Little did I realize that I had been waiting for the season when I'd turn 60. Having reached this stage (successfully finishing 60 trips around the sun), I had some inner sense of having 'made it'. I'd come safely and reasonably happy through my childhood, young adulthood, and now middle age—and all that went with these various stages of life. It had been—and still is—a good life.
I began curating my personal history, organizing the motley collection of photo albums, journals, yearbooks, scrapbooks, and multitudinous touchstone keepsakes. It was the season of gathering the fruit—stories, experiences, lessons—of my life. And putting some order to it. Based on the advice from Natalie Goldberg, or was it Julia Cameron, I created ten-year increments of 'Just the Facts' timelines, of my life from birth to present day. From there, I took the barebone facts and began creating a more detailed narrative timeline. A lifetime in a timeline. I felt so organized and orderly (smile).
It was a such a satisfying season. Some things got wrapped up, some got sorted. Other situations remained shrouded in mystery and no answers to the whys of life but it was okay to let it be. Some things were dusted off as I paid close attention to which memories shimmered and begged to be told. Quite often bits and pieces of this material worked its way into essays for blog posts and anthologies. I self-published a magazine through Blurb that housed my simple but cherished childhood Christmas memories. Which made lovely Christmas presents one year and I was amazed at how much interest it garnered in sales from strangers.
From the start, I wanted to write about my lost dream to marry and become a mom early in life. My twenties disappeared as did my thirties; I was still single and earning my own way in an unchosen but good career for years. It wasn't the plan at all. It would be years before I'd meet my partner. I even thought about a working title for this memoir "Between a Prayer and a Proposal: Twenty Years of Waiting... and Living". I never realized until I started looking back that I'd been composing possible chapters in my head for years, ever rehearsing those touchstone experiences till they were etched in my heart of how I had learned to let go of my expectations and invite God to show me how to create his beautiful life for me. I had lived the story for years; the time had come to get it down on paper. I took a memoir writing course with Lisa Dale Norton and loved her book Shimmering Images on the topic. The first draft got done, but I never quite got up the courage, and energy, to push through and finish it. It's still a work in progress.
Turning another corner
Top Photo credit: Image by CongerDesign from Pixabay
*Be Still My Soul
Brenda is living her beautiful life in slower mode, having time to watch the world go by, sit in her comfy spot by the bay window, read, walk, watch the birds and clouds and flowers grow. And she enjoys writing on her blog It's A Beautiful Life and here on InScribe. She can also be found on Facebook, Instagram, and BlueSky.
Ah, Brenda, what a lovely post you've shared with us. I like the thought of the Gathering Season as a time to reflect on the past and collate the memories as you've done. I do hope you will persevere with finishing your memoir as I would love to read it. And I thank you for your beautiful blog - it's a must read, and you might be surprised how often I will click on the month's posts for years past and enjoy them over again.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Brenda, for your post this morning. I followed a couple of your links and had to remember to come back and finish reading the post. You are an inspiration to me and in this writing life I am entering into more and more:)
ReplyDeleteThe Gathering Season ... ooo that puts tingles up my spine. I love that. And the advice to create just the facts in 10-year increments is a fantastic idea. It makes "curating [a] personal history" so much less daunting!
ReplyDeleteAnd then, to read that the gathering and curating was a season that has now passed made me realize again that we must enter into each season with open arms of acceptance as well as determination and persistence to do what the season requires.
Thank you for another beautiful and enlightening post!
Beautiful
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