Writer, with Kids: Gayle Brandeis

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Gayle Brandeis, author of of Fruitflesh: Seeds of Inspiration for Women Who Write, Dictionary Poems, the novels The Book of Dead Birds, which won Barbara Kingsolver’s Bellwether Prize for Fiction in Support of a Literature of Social Change, Self Storage and Delta Girls, and her first novel for young readers, My Life with the Lincolns. She released The Book of Live Wires, the sequel to The Book of Dead Birds, as an e-book in 2011.

For mothers who write, I have two words of advice: joint custody. My husband and I separated two months ago, and I suddenly have the luxury of a few nights a week to myself. I miss my three year old when he’s with his dad, but I am starting to feel like myself again. I am starting to feel like I can breathe more fully. Like I have time to actually drop into my writing and swim around inside of it.

Of course this is not the ideal solution for every mother writer. It goes without saying that a happy, intact family is best for all involved, if you can make it work. And as much as I appreciate living alone for the first time in my life–and let me just say, I really, really appreciate it–it’s not all dancing around the living room in my underwear, although there is plenty of that. My husband and I can’t afford two households, so money is a constant source of stress, and I’ve filled a bunch of my newfound time with extra freelance work to pay the bills. And sometimes I don’t use the time I have been gifted very well–this transition has been full of emotional upheaval, and sometimes I just need to decompress and watch Orange is the New Black instead of write. But I feel the time expand around me, spacious and full of possibility, and I know that I will find a way to stretch into its promise.

This is my second round of parenting. I had two kids in my early twenties, who are now 22 and 19. My first husband and I were poor when they were little, so we couldn’t afford much in the way of childcare, although my eldest did go to state-funded preschool around the time his sister was born, and we would trade babysitting with our neighbors on occasion. Mostly, though, I was home with the kids, and somehow I found time to write. I always had a notebook nearby; I would write while nursing, write while in the bathroom. This was pre-Internet, and we went through great stretches not having tv, so there was less media-related distraction in the house, but I don’t think I can chalk up my productivity to that fact, alone. The writing/mothering balance felt like being a mermaid–diving underwater when I could with my work, then breaching the surface and growing legs again when the kids needed me, seaweed still dripping from my hair. It felt fluid, this balance, a fairly easy back and forth between realms. I would have loved more writing time, but I wasn’t desperate for it.

When Asher was born in 2009, things were different. I was 41, and my life wasn’t nearly as simple as when I first had kids. I wasn’t just writing and mothering; I was also teaching, and promoting books, and doing freelance work and getting sucked into the internet way too much, plus I was actively grieving my mom, who took her own life when Asher was one week old. And then my new husband’s mom died unexpectedly less than four months later, and our life became one big morass of loss (thankfully countered by our sweet son, a beam of light and joy from the time he was born.) I wasn’t getting much done, to put it mildly. Even once Asher was old enough to go into preschool and I had a few hours a day to myself, I didn’t feel like I had enough time to address everything on my plate, and my own writing often came last. I would regularly slink off to my office after my husband came home from work, starved as I was for more time to think and write and be, but that never felt like enough, either. As much fun as I had with our sweet boy, as lucky as I knew I was in the big scheme of things, I often felt depressed, a pale replica of the optimistic woman I once was. I didn’t let anyone–not even myself–know the depth of my despair. And then my marriage fell apart, and suddenly I had more time to myself, and I started to come to life again. I’m a better mother because when I am with my son, I am fully with him, not as distracted as I had been. And I’m a better writer, too, or at least I have the potential to be, because I’m making a more conscious effort to speak my truth, to live as authentically as I can.

So don’t leave your partner just to get more writing time. That’s certainly not the only reason for my own separation. But do fight for the time you need to claim your own space and voice and breath as a writer–whether that means trading child care one day a week with another writer mama, or spiriting your notebook into the bathroom, or getting a little bungalow of your own. Do what you need to do to mother your own writing self as you mother your kids. Once you do that, time may just find a way of opening itself to you.

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Posted in Gayle Brandeis, parenting, with Kids, Writer, Writer with kids, writing

Writer, with Kids: Brian Gresko

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Brian Gresko is the editor of the anthology When I First Held You: 22 Critically Acclaimed Writers on Fatherhood, forthcoming from Berkley Books/Penguin in spring 2014. He has contributed to The Huffington Post, and written about books and culture for Salon, The Atlantic.com, The Daily Beast, The Paris Review Daily, The LA Review of Books, The Rumpus, and numerous other publications. Brian keeps a column on parenting and gender politics for Babble, where he often writes about balancing his writing life with caring for his son. In print, Brian’s work has appeared in Glimmer Train Stories and Slice Literary Magazine.

Age of Kid: 4

At 29, I said goodbye to the girlfriend I’d been living with pretty much since college and moved to Shanghai to teach middle school English Language Arts. As a teacher in New York City, I worked six if not seven days a week, channeling my creative energies into crafting lessons, drama performances, and writing workshops for my students. Teaching in China required half that—no, less. My department head, the poet Frances Driscoll, encouraged me to loosen the hell up. She breezed in and out of the office on her own mysterious schedule, short red curls dewed with sweat, the sleeves on her oversized business shirts rolled up like she just came off a painting job. Her voice stained by cigarettes, Ms. Driscoll encouraged me to throw out plans and instruct by instinct. Stop trying to direct students from A to Z and instead inspire them to walk the path on their own. It was freeing.

With my extra time, I kept a blog. This began my practice of writing with any regularity. I had come to Shanghai in part to follow a dream laid by my high school infatuation with Henry Miller, hoping, like Miller in Paris, to mold myself by force of will into an artist. And to glean perspective through displacement, to run away in order to stop running. See, my girlfriend wanted to marry, start a family. I had never known my biological father, a fact my mom and adoptive dad dropped on me when I was about ten and which we didn’t discuss again till I brought it up at age twenty-one. This uncomfortable family secret, in part, led me to not want to be a parent myself. I dreamed of making words, not kids. But on the other side of the world I decided I could do both. So from the start my writing self and paternal self emerged from the same cauldron of experience intertwined, strands of a double helix.

I returned to Brooklyn, got affianced, and entered the MFA program at The New School for fiction. I met writers years younger who had been writing for years longer than me. I had, at this point, penned a handful of short stories, each of which in some way addressed the pull between domestic life and a more animal, base desire for unchecked consumption and destruction, a la dear old Henry Miller. Some afternoons I tutored, and only wrote in the morning. On ideal days, I wrote for three hours or so after waking, and then ran around the park and napped before writing a few hours more. At night, I read or went to class. Even when hung-over and exhausted from late nights carousing with writer friends, I crawled from my bed to write with bleary eyes. I hungered to catch up in experience with my peers, to put more words under my belt.

My son Felix was born a week after I graduated. I slid into caring for him full-time, figuring to write while he napped. Figuring—the key word. The kid had too much life in him to sleep the day away, and so I logged pages in pre-dawn sessions, or late at night. The discipline I formed in grad school out of insecurity served me well as a new dad. At this point I began blogging for The Huffington Post about being a stay-at-home parent, leaning on a friend from grad school to get my foot in the door, and writing to fill the father-sized hole I saw in their parenting section.

This was a purely practical decision. My wife is an educator at a non-profit cultural institution, so income matters. I fostered the foolish belief I could make a living from my pen — that remains to be seen — but at the very least I wanted to contribute something financially. HuffPo didn’t pay, but it led, as I had hoped, to gigs with parenting sites. Besides the money, I reaped the psychological benefits of being published, the satisfaction of knowing someone wanted my work, the gratification of readership. Parenting, especially a little baby, is a thankless, selfless task, and I worried about losing my creative self in the endeavor. Some of my old fear of fatherhood still existed, maybe always will.

In part, that fear motivated me to conduct interviews and write criticism — things I practiced in grad school exercises but never anticipated doing professionally — proof I hadn’t surrendered all of my brain to parenthood. My wonderful agent, Erin Harris at Folio Literary Management, more attuned to the themes of my fiction and the trends of my work than me, suggested I combine my interest in the literary and parenting. Together we came up with the idea of an anthology of authors, mostly novelists, writing about their experiences as fathers. That book, When I First Held You, will be out next spring from Berkley Books/Penguin.

This isn’t what I would ever have anticipated my life being like—far from it! A kid hater, uncomfortable with the idea of being a father at all, staying-at-home with my son? A wanna-be novelist writing mostly personal essays? Writers are a masochistic bunch, but come on. I have a rough morning with my son — he throws a tantrum and I yell back and next thing you know we’ve escalated, heads bashing one another, antlers locked in a struggle for dominance — and then I plop down at my laptop to pick the scab open for my readers. Sometimes documenting my thoughts and experiences helps me process shit, but other times it really sucks. Parenting can be the last thing in the world I want to write or talk about. Often, when out at readings or parties with colleagues and friends, I don’t much discuss Felix. I’d rather feed the other parts of my brain, and recharge my creative spirit. I think it’s essential for parents, especially creative ones, to maintain friendships with people who don’t have kids, so as not to fall into a world where kids are king.

What’s even harder? Switching gears to write about something other than parenting, shaking off feelings of failure or confusion in order to immerse myself in an essay, review, or—rare, but with growing frequency these days—fiction (I’m beginning a new novel, my fourth attempt). If I spend a blistering long summer morning with Felix at the playground, I want nothing more than to nap away my two hours of babysitting, which is what I get on most days. I don’t have that luxury. Nor do I have a lot of time to read for pleasure. (That’s the downside of turning your passion into an occupation.)

I escape these moods the same way I always have, whether confused in China or anxious in grad school: Shutting off the Internet. Retreating into solitude. Putting one goddamn word in front of the other. Sinking into the page like it’s a bed—an apt metaphor, because if things are going good there’s an automatic nature to writing and I feel like I do when coming up from a dream, emotions thrumming, senses alert, every part of me sensitive and alive. It can be hard to go back to the boy in those states. I just want to ride the high a little longer.
There’s something risky about parenting and writing, if done with a fully committed heart. You expose yourself in situations you can’t control. I sometimes think of Frances Driscoll, encouraging me to stop thinking so much and fucking do it. Your children don’t always come out the way you expect, and your professional life can’t be planned either, but that doesn’t mean you don’t feel proud of both, and happy, if surprised, by their development. Funny how I used to think parenting would be the death of my creative side, instead of its source of life.

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Posted in Brian Gresko, parenting, Uncategorized, Writer with kids, writing

[random]

1. The lovely folks at The Villager published an excerpt from The Revolution of Every Day in their recent “V Lit” section. You can read it here.

2. The Tin House Writer’s Workshop brought many wonderful authors to town, which meant many must-see readings, which meant I wasn’t home at night all that much in the past two weeks. Billy picked up the kid-related slack and was generally accommodating and wonderful as I traipsed around town like someone with actual freedom of movement. (I didn’t exactly remember how to do that, but I think I faked it pretty well.) Related to the workshop, I heard a lecture by Karen Russell, and went to readings by Tin House family members (labelmates!) Jodi Angel and Matthew Specktor, and a reading by workshop faculty Brandon Shimoda, Dorothea Lasky, and Maggie Nelson. (Maggie Nelson!) Unrelated to the workshop, I went to readings by the Other Kari Luna (yes. Another novelist Kari Luna, who lives here in Portland. Luckily we adore each other.) and my friend Susan Choi.

I’m reading Jodi’s You Only Get Letters from Jail (how great is that title?!) right now and you MUST read it. It is SO very good. Next on the pile, Matthew’s American Dream Machine, Susan’s My Education and Kari’s The Theory of Everything.

Related: I need to figure out a way to read in my sleep. Or give up sleep entirely.

3. I’ve accepted the position of Fiction Editor of Stealing Time Magazine. (Because I had too much free time.) It’s been a blast so far, and an honor. Sending my first acceptances to writers feels even better than I expected. It was one author’s first acceptance anywhere, so that was extra great.

4. I’m on a Kevin Sampsell binge. Just finished A Common Pornography (speaking of great titles) and moved on to Creamy Bullets. (He’s a friend and a Tin House labelmate. Check him out. I loved his memoir and I NEVER love memoir.)

5. It isn’t inaccurate to refer to fellow Tin House authors as labelmates. Check it out! We’re the Sub Pop of literature! (I claimed Mudhoney. Alexis Smith claimed Fleet Foxes. We agreed that Matthew Specktor is probably our Nirvana, but with a happier ending.)

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Writer, with Fetus: Christopher Higgs

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Christopher Higgs, author of: The Complete Works of Marvin K. Mooney (Sator Press)
Assembler of: ONE (Roof Books), with Vanessa Place and Blake Butler

 

What is your writing schedule like now, and how do you anticipate it will change when the baby is born?

My wife is 39 weeks and 1 day pregnant today, so I’m presently in a very strange liminal position, on the cusp, at the threshold: our little boy could emerge any minute now! This anxious anticipation has me frazzled. Getting work done, any kind of work, seems impossible right now. All I really want to do at this moment is either stare at my wife’s belly and send magical thought-rays to the baby urging him to exit his womb room; or, watch engaging television shows like The Killing or The Following, where I can just zone out and chill my eagerness.

Over the course of the pregnancy, though, my writing schedule changed dramatically. In the first trimester my wife got pretty sick, which required me to become sole house cleaner and meal maker, which I really enjoyed because it made me feel like I was actually contributing to this crazy process. During that time, at the end of most days I would get my wife set up for bed and then I would go out into the living room and watch the Lakers game. I think I watched all 72 games last year, but since we live in Florida they usually start around 10:30 PM, so I would put the game on and write intermittently until the game was over, and then I’d go to bed. When second trimester kicked in, the sky cleared and my wife’s physical and emotional situation improved tremendously. We both got a lot done in that period. I went back to my “normal” routine (i.e. before pregnancy), meaning I wrote for at least half of my day. Third trimester sort of reverted back to first trimester in terms of when I wrote, which is to say I would steal time late at night.

Anticipating the change when the baby arrives is tricky. On the one hand, I imagine I’ll want to do nothing but stare at him and play different kinds of music for him. On the other hand, I am finishing my Ph.D. and going on the job market this fall, so I’m going to have to find time to work. Everywhere I hear this idea that even the most disorganized writer will become organized out of necessity, that time will have such a premium none will be wasted. I’m really looking forward to that phenomenon, if it’s true. In the past I would describe myself as a professional procrastinator. It will be awesome if the baby helps me to focus.

Have you and your partner talked about making sure you each get time for your work/creative pursuits after the baby is born? What’s the plan?

We’re very privileged. Neither one of us has a 9 to 5 job. I’ll be teaching Tuesdays and Thursdays in the fall, and she’ll be teaching Mondays and Wednesdays, so we’ll be able to cover for one another during work hours. In terms of writing, the plan right now is for me to watch the baby in the mornings so she can work in her prime hours and then she’ll watch the baby in the afternoon during my more productive hours, and then the three of us will spend the evenings together until the baby goes to bed, and then it’ll be just me and my wife time. As I type this out, I realize how it sounds too good to be true, a little too perfect. Would be lovely if it works out this way, but experience has taught me not to put too much stock in plans. Chances are, we’ll have to learn a pattern we can’t even imagine at present. Luckily, we’re pretty good at making schedules.

Has your writing been affected by impending parenthood? How about your reading preferences?

Yes, both my reading and writing has been affected by impending parenthood. For one thing, it has sparked an amazing learning process. If you would have asked me two years ago to define a mucus plug, or to explain the benefits of breastfeeding versus bottle-feeding, I would not have had answers. But now I could talk your ear off about those things. There’s a whole world of information out there, which for me went untapped until I entered this situation. Over the past nine months I’ve read handfuls of parenting books from generalist classics like What To Expect… to more specialized editions like Harvey Karp’s quintessential cry-prevention guidebook Happiest Baby on the Block; probably most importantly, I read Husband-Coached Childbirth by Dr. Robert Bradley for our birthing class. I’ve watched hundreds of YouTube videos ranging from cloth diaper comparisons to nursery set up suggestions; I’ve looked at countless parenting websites and community boards to get ideas about everything from how to best handle vaccinations to the pros and cons of circumcision; I’ve spent hours reading information on the Consumer Reports website about which car seat, stroller, baby carrier, etc. ranks highest in safety; I’ve started paying attention to children’s books, a genre I had never before even glanced at, and have read reviews by experts and amateurs alike in hopes of determining which books we need to get our little guy.

All of this reading has inspired me to become more interested in writing nonfiction. However, try as I might, I can’t seem to write about this whole becoming a father thing. I had these grand plans of writing essays on the subject, but every time I sat down to try and put finger to keyboard, my brain froze. This interview is the most I’ve been able to say on the subject, despite being filled with exciting things I want to convey. Since my wife is committed to a natural childbirth, outside the hospital setting, with the aid of a midwife, I know our story is unusual and could not only be interesting to others but also might serve to inspire others to consider alternatives to the conventional method of childbirth in the U.S. So, I want to write about it. I feel like I need to write about it. Hopefully, maybe, answering these questions will help to open the floodgates and encourage me to write an essay or two about this wild experience.

Do you look at your published work differently now, knowing your child will read it one day?

No, I’m proud of my work and would be thrilled if he ever read any of it, but I figure he won’t be interested. I saw this picture of Tom Araya, the lead singer of the great thrash metal band Slayer, embarrassing his kids at the Grammy Awards last year. My first thought was, how on earth could someone as legitimately cool as Tom Araya ever be seen as anything but awesome? My second thought was, probably kids don’t care so much about the art their parents create, or how cool that art might make their parents to other people. To them, he’s just dad; and at some point I’m guessing all dads can be embarrassing.

Are you terrified? Admit it. You’re terrified. It’s okay to be terrified. What scares you most about this whole baby-on-the-way thing?

In terms of the immediate transition to fatherhood, I’m more excited than terrified, to be honest. I’m super stoked. I can’t wait for him to get here. Fear isn’t really on my radar. For the most part, I’m not a worrier. As a defense mechanism, I’m a researcher: someone who tries to learn as much as possible about a topic in order to alleviate the fear of the unknown. Plus, if life has taught me anything over the past 35 years it’s the futility of worrying about stuff. Whatever shall be shall be.

That said, I began reading this essay by Joanna Schroeder called “An Open Letter to My Son, Who Yesterday Was Called a ‘Nerd’” and I couldn’t finish it because I got so sad thinking about the eventuality of this situation five years down the road. So I guess for me the only thing that’s terrifying is the fact that sooner or later my son will have to mingle with other children.

You can ask one question of those writers with kids who’ve gone before you. What do you want to know?

What parenting books and websites have you found to be the most helpful?

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Posted in Christopher Higgs, parenting, Uncategorized, Writer with Fetus, Writer with kids, writing

Writer, with Kids: Yelizaveta P. Renfro

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Yelizaveta P. Renfro, author of a short story collection, A Catalogue of Everything in the World (Black Lawrence Press), and a collection of essays forthcoming from the University of New Mexico Press in 2014.

Ages of kids: 5 and 8.

What was your writing schedule (ideal and actual) like before kids, and how has that changed?
Before I had kids, I wasted inordinate amounts of time. I now look back on those giant swaths of time that I just frittered away—drinking one more cup of coffee, checking my email one more time, baking impromptu batches of lemon bars—and I am appalled. I can’t say that I ever had much of a writing schedule. Right before I had kids, I spent three years in an MFA program (while also working), so my writing got done mostly as assignments for my classes. If something was due for a workshop, then I would write. If I the mood struck me, then I would write. I was not particularly disciplined. Besides, I was in my twenties, so it seemed that I had all the time in the world.

Then I became pregnant and simultaneously started a Ph.D. program—not exactly the recommended way of doing things. My daughter was born halfway through my second semester. For three years, I worked on completing coursework, teaching, taking exams—all the things I needed to do in order to become ABD—and I wrote very little. Actually, it wasn’t until my second child was born that I figured out how to be a parent and a writer at the same time. Being ABD at that point also helped. All I needed to do was care for my kids and write. So when my son was an infant and my daughter was three, I wrote the majority of the stories that make up my short story collection. I simply became determined to get it done. I wrote during every moment I could. I wrote while the kids napped during the day and after they went to bed at night. I wrote while my newborn slept beside me on the bed, and I wrote while breastfeeding. I learned how to be efficient with the time that I had.

That has been my writing approach ever since. I write when I can. Unfortunately, I still don’t have a regular writing schedule. Some days, I don’t write at all—or if I do write, it’s a matter of jotting down a sentence fragment or two in a notebook. Sometimes, I grade papers all day. Sometimes, I am with my kids all day. On other days, I get the luxury of devoting several hours to my writing. Having kids has certainly taught me one important lesson: I don’t have all the time in the world. “There is no perfect time to write,” says Barbara Kingsolver. “There’s only now.”

How do you remain present for your family even when you’re sunk deeply into a current project?
We live in a messy house. The only time our house is ever in order is when we are trying to sell it (and we’ve bought and sold more houses than I care to remember). Sometimes, I feel guilty about the disorder, but the guilt always passes. My own mother was never a great housekeeper and detested housework. In our household my parents were much more likely to be reading than cleaning. My mother was ready to read a book to me any time of the day or night, and the dishes could always wait until later. I probably took on many of her relaxed housekeeping habits, but I also learned from her that reading and writing are more important than anything else that we might be doing.

This is a roundabout way of approaching this question, I know, but the point is this—children learn more from your actions, day to day, than they do from so-called “quality time” or regular doses of advice. By seeing me living my life as a writer and a reader, my children are, I hope, learning about priorities, about what is important. At the same time, I want them to know that they are important. So I still do most of my writing when my children are asleep or at school. There are times, however, when they play or read while I am writing. They know to be quiet and to (mostly) leave me alone. There are other times when I help them with their own writing, or we take our nature journals out in the field to write and draw, or we work on photography or art, or I drop everything to read to them—and in these ways, I am present with them while still feeding, in small ways, my reading and writing life. And my husband and I have made other choices—for example, we don’t own a television—that encourage all of us to be present when we are together.

Are there times I am with my kids when my mind is on my current writing project? Of course. But I simply keep a notepad close at hand, and if something strikes me, I jot it down. The kids are used to this idiosyncrasy of mine. In fact, my daughter has begun to do the same thing. “I need to write down my idea before I forget it,” she’ll say, echoing word for word something she’s heard me say probably hundreds of times. They understand that this is the way I work. Just as they understand that we read and write before we do anything else.

So yes, the kitchen floor really needs mopping, and I’ll get to it eventually, but first, we’re going to read a good book.

How has parenthood changed the work itself, if at all?
My experiences becoming and being a parent are a rich source of material. Yes, I write much more about having kids and about raising kids than I used to, simply because it is currently a central part of my life and because I have those experiences to draw from. I would not have written the majority of the stories in my short story collection or the majority of the essays in my essay collection if I had not had kids. I can’t even tell you what kinds of writing I’d be doing now if I hadn’t become a parent eight years ago, because having a first child is such a profound change—probably the most wrenching transformation that many of us will ever experience. Sometimes, I hardly recognize the person I used to be before having kids. And it isn’t a change that happens overnight—bam, the baby’s born, and you’re suddenly a full-blown parent with a wise, serene smile on your face. No, it’s more like a catastrophe, a disaster—a sudden maelstrom of sleep deprivation, crying, diapers, feeding, despair, insecurity, doubt, forgetfulness, exhaustion. You can’t do any of the normal things you’re used to doing at the normal times. In fact, it seems that you’re no longer in control of your own life—you can’t drink that leisurely cup of coffee or sleep in or watch an entire movie or even take a shower. You’re held captive by a squalling newborn—and at first you miss your old life, the person you used to be.

Like all transformations, it’s painful, and it lasts a lifetime—I have not yet emerged from the maelstrom. I do not yet have a serene smile on my face. But gradually, you get a little more sleep, and one day the child weans, and one day you change your last diaper, and you see that what has happened to you—what is still happening to you—has changed you for the better, has widened your perspective, has stretched you in ways that nothing else could, even while robbing you of sleep, time, energy. And the person that you missed, the person you clung to and desperately wanted back, is like a stranger to you now, and you’re grateful to be who you are. So this condition called parenthood that happened to me eight years ago necessarily infuses all of my writing in ways that I can’t even begin to express. I am a mother forever.

What is the most challenging aspect of being a working artist and a parent?
Time and money. Time, because sometimes it feels that every moment I’m writing is a moment stolen from my kids. And money, because most of the writing I do doesn’t pay the bills. These are neither new nor unique challenges. In 1929, Virginia Woolf wrote that a woman writer needs “a room of one’s own” in order to be successful. What this room stands for, besides the obvious physical space necessary for doing work, is the financial independence and uninterrupted time required to seriously pursue writing—or any other artistic endeavor. The room stands for space—physical, yes, but also psychological, emotional, financial. And children don’t give you a lot of space—of any type. So between the time I spend teaching and the time I spend parenting, there isn’t a lot of time left over for the writing. I am constantly working to make time, to carve it out of my day, a sliver here, a sliver there. It isn’t easy, and I don’t always succeed. But the need is always there, a persistent nagging feeling. You must write. You must write.

Do you have any advice for other writers with kids or who plan to have them?
I have heard variations on the same advice—something along the lines of, if you want to be a writer, don’t have kids, or sometimes, limit yourself to just one kid—more times than I can count. This is completely wrong. Virginia Woolf imagines an eighty-year-old woman, who, when asked about her life, remembers nothing: “For all the dinners are cooked; the plates and cups washed; the children set to school and gone out into the world. Nothing remains of it all. All has vanished. No biography or history has a word to say about it. And the novels, without meaning to, inevitably lie. All these infinitely obscure lives remain to be recorded.” But these lives of mothers, of parents, need not be obscure, unrecorded. We need to hear these voices, these stories of parenthood. I mean, we are busy doing the most important work in the world—creating the future members of the human race. We are molding the future citizens of the world, and this deserves to be written about; this needs to be written about.

Even when your day is filled with play dates and tantrums and potty training and story time and breastfeeding and housework—write about it. It’s important. It really is. And don’t ever let anyone tell you the work you do isn’t important—the writing work or the parenting work. We need to stop belittling parenting as some mindless and meaningless labor, and we need to stop apologizing for our writing, stop calling it just a hobby, something that we just dabble in during our so-called “spare time” (as if such a thing existed). You might not ever earn a cent from being a parent or being a writer, but if you remind yourself, day in and day out, that what you are doing is the most important work in the world, you will never lose the very human impetus that drives us to these acts of extraordinary creativity.

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Posted in parenting, Writer with kids, writing, Yelizaveta P. Renfro

Writer, with Kids: Celeste Ng

photo by Kevin Day

photo by Kevin Day

Celeste Ng, author of Everything I Never Told You (debut novel, forthcoming spring 2014, Penguin Press)
Age of kids: one son, 2 ¾ years old

What was your writing schedule (ideal and actual) like before kids, and how has that changed?

Before I had kids, I wrote the way lions eat: not at all for days or sometimes weeks at a time, then in 6- or 8-hour binges that lasted long into the night. Each morning I would read over what I’d last written and then read books and blogs, eavesdrop in coffee shops, stalk people on Facebook—you know, research. Late at night, I would lie awake thinking about my characters and the plot problems I was currently facing. This pattern would go on until eventually insight struck—usually in the wee small hours—and I’d tiptoe into the bathroom so as not to wake my husband, scribble some notes on scrap paper, and head back to bed. Then I’d get up in the morning and write and write and write until I hit another wall. Repeat.

Once my son was born, of course, that kind of schedule was no longer possible. Now I don’t have the luxury of waiting to get “inspired”—and I don’t think there’s a parent alive who gets 6 uninterrupted hours to do anything! These days, my schedule is much more regimented; it has to be. When my son is at preschool, I have to work because it’s the only time I have: I can’t stay up late anymore because I’ll be exhausted the next morning, and exhaustion plus toddler is a recipe for disaster. So I try to remind myself that I’m paying for work time, and that helps me get (a little more) focused. After a lot of experimenting, this is the current working system:

At 8:30 my husband takes my son to preschool, and I get a cup of tea and am sitting at my computer by 8:35. I answer whatever emails are pressing, maybe send a tweet or two, and then get to work. Usually half the battle is just getting myself to look at the story again, so I’ve set up my computer to open the current file automatically when it boots up—when it’s right there in front of me, it’s easier to get started. To further trick myself into working, I tell myself I just have to read the story over, and usually by the time I’m a few pages in, I’m going, “Hm, okay, I can make that better” or “Oh yeah, I remember where I was going with that” or “Oooh, I know what happens next!” Or sometimes, it’s “Okay, that HAS to go”—trimming off deadwood and other bad writing is work, too.

I work until 11:40, save what I’m doing, and pick up my son at 11:45, and we have lunch. He doesn’t nap any more, but he rests in his room for an hour or two while I respond to emails or read (because reading is also work, for a writer). Then once my son gets up, I’m done working for the day. If I have to finish something, I sometimes write a bit more after we’ve had dinner and put our son to bed, but usually I just hang out with my husband. I think that downtime is important, both for writing—you need give your brain some fallow time—and for your relationships.

How do you remain present for your family even when you’re sunk deep into a current project?

This has been one of the things I struggle with most. It’s really, really hard to step away from the story or the scene that you’re immersed in. When I used to write for 6 or 8 hours straight, I was a zombie when I came out of my office, my brain was so fried. I needed a good night’s sleep and some serious goofing-off time—like a couple hours watching TV or shopping online—before I could really function like a normal person again. But you can’t really do that when you’re taking care of kids, even with the most helpful and involved partner. Sometimes I wish my brain worked like my iPhone, where I can switch from one app to another, and come back to the first app and find everything just where I left it.

So this is a problem I’m still wrestling with, but some things that have helped are:

(1) Write notes to yourself. When I stop working, I write a little to-do list about what I want to do the next day, like “Finish scene at liquor store” or “Description of the house comes next.” This reassures me that it’s okay to stop working for now—I won’t lose my train of thought or that image I want to work in (or at least I’m less likely to). And plus, I won’t be starting from zero next time I come to work. This is especially helpful on Mondays, when I haven’t looked at my pages since Friday.

And that brings me to (2), which is:

(2) Think of writing as a job. Doctors treat patients all day, but when they come home, they’re off duty: they’re not rounding up their family members to take their blood pressures. The same is (mostly) true of lawyers, salespeople, practically every other profession; work stays at work, and when you come home, you’re done. It doesn’t work that way for writers and other creative artists, of course: we’re always working even when we’re not at the keyboard. But I set aside “off duty” time: when my son is home in the afternoons, in the evenings when my husband and I hang out, and on the weekends. I do my best to really write during my work time, so that I feel less bad about not writing the rest of the time. In the back of my mind I’m still always thinking about my novel or story, but I try to be present mentally, to have that little membrane dividing “work time” and “off hours.” And actually, I often come up with a lot of ideas during those “off hours”—that’s when I’m out doing things, noticing stuff, and talking to people, and sometimes that’s just what you need to get your writing going the next time you sit down to work.

How has parenthood changed the work itself, if at all?

There’s that old saying that the job of the writer is to make the familiar unfamiliar, and to make the unfamiliar familiar. That’s almost a perfect description of parenting, too. For a young child, everything is unfamiliar: they’ve never heard thunder before, or eaten a tomatoes, or petted a dog, or seen a giraffe. (My son’s head whipped around the first time we went to the zoo; he was clearly thinking, “What the heck is THAT?”) Spending time with a toddler can be an amazing education for a writer; you get to see all this familiar stuff through fresh eyes as your child sees it for the first time. And, at the same time, your job as a parent is to try and explain that new world to your kid, to put things in terms they understand. I find myself saying things like, “Okay, this is a muffin, which is kind of like cake, but it also has blueberries in it,” or “A hill is like a really, really big mountain that’s made of rocks.” That’s also pretty great practice for writing: finding ways to describe the unfamiliar.

Becoming a parent has changed the subject of my work a bit, too. I’d always written about parent-child relationships in my fiction—often the moments when children realized their parents were vulnerable or flawed. I didn’t realize most of these stories were from the point of view of the child until I became a parent myself. Now I’m more aware of the flip side of that parent-child relationship, so I’m writing stories about parents who realize they are not totally adults themselves, parents who are surprised by flashes of insight and wisdom in their children—you get the idea. One of the major themes of Everything I Never Told You is the expectations parents have for their children, and the pressures children feel to be just like—or completely different from—their parents.

What is the most challenging aspect of being a working artist and a parent?

Right now, it’s time management. There just aren’t enough hours in the day for everything. I have been nagging a good friend—a geneticist—to get to work on making us some clones, and at another friend—a physicist—to work on time travel. Until they get that figured out, though, there will just always be a little less writing time, a little less downtime, and a little less sleep time than I want and need. Sometimes a lot less.

Do you have any advice to other writers with kids or who plan to have them?

When I had my son, my teacher Peter Ho Davies told me, “Don’t underestimate how much writing you can get done in 20 minutes.” He told me that he wrote much of his novel—which was longlisted for the Booker Prize—in 20-minute snatches while his then-infant son was napping. I’ve yet to master the 20-minute work period, but I took his larger meaning to heart: kids and writing can coexist.

There have been a lot of prescriptions lately about how many kids writers should have. If you want to be a writer, don’t have kids! Okay, you can have kids, but have only one! Try and ignore all that. If you want kids, have them. You will find a way to write. Some people have sitters for a couple hours a week, some have daycare, some take weekend writing vacations, some stay up late after the kids go to sleep, some get up early before the kids wake up, some wait until their kids are in school—and some write holding babies in their laps! A good friend of mine took turns with her husband, who also worked at home: she wrote for 15 minutes while he minded the baby, then he worked for 15 minutes while she minded the baby, back and forth, all day. I don’t know that that would work for everyone, but the point is: have faith in your writing. You will find a way to get it done.

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Posted in Celeste Ng, parenting, Writer with kids, writing

My book traveled to France without me

I think it’s having a good time.
laurie hay

(Photo is of the wonderful Laurie Mittelmann, co-director of the Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space)

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Writer, with Kids: Sarah Gilbert

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Sarah Gilbert, author of essays in the Water~Stone Review, Oregon Humanities, Stealing Time Magazine and the upcoming anthology from Creative Nonfiction, “True Stories of the Sultry South and Women Behaving Badly.”

 
Sliding into Place: on writing and mothering

I wrote before I was a mother but I was not a writer. Becoming a mother slid the bar into place, clicked everything together, finished me.

I write this without wanting to say that I could not have been a writer without becoming a mother; I’m sure it would have still come together eventually. But for me it was the nudge — or, rather, the push off the pier into deep, cold water — that forced me too, finally, flail my arms and cough until I could swim.

What it was about mothering was that I was forced first, before I became a mother, to consider my relationships through a colder, harder light: this is not about me. This is about all the people who depend on me, or might someday. This is about what influence I am making or am not making. Then after I became a mother I was forced to work on myself. To think and rethink and rethink my assumptions and my views of the world and my defenses of my behaviors until I was not following any prescription; I was not subscribing to any philosophy.

Being a mother had me re-think what faith means, what love means, and how narrow are those loves I’d learned as a student (eros, philos, agape), how I felt about society and my place in it and success and my definition of it.
I became someone better as a mother in that I became someone who had to look at herself over, and over, and over again, and see if it was the self she wanted re-created in values and mannerisms and relationship style. I learned that I did not care about nose-picking and I did not care about back-talking and even swearing is not that big a deal, but I did care about sighing.

My mother sighs. I notice this when I ask her something hard, like if it’s ok if I go for a run, now, like if she can take care of my children for a few days. And I told my oldest, now almost eleven, to remind me not to sigh. I wonder how many sighs I’ve heard; I wonder how many I’ve given.

I have recently begun working through The Artist’s Way, and so often I come to the exercises or ideas for “dates” and realize how much of this I have already done. I pay attention, not just for my own writing, but to tell the stories to my children, to look and point up at the sky at the great blue heron, flapping slow and low right over our heads as we bike up the street and landing on a neighbor’s roof. We stop and point and look for other people stopping and pointing, too, but they are driving, they are getting gas, they are on their phones.

I consider one of my greatest achievements to be this: my boys, running to the window in the evening, saying, “LOOK! Look at the sunset! It’s BEAUTIFUL!”

In my morning pages I copy down quote from the latest mother/writer controversy, this one (as Rebecca Mead writes in the New Yorker blog) “bait-titled ‘The Secret to Being Both a Successful Writer and a Mother – Have Just One Kid.’” She goes on to write that, as both Jane Smiley and Zadie Smith point out, “the key – nothing so occult as a secret – to their ability to marry motherhood and writing has been adequate child care.” Is even that it? Maybe the secret is more like, “be the sort of person who can marry motherhood and writing.” In my life it is hard, but not terribly hard, and I have three boys, and a husband whose military service keeps him away from home for much of the last several years, and my three boys have behavioral challenges that stress me to the bending-but-not-quite-breaking point, and I have been more productive these past three years than any time in my life. Somehow it just works for me. Maybe I have patience or maybe (as I assume Jane, and Zadie, and Marilynne Robinson, and hundreds of other women with multiple children and admirable writing careers) I just want to badly enough, I want to have both children and writing, I, as the sentimental saying goes, always have love enough for one more.

I perseverate on Lauren Sandler’s money quote, from Alice Walker: “with one you can move. With more than one you’re a sitting duck.” Pair this with Joan Didion’s daughter Quintana’s “mom’s rules”: “Brush your teeth, brush your hair, shush I’m working.” Both of these do not seem either motherly, or as Sandler describes it, “momish.” Both of these seem cold and even cruel.

What all this is, is not an argument so much for having a certain number of children – or, as Rebecca Mead, one child and three step-sons – but for working uninterrupted. Perhaps there is a style of work that I – like Katie Roiphe, with her “messy life” – claim. That of loving, and living, intensely and chaotically. Of coming upon my writing in the midst of a jumble of my children’s artwork and wrestling. Of exuberantly tumbling and giggling with my boys, falling asleep too late with them, waking late and in the quiet of our morning chaos see through my life like – something, a telescope or a microscope or even a prism – and find the bits I want to fictionalize and the others I want to commit to memoir. To commit to this essay.

Adequate childcare? Can I call it that? Certainly, I spend my hard-earned dollars writing about finance on five hours of babysitting a week (for writers’ group). I let my son watch his brothers while I go to the coffeeshop nearby to write morning pages or to have an editorial meeting. But my most productive times are at my computer in the dining room or in my bedroom, with children all over. With Monroe pulling on my arm – “mom, go run!” he says, wanting to play Minecraft on my laptop – with Everett hopping nearby shouting, “snacks snacks snacks snacks snacks!”

The thing is I write best in the middle of it.

The thing is, I produce as much because of my children as in spite of them. Is it that they clarify me? Is it that they inspire me? Is it that they (prosaically) give me material?

I write off their graphic novels and art supplies and coffee shop snacks as expenses. I write about the hardest things with them literally at my elbow. My essay about parenting them without my husband nearby won an award and major accolades. Another essay, about my abusive ex-boyfriend, will be published in a book this fall; I wrote it in bed, my oldest, who has anxiety, sleeping badly next to me. I write among my children and I write because of my children and – I know it’s not for everyone but – it works, like falling into place, for me.

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Posted in parenting, Sarah Gilbert, Writer with kids, writing

Life like I thought it would be

I went to a reading last night and did something potentially foolish: I brought the entire family with me. Two kids, ages seven and three, at a literary reading. What could possibly go wrong, yeah?

The event listing read: “If you are old and haggard, we promise it’s not a late night. And if you have kids, we promise they are welcome. Ours will be there.” How does an old, haggard mom pass up an opportunity like that? It would be a chance for us to do something as a family, and for the kids to understand what it is I’m doing when I rush off after dinner some nights to “go to a reading.” And Vanessa Veselka would be reading from her novel-in-progress, and only a fool passes up a chance to hear something like that. So I fed everyone, got them reasonably cleaned up, and brought the crew to Old Town.

kids reading

The kids (and even Billy!) listened attentively to the first two readers, Jessica Kelso and Dan DeWeese. Kiddo was especially pleased because Kelso said “shit” and “boobs.”

And then… AND THEN…there was music before Vanessa was to read. Stefan Jecusco, specifically, and I was rather excited about that. Ah, but the event listing had promised “and mysterious others.” The mysterious other?

Jolie Holland. Yep. I have only blurry evidence, because it didn’t feel like a “take a picture of the stage” kind of a night, if you know what I mean. There was an intimate, non-social-media feel to it, which was lovely. But come on. Jolie Holland. I had to sneak one quick photo. (This is also my excuse for having no photos of the writers for you. I should have at least grabbed a quick shot of Vanessa as she paced the stage, mic in hand.)

blurry jolie

And they played. And it was awesome. Kiddo, in particular, was totally absorbed. They played again after Vanessa read, and Kiddo didn’t want to leave. We ended up staying until ten, just to let him listen to the music a while longer.

kids reading2

The excerpts Vanessa read from her novel-in-progress were, unsurprisingly, excellent. (You HAVE read Zazen, right?)

And my darling labelmate Alexis Smith was there, so we got to hang out and plot playdates with the kids, and Heather Hawksford (who took my author photo) was there (and shared her cookie with Kiddo, so now he loves her), and I hadn’t seen Vanessa face-to-face in possibly more than a year, so that was awesome, and Kari Luna was there in spirit but home sick the poor sweet woman (her presence would have probably pushed the whole night into overwhelmingly over-the-top too good, so it’s just as well)… and…and…

See…usually when I go out to a reading and it’s really good, like last night was, I feel like another piece of my pre-kids life clicks back into place. Which feels nice, of course. It’s satisfying to be reminded of my identity apart from them. But it’s nostalgia. Last night, what I felt click into place was a glimpse of how our life can be as the kids get older. We can go out in the evening and hear people read and listen to great music and be together as a family. I can involve the family in this part of my life, and show them some of the things that are possible with words and music and images and their brains.

This is exactly what I want our life to be. Not every week, of course. But to be able to bring my family to a reading, to know the people reading, to know the other writers who are there to listen, to be part of the literary community here in Portland in that way. And then to have the kids be into it, to really engage with what’s going on and be excited by it… And then…you know…Jolie Holland walks in.

We got home close to 10:30pm and all piled into the “big bed” together and laughed and sang and told jokes until much too late. Because sometimes staying out way too late on a summer night and then staying up way later together is exactly the right thing to do.

Oh–and this happened:

pool

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Writer, with Kids: Steve Edwards

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Steve Edwards, author of: Breaking into the Backcountry, a memoir about his seven months of solitude in southern Oregon’s Rogue River canyon

Age of Kid: He’ll be four this summer

 

What was your writing schedule (ideal and actual) like before kids, and how has that changed?

Before we had our son almost four years ago, I was a grad student and then a lecturer—and because I didn’t have the distractions of a real job or money, I usually wrote from eight in the morning until noon, seven days a week. When we got pregnant, I knew things would have to change. My wife (and those thick Dr. Sears baby books) all reassured me, however, that babies slept eighteen hours a day. I figured if I couldn’t find time to write in an eighteen hour window, I shouldn’t call myself a writer.

Unfortunately, our story got more complicated. I’ll spare you the gritty details but our son had medical issues (which went undiagnosed), and he spent most of his earliest days in red-faced agony. We thought at first it was colic. Then he blasted through three, six, nine and twelve months, and was still a screechy mess. Not only did he never sleep eighteen hours in a day, he didn’t even sleep the night until his third birthday. In the meantime, the economy tanked, and my wife and I both were under- and then unemployed. We had a sick kid and were weeks away—still surprises me to say this—from homelessness. My daily writing sank to the bottom of a long list of priorities.

The good news is that our little guy finally got some competent medical intervention, and my wife and I both somehow found full-time work to pay the bills. Our family has begun to heal, and I’m writing again a couple mornings a week. Life is insanely more difficult than I thought it would be when we started out—partly because now we’re approaching public school bureaucracy and our son requires OT, PT, and speech and language therapy (and all of it is a giant time- and soul-suck). But I’m filled with gratitude these days because it’s so much better than it was. I’ll take my two mornings a week!

 

How do you remain present for your family even when you’re sunk deeply into a current project—say in the sticky middle of a novel’s first draft?

I schedule half an hour, before and after each writing session, for weeping. I say this jokingly but it’s not a bad idea!

Honestly, though, I don’t know. I have a hard time remaining present. Period. Part of the challenge for me is keeping my ego in check. The sun doesn’t rise and set by the writing I do, you know? Yes, it’s important that I write—for my sanity, and to a certain extent for career advancement and our family’s well-being. But I have to really remind myself: it’s just one part of a much larger picture.

I try to practice the art of compartmentalization. To only write when writing. I like to think that if there’s a leap of faith involved in sitting down to work on a book, there’s also a leap of faith in stepping away from it when the day’s writing is done. Maybe in the leaving and coming back something vital happens.

I’m reminded of a story I heard on This American Life a few years back. There was this food factory that made hotdogs, and in the process of moving from their old facility to a brand new one, something happened to the taste of the dogs. The ingredients were exactly the same but the hotdogs just tasted different. Took them months to finally figure out what happened. In the new facility, the process of hotdog making had been streamlined—all inefficiencies had been done away with. Turns out that at the old facility, when the hotdogs came off the conveyor belt, or whatever it was, one guy’s job was to cart them across the building to where they needed to be next. Well, this guy was a talker and he’d take his sweet time carting the hotdogs around the building. In the meantime, the meat and the casings and whatnot had time to temper—it slightly changed their chemistry and gave the hotdogs the snap they were supposedly famous for.

Spending time with my family—enjoying them, listening and supporting them, putting them first? That’s how I push my cart of hotdogs.

 

How has parenthood changed the work itself, if at all?

Considering what we’ve been through with the intensity of taking care of a sick child and having money woes, I think the narratives I write now have become far less linear. I used to tell a story beginning to end—let everything develop scenically. Now I’m much more interested in the strange push-pull between how time and memory work, and how to represent that on the page.

When our kid was so sick, one moment my mind would be in the distant future, imagining myself writing again or alone and exploring some far-flung place. Then I’d be holding him at one, two, three in the morning, trying to comfort him as he cried and get him back to sleep. Then back in bed, in the quiet afterward and jacked-up on adrenaline, I’d remember something my mother once said to me or something I did when I was little. I’d see the whole thing crystal clear.

So I’m working on stories—flash fictions, mostly—that flicker between past, present and future. That take ordinary moments, like a dad getting up in the night to comfort his kid, and de-familiarize them. Make them strange.

 

What is the most challenging aspect of being a working artist and a parent?

Not having time enough for either your art or your kid, and feeling as though the two are at odds—and the anxiety and massive guilt provoked by choosing, moment to moment, how to strike a balance you can live with.

 

Do you have any advice for other writers with kids or who plan to have them?

I think of that Stanley Kunitz poem “The Layers” when he says, “I have walked through many lives,/ some of them my own…” Because there’s such a strangeness to becoming a parent—it’s a new you, and it’s also a return to your own childhood and earliest days. And the world really does look different as a parent. And though I myself suck at it, all this change, risk, failure, joy is to be embraced. I think it has to be if you’re going to tell stories that matter—because how else could you know? But in terms of real advice, I’ll let the end of Kunitz’s poem speak for me: Live in the layers.

In my darkest night,
when the moon was covered
and I roamed through wreckage,
a nimbus-clouded voice
directed me: “Live in the layers,
not on the litter.” Though I lack the art
to decipher it,
no doubt the next chapter
in my book of transformations
is already written.
I am not done with my changes.

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Posted in parenting, Writer with kids, writing

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