Flourish
October 2005
vol. 1, no. 8
Perhaps
it is appropriate that the eighth issue should take a turn
toward the more somber.
Last
time I told you about Liz, who had been working long hours
to make her dissertation deadline, only to find her advisor
balking at approving the last chapter. Fortunately, on the
very cusp of the deadline she had been laboring toward all
year, she asked again about the terms of her fellowship
and found that September 6 was not the real deadline--September
29 was. Yippee! Of course, given that she was teaching four
full days a week at campuses quite a commute from her home,
the new deadline did not afford her that much more time.
But she thought that, in the nine days now available to
her, she could revise the last chapter, tidy her previous
chapters, organize her bibliography, write the acknowledgements
and abstract, and go through the day-long filing process.
Unfortunately,
as Samuel Johnson said long ago, sometimes on to an already
heavy burden “her load misfortune flings.” On September
6, the results of some medical tests arrived and the news
was not good. In fact, the news was devastating. Liz needed
major surgery followed by six weeks of bed rest. A small
chance existed that when the doctors went in they would
find the unspeakable c-word. Since Liz had gone through
chemotherapy once before in her life, she knew all too well
what this diagnosis meant.
As
you can imagine, Liz shut down. Part of what made her feel
so anxious was that she was no longer a student and thus
no longer medically insured. How was she going to pay for
this surgery? And how was she going to support herself for
six weeks of bed rest if she couldn't teach?
Liz
is a survivor in more ways than one, however. Slowly she
began to pull herself together. She asked her department
for more time and they were wonderful. She arranged to have
gap insurance that would cover her through the surgery and
found an insurer that would take her on despite her pre-existing
conditions. She asked the doctors if she could do the surgery
during the winter break between teaching periods, six weeks
when she didn't have to work.
As
a back-drop, though, the unfinished dissertation loomed.
Day after day she simply could not bring an ounce of energy
to it. She'd been running too hard for too long. After two
weeks, she was still only managing an hour here and there
amidst all the teaching and medical appointments. She wished
that she had the energy to get up at 3:30 in the morning
and work seven days a week, as she had been doing, but she
just couldn't do it. Knowing that she had every reason do
nothing at all didn't help.
One
day, she was again castigating herself for not spending
more time on the dissertation. “I spent two hours in the
grocery store yesterday,” she told me with a sigh, “just
going up and down the aisles. Up and down. And I hate grocery
shopping!” Did it help? I asked her. “Actually,” she laughed,
“it did. It was very relaxing.”
We
agreed then that she had to stop beating herself up for
not being in mad, round-the-clock writing mode. She'd always
known it was not sustainable for long. What she needed was
a truly realistic schedule, with a truly realistic deadline,
that took into account all the realities of her current
situation.
So,
she wrote up a weekend by weekend task list and is now aiming
to file on December 2, before she does the surgery. That
gives her two months, including rounds of waiting for her
committee to respond. Last weekend, she didn't do any of
the things she planned to do; this weekend she was back
to getting up at 3:30 in the morning and working for many
hours. No doubt the journey of the next two months will
have its ups and downs. But for now, as Liz puts it, “writing
helps. When I'm writing I can't think about what else is
going on.”
So,
that's the story so far. Not the usual light fare. I asked
Liz if she would prefer I not tell you her story this month,
but she insisted that she was enjoying her “celebrity status”
and took comfort from knowing that her struggle might encourage
others. Now I'm going to take the pressure off her, though,
and let her go back to civilian life. When I have good news,
I'll let you know. She thanks all those Flourish readers
who wrote to her with notes of encouragement last month,
she appreciated them!
Quote, Unquote
“Poems
: For the Young Who Want To”
Talent
is what they say
you
have after the novel
is
published and favorably
reviewed.
Beforehand what
you
have is a tedious
delusion,
a hobby like knitting.
Work
is what you have done
after
the play is produced
and
the audience claps.
Before
that friends keep asking
when
you are planning to go
out
and get a job.
Genius
is what they know you
had
after the third volume
of
remarkable poems. Earlier
they
accuse you of withdrawing,
ask
why you don't have a baby,
call
you a bum.
The
reason people want M.F.A.'s
take
workshops with fancy names
when
all you can really
learn
is a few techniques,
typing
instructions and some-
body
else's mannerisms
is
that every artist lacks
a
license to hang on the wall
like
your optician, your vet,
proving
you may be a clumsy sadist
whose
fillings fall into the stew
but
you're certified a dentist.
The
real writer is one
who
really writes. Talent
is
an invention like phlogiston
after
the fact of fire.
Work
is its own cure. You have to
like
it better than being loved.
--Marge
Piercy, Circles
on the Water (Knopf, 1982)
News
from the Editor
My
summer workshops have ended, so my time has been freed up
for more writing. I've been focusing on journal articles
this summer, now I am turning to longer writing projects.