Representing through Personal Story

The other evening I attended an event hosted by the No Name Women’s Club in Sonoma County, the wine country north of San Francisco. The NNWC has no name, no place, no address, and no website; communication about events is by phone and word of mouth. Nevertheless, it is a strong and effective women’s group with a commitment to supporting women’s issues in public policy. So well regarded is NNWC that our honored guest that night was Congresswoman Jackie Speier who spoke to a packed audience of hundreds.

Representative Speier has always been heroic to me, dating from her near death in 1978 during the Jonestown massacre when she visited Guyana with Congressman Leo Ryan. One of the few survivors, she was shot and left for dead, lying under the escape airplane.

But it was last February 2011 when Jackie Speier again caught national attention, speaking on the floor of the House of Representatives late one night. She abandoned her prepared remarks and spoke about her own experiences as a mother when forced to face a tragic decision. Whether or not one agrees with her decision, her ability that night to tell her own story and speak her personal truth was once again, heroic. Her words cut through the rhetoric of the day and reached an international audience.

Representative Speier told our club that her success that night taught her the power of the House floor “megaphone.” Through it she hoped to reach audiences directly and to speak for women who are ignored or undervalued. Now, each week, she tells personal stories of women who are victims of sexual abuse or human trafficking. And she has been effective in catching the attention of others who happen to hear her on C-Span or in government.

After her Sonoma county speech, I stood up and commended Representative Speier on giving voice to women and for sharing her personal truths as a mother. Later I gave her a copy of the book, Wisdom Has a Voice: Every Daughter’s Memories of Mother (though I have only a few copies to spare). I hope she enjoys reading the 25 memoirs about Mother.

Once again I was struck by the power of an authentic woman’s voice, the voice of a mother who is both powerful and compassionate –who tells truth in personal stories.

 

Sitting Beside Yourself

Self-Assessment

Words are magical!

Some years ago I learned that the Latin root of the word, assess, means to sit beside. Today I double-checked and it’s still true.

An online etymological dictionary states—originally of L. assessus, pp. of assidere “to sit beside.”

I’ve always loved that image of assessment for writing memoir, a genre that demands self-assessment and reflection. It’s a cozy and comforting thing to see myself beside myself, noticing and watching, learning with compassion and empathy from a particular experience.

It may be that I’ve just described an incident of my youth in a dramatic and vivid scene. The writing is clear and immediate; it tells what happened in authentic detail. I am reliving that moment as I recall it, but there is no reflection, no self-assessment.

Time to draw up a comfy chair and sit beside myself.

I begin to dialogue with the main character, me. Who am I in that scene and how am I feeling? What am I learning and how am I changing?

Let’s say it is a scene at my first real job after college, working for the telephone company in San Francisco. As the “me” on the job is busy acting the real life scene, the “other me” is watching and taking notes, wide-eyed and caring.

I notice how alienated I am, how confused, how I go through the motions and look around for clues to understand this new workaday environment. How am I changing as the days and weeks go by? How do I adapt and how do others perceive me? When I leave the company to enter graduate school, what have I learned?

Ah! The insights come and my young awkward entry into corporate America becomes more than a story; it’s a memoir—with a wider meaning for the reader.

Another way to describe this split in thinking that is central to memoir is to think of two different voices.

Sue William Silverman explores this dynamic in her recent article. “Finding Innocence and Experience: Voices in Memoir,” published in WOW-Women on Writing: April Newsletter. In Silverman’s analogy, the bare experience is the voice of innocence and the self-assessment is the voice of experience. Read her excellent article here.

But whether I am talking, murmuring, or just taking notes, I still like to think of “me” sitting beside “myself,” warm and cozy, perhaps sipping a cup of tea.

Above the Noise

by Shiloh Sophia McCloud

It is a marketing cliché to rise “above the noise.” But the racket of media and newer social media is getting ever louder. Is this a cause for despair? Does this give writers and editors a sense of futility in the publishing world or in producing, as some are calling what used to be books, a content delivery system?

But as we gather the stories for the Wisdom anthology, it occurs to me that this “book” is not actually intended for everyone. That means that we only have to reach above the noise in certain arenas, turn down the volume in only a few rooms to find a listening ear.

It is an irony of our high tech world that the louder the noise, the more likely we are to actually reach our target audience.

Challenging and exciting!