “fun at AWP.”