Friday, May 02, 2008

The Writing Mom

Yesterday, my alarm went off at 6:00 a.m. But I was already up (stress). By 6:10, Demon Baby had arisen. Demon Baby, for the record, does not greet sunrise with joy. He doesn't babble at the rays as they form a dappling pattern across his crib. He wakes up, and his first instinct is to pretty much let the world (in particular, me) know his sheer displeasure at everything about it, which means whining or crying for about 5 minutes, sometimes 10. Yesterday, I scooped him up at my desk, and we rocked in my desk chair for about 10 minutes. I was struck by how wonderful, actually, this is. See, I used to DREAD the whining routine. I used to say, "My darling Demon Baby, greet the sun with happiness." But now I realize it's the only 10-minute period in which he will cuddle and hug me and we have pure alone time (since no one else is nuts enough to be awake at that hour).

The day pretty much was a blur from that moment. I got in a fight with Oldest Daughter. I got the other two off to school. New contracts came (announcement soon!). I called my agent, signed them. I wrote. I took phone calls. I cleaned. I did four loads of laundry. I wrote. I cleaned UP after Demon's nuclear disaster of toys, and persuaded him that soap bubbles really ARE an outdoor activity. I did another load of laundry. I cleaned my desk. I actually threw out an entire garbage bag of clutter and crap (mostly papers---but yes, I recycle). I vaccumed (don't want to know what Demon did with some cereal and my carpets). I made lunch for Demon (mac and cheese). I ate an apple. I paid bills (ugh!). Then the OTHER kids came home. Oldest Daughter and I made up from our spat. Oldest Son got a stern talking-to for his grades. Baby Girl felt the need to rub her easy "all As" in his face. I made dinner. We went to Oldest Boy's concert (plays horn). It was wonderful. However, if you can imagine CONFINING Demon Baby AFTER the "wtiching hour" (which around here is approximately 5:30). I was--I have proof--I was in Dante's Third Circle of Hell. I spent over half the concert in the LOBBY (though I did see Oldest Son play). Then we went home around 9:00. I put Demon to bed. He got back up. I put him in again. I sat down to write at 9:30. Demon started shrieking (has night terrors). Oldest Daughter offered to hold his hand and help him settle down. I hugged her and said, "BLESS YOU, MY CHILD." She got him to sleep. It was quiet. I did a "little work" before I realized I was too exhausted. I went up to bed at 10:30 after, essentially, being on the go as a mom or writer since 6:00 a.m. that morning. I ate dinner standing up at some point (potatoes--kids had chicken . . . I ate another apple . . . I had green tea). AND THEN . . . once in my bed, I called my Mom.

I have a writing point, I swear to you guys.

I have two best friends. My best friend, Pajamala (not her real name but . . .). And my mom. My sisters are in there too, but especially my mom. I usually call her once a day. We usually talk for over an hour. Sometimes I call her twice. I hadn't talked to her in at least four days, which felt hugely horrible. It was a gaping hole in my routine and life, but I've been SO busy. So I called her at 10:35 (she's up late) and said, "You do, indeed, have an oldest child. I haven't hurled myself from the second-story window." (She knows how stressed I am.) We talked until 11:45. About everything and nothing. About how I spent $70 in groceries and got NOTHING. ($4.58 for milk???? WTF.) How four kids is a LOT of groceries. About how I am so busy. About Demon Baby. About the concert. About Obama. About the election and politics. About the state of health care in this country. About my dad. About their visit (coming to stay next Wednesday--for a month . . . OH, there will be stories). About Oldest playing the KENNEDY CENTER next month! About Oldest's OTHER concert next Friday (which she wrote some of the arrangements for). About life.

And so today, as I opened up a file to write . . . I realized . . . there are SOME relationships in books that are difficult for me to write about. I mean, a tried and true literary theme or relationship is the difficult mother-daughter one. And I have a very, very hard time writing about it. It's like writing about this totally foreign entity. I wouldn't know what it is like to have a mother undermine her child's confidence, or belittle her daughter, or CRITICIZE her. I wouldn't. My mom's not without her opinions . . . and once in a while, she'll tell me something she thinks about x or y. But criticize me? Never happen. And I have to say, dammit, my writing SUFFERS for it. LOL! Because in women's fiction, you often explore that . . . and so I have to try extra hard to wrap my head around a difficult mom.

Now, my mother-in-law? Slapped her own grandchild. Hasn't seen any of them since--10 years. I've offered. I've written her. But she says she's not interested in them--and that I've just made her out to be the bad guy (I suppose there's a good-guy way to portray striking a 2-year-old, but I haven't found it yet). So it's not like I can NOT find a relationship to write about. But that's a one-note performance. I have to work hard to write about it . . . because I didn't GROW UP with it. I don't know all the threads that would make a woman essentially uninterested in her own child or grandchildren. Uncaring. Cold. I don't KNOW that woman. I don't know what makes her tick.

Sisters (see yesterday) I can write with ease. Fun, real grandmothers. I know them. Complicated, criminally inclined dads? I think I can do that justice. A close, loving relationship between a woman and a gay man/best friend? Sure.

But others? It's harder. I have to really imagine myself in that position. As I have shared before, I am a "Method" writer--I really do go through some process where I become the character inside. And some . . . trickier than others.

So . . . are some relationships mirrored on your own? Or do you have to work to create it all? Are some harder to create than others?

Labels:

23 Comments:

Blogger lainey bancroft said...

Ah, the enviable and glamorous life of a successful author.

Oddly enough, it bears striking resemblance to the glamour of being a newbie author. Minus a Demon. LOL

You're lucky to have that with your mom. But I'm sure I don't have to tell you that. =)

I need a rest and probably another coffee after reading this!

9:16 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Oh, Lainey . . . it's not THAT bad, is it??? Ok, it is, some days.

But a Demon Hug makes it worthwhile.

And yeah. I don't know how I contain myself with all that glamour.

:-)
E

9:22 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Edie said...

Erica, I don't know how you find time to write all your books. About your former MIL, some people have a disconnect. I don't know how they feel what they do. That's not a character whose mind I could get into either.

In my last book a protagonist's mother was a self-absorbed bitch, but I think their relationship rang true. My mother wasn't like that. I'm sure there are lots of characters I can't write, but I'm not drawn to use them and don't include them in my books. Hey, we're gods when we write. Or goddesses. :)

9:35 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Jude Hardin said...

I'm working on a scene where my protagonist is forced to ask an ex-girlfriend for a huge favor. Their relationship didn't end with a dramatic breakup. He just stopped calling her one day. So, it's especially awkward for him to show up now in need of her help. It's all imagination on my part, because I can't remember ever being in a position like that. Fortunately for my MC, his ex has a heart of gold and gives him the help he needs. Which makes him sort of regret the way things turned out, even though he's happily with someone else now...

So, yes, I sometimes have to rely on imagination when it comes to relationship dynamics. But, while the situation might not be something I've experienced directly, I think I can usually draw on an emotion similar to what my character is feeling. That's the important thing, I think. The emotion.

Another great thought-provoking post, Erica!

9:40 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Hi Edie:
I absolutely can't fathom her. Never could. As you know, I have Crohn's disease. When preggers with #2, I was hospitalized and on TPN for a while, then was not allowed to eat food for 4 months (just Ensure--YUM!). ANYHOO, once he was born, the Crohn's REALLY went haywire. I couldn't walk . . . was in so much pain. And she came to meet him. I said, "I'm exhausted . . . I'd like to take a nap--can you mind him for an hour or so?" "Oh, sure." Fifteen minutes later, I can hear him SHRIEKING. Just shrieking. I go out and she's sitting on my couch with her feet up, reading a magazine, and he's in his crib--at 3 weeks old--just screaming. I pointed out to her that you can't spoil a baby, just hold them and rock them, that he's too young to be just left to scream like that. And she just didn't "get" it. I don't know. My maternal instinct is FIERCE.

As for writing about different characters--of course that's why we're writers. The fun of creating these different people. But definitely, in terms of layering depth, some are easier for me than others to get in touch with.
E

9:41 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Hi Jude:
Yeah . . . definitely. Going for that emotional connection--we all have been in some awkward scene. We all have had failures. Pain. Heartache. Pride at something our kid did, or something we accomplished. It's trying to find those elements and relate to them, I guess.
E

9:43 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Mark Terry said...

Ah, the glamour!

For that sort of thing I tend to focus on my worst days and my worst moods and give that character how I felt on that day. That said, my more recent books have been action-adventure, so familial relationships aren't too big a deal, although often my bad guys (say, the Serpent in The Serpent's Kiss) have some issues with a parent.

For me, much of the psychological motivation for characters comes from parents, especially the father-son relationship, I guess.

Of course, my books to-date have been a little simpler. Just kill somebody or blow something up. It's the action-adventure-thriller writer's solution to the Gordian Knot.

10:31 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Mark:
I should try that. Unhappy with my family . . . a bomb.

And now the FBI is probably monitoring my blog.

E

10:43 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Heather Harper said...

I think because of my childhood ambition of becoming a saint, LOL, and my acting background (that translates to "flair for the dramatic") that I strived to wrap my mind around others insanity to fine tune my empathy.

I was an only child. Bored and lonely.

Can you tell?

And after reading this post, I'm buying the Erica candle TODAY.

Do you have a color preference? ;)

10:54 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Heather:
I am partial to green.

But honestly, guys . . . I was exhausted, but that's a typical day. Really. From 6:00 a.m. until at LEAST 10:00. LOL! I guess I used to it by now.

And Saint Heather . . . just love ya!
E

10:59 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Heather Harper said...

My alarm is set for six and I pray that I'm asleep by midnight. I feel so much better if I can fall asleep by eleven, but that rarely happens.

11:17 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Heather:
See? I am not alone. This whole work-home life balance thing? A myth. Exponentially a myth the more kids you have. (Demon Baby counts as three children.)

E

11:23 AM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Alyson Noel said...

All that and you still write books? Sheesh, I'm such a slacker compared to you!

I was talking about this the other day with a friend, I'm definitely a method writer, though I doubt I'd even be a writer if my childhood had been happy. But since it wasn't all that, I've got loads of material to pull from!

12:14 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Hi Alyson:
Another Method writer! Cool.

My childhood wasn't Ozzie and Harriet. But I feel like if you reach an ("ahem") certain age and are still b*tching about anything having to do with the first 18 years of your life, you need to snap the f*ck out of it. :-)
E

12:20 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Ewoh Nairb said...

I have a few things to draw on from my life... but mostly I have to spend time getting into my character's heads and get them at that level.

I hear you on your daily grind. Mine is not quite there yet... yet. But it has its own quirky elements none-the-less. I was just diagnosed with walking pneumonia... yay me. That has been a big damper on my running, not to mention classes I am taking and managing family, cooking, cleaning and laundry. The doctor told me to slow down and get some rest. Right. That's going to happen real soon now. Sure it is.

1:25 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Oh, Ewoh:
I will keep you in my prayers, friend. A parents' job is never done . . . .

E

1:39 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger spyscribbler said...

I'm more of a watcher. After my dad died, my mom married into this Italian family. Big, loud, and I loved it. It kind of drifted apart after Grandma died.

Mothers are difficult. I don't think I could write about it. It took me squashing all my dignity to call my mom and literally beg to let me come live at home because I couldn't take care of myself. I was too embarrassed to ask anyone else for help, because I couldn't clean, couldn't do laundry ... it was awful.

She said no. She has no memory of it. In fact, she doesn't even KNOW I was sick for years. Just not in her reality. LOL ... I don't even know how to enter that mindset to write about it.

4:32 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Hi Spy:
Some people live in a world where they are so "right" it blocks the sun of any sort of reality filtering onto them. I can only assume when my MIL slapped my child and didn't apologize, but told my brother-in-law that my 2-year-old "deserved it" . . . when he husband called me a b*tch, when they arrived to my Baby Girl's first birthday emptyhanded (though he is a millionaire) and declared, "We decided to give her nothing because we feel your children have enough" and on and on and ON . . . that in some weirdly insane little corner or her mind she is RIGHT. And so she remains in that corner a bitter person--without every laying eyes on Demon Baby, or any of my children in 10 years. A lot of people live in that corner with her, Spy. So you know, take it for the devil's work, for the insanity, for whatever it is that makes people want to live in that place. People can come out into the light of joy, into the presence of children, of compassion, of sunshine and laughter, or they can hold stubbornly onto their own ugliness.

E

5:08 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger spyscribbler said...

Deserve it? How can a two year old deserve it? That is not possible.

But you're right about the fact that they're "right" in their mind, you know? That's a scary place, where they are.

9:50 PM, May 02, 2008  
Blogger Ello said...

Wow I'm tired reading your post! ;o) Seriously, you are like superhuman or something. My day is crazy too, but my day starts at 7:30. None of my girls are morning people. Neither am I. But I do have the over critical mother. I envy you the lovely relationship you have with your mom. That is what I hope to have with my own girls.

4:40 PM, May 04, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

ello:
My mother is very Type-B "practical." I say she is a Buddhist but doesn't know it. She lives in the moment, she doesn't carry grudges. When something is "over," it really is. When life sucks, she realizes it is what it is and move on, no sense in wallowing in self-pity. She's an avid reader, smart, just an all-around great person to know . . . and yeah, I hope my kids like me when they grow up. Though I am a MUCH more disorganized, "weird" mom so who knows. We think we are doing OK . . . but . . .

E

9:55 AM, May 05, 2008  
Blogger molly said...

Hello Erica,

I am new to your blog.
I agree with Lainey Bancroft, your life is enviable as well as very busy. Do you ever rest?

I am an author/illustrator as well focusing in the area of elementary school aged children.

I also study and teach kids art and recreation and know their cognitive, affective, and physical abilities at each stage.

Your relationship with your Mom is wonderful, I see you cherish every day of it!

My Mother is deceased, I miss her every time I look into my son eyes,
as she never met him, nor my husband. She was not a perfect Mother, but as an adult I became aware that no Mom is.
My Mother-In-Law is deceased as well.

About your Mother-in-law. You said she struck your child? Was it a slap to discipline? Your description doesn't sound like it makes sense to me.

Since toddlers rarely have the ability to do time out, occasionaly a slap on the hand or bottom is neccesary. I can count
2 times I had to slap my child on the bottom to keep him from doing
something he wasn't supposed to.

Its seems odd she would appear to close a door on your children, when obviously she cared enough to show them right from wrong.
Grandparents are not always aware
of the PC way to do things, I have experienced it too myself.

My thought is this... maybe you should consider trying to communicate with Mom in law again, maybe after meditating on forgiveness.

I am sure a slap on the hand did not scar your child and you are probably carrying around a great deal of burden because of your negative thoughts. Isn't it time to make amends?

Have happy thoughts today and Happy Mothers Day.

10:22 AM, May 08, 2008  
Blogger Erica Orloff said...

Hi Molly:
Oh, I so agree. It's difficult on a blog to go into a familiy's trials and tribulations, and it's not the purpose of the blog. That was one small incident of many, the shortened version of which was about a week later when we called to wish a merry christmas, I was called the b-word for not being "attentive" enough to her as a daughter-in-law at the birthday party where my son was slapped. There were 30 people, I have three children, including the 1-year-old birthday girl, and was running around like a chicken with my head cut off. Anyone who knows me . . . knows I run at a million miles an hour, but I was told I didn't refill her drink, didn't talk to her enough, and so on. The slapping incident had occurred that day, so feelings were a little raised. Still, to be called that verbatim . . .

Time went on where no one spoke. That Easter, we got a letter so horrid I literally vomited. It was an outpouring of ugliness that I have never seen before in my personal life--maybe she felt wounded, but the thing with saying horrid, horrid words is that you can't take them back. Even when she slapped my son--HARD--I said NOTHING, not one word. I knew to bite my tongue rather than lash out verbally. Things were said in that letter (email actually) like my daughter was not "really" her son's daughter (biologically true, but he'd raised her since near-infancy), that I was a horrible mother and person, that she wished me all the unhappiness and pain the world could muster forever, that her son was saddled with a b*tch, and so on.

MORE time passed, and about a year later, I began writing her every Christmas--for SEVEN years. I would write things like, "We don't have to be best friends but for the sake of these precious children, we can be civil, PLEASE let them into your life." I also began buying her a Christmas gift each year like those honorary "chicks" and so on, from Samaritan's Purse (you know, where they send a farm animal to a Third-World family so they can eat/put food on the table). It's a well-known organization, and it seemed like something Christian and a gesture of goodwill. Anyway, after seven years of pleading, she finally, two years ago, told my guy, "Tell her to stop sending the letters. I don't wish to have a relationship with her OR YOUR CHILDREN. Pictures are fine once in a while. I will always be painted to be the bad guy." There has never been an "owning" of the letter she sent, none of it, and she is NOT the bad guy. Not for any of it BUT . . . continuing this nonsense. In the Bible it says forgive seven times seven. I suppose I could write the Christmas letter for 47 years or whatever . . . but I was told to stop. So I respected her wishes and have.

Since that time many years ago, I have become an even more spiritual person, and though I occasionally reference her in a blog post because this is MY journal as a writer . . . I wish her well and I don't hate her. People say horrid things. You can't take them back but people move on. As I wrote one Christmas, "Do you really think on your deathbed, that any of this nonsense will have been worth not seeing these children who NEED their paternal grandma?" I respect that she deserves to know these angels--my four kids are my LIFE. And I got no response.

I don't know you, but I can assure you years were spent trying to make amends. Make peace. If you are new to the blog, then you likely don't know this blog is a spiritual and writer one. I have no burden . . . seven years of letters is more than anyone I know would do--particularly after receiving a letter like that and being called names.

7:28 AM, May 09, 2008  

Post a Comment

<< Home