I’ve spent a lot of time thinking to myself: what’s it all about, Mary? What’s the point of this blog, because now that I am at the computer and tapping out the contents of post number ONE THOUSAND (yes, really!) I should have an idea of what it is I’m trying to accomplish besides getting something out of my system.
Having a platform for expression is fine. But it’s also an opportunity. Am I a mommy blogger? A women’s blogger? A family blogger? Recipes, food, families, life in general, struggling to balance career and creativity? What is the point of this? Because if a blogger can’t figure out the point of her life, she can’t figure out the purpose of her writing, and if that’s the case, then what the hell business does she have writing every day?
I’m not on the map in the blog world. I don’t have a goal of exposing corruption, or getting people to eat better food or raise the minimum wage or create some new policy and affect public opinion. I’m intelligent but not wired that way.
My goal in life has always been to help people. To live a decent life that brings illumination to people and makes the way a little straighter, the load a little lighter, the going a little easier. It’s not much. I just want life to be better for people for having met me. I just want to love people and provide a piece of the universe, a little space that makes them forget for a time that things out there are so hard.
When I was a teen, there were times of chaos and fear and loathing that felt so impossible to overcome that life was untenable. I’ve been trapped in those times occasionally throughout the years, and I always managed to find my way out through a combination of pulling myself up and being pulled by others. What I’m trying to say is that none of us can get through this stuff alone. If someone reads me every day and something I say can help them find their way through something untenable, then I am happy to continue this.
If I write something entertaining and it illuminates the way for a while, that’s great. If I share a struggle and someone says “Hey, that’s what I’m dealing with,” then that’s great.
At its heart, this blog is for me to express myself, get better as a writer and practice the discipline of consistently putting down what’s on my mind. But I could do that in a journal, or on the computer without publishing it online. By making it available publicly, I’m holding myself accountable. I don’t flatter myself that anyone depends on what I write. But now I’m part of a community of writers, readers, and people who have shared their lives online. I’ve learned from the blogs I read and I hope to God I’ve been able to touch others with what I have shared.
My life is not a box with perfectly filed categories. I can’t just take one category and blog about it. There are those who can and do compartmentalize what they believe and share only a portion. But my life is made up of a lot of ingredients: family, friends, my present life and my past. Nothing is separate from anything else. You may be an appetizer or a perfectly presented entrée with garnish and white space on the plate between foods. You may be a palate cleanser, a sorbet in a goblet. Me? I’m stew. I’m a tasty mess that might not always be pretty to look at, but I feed you, I fill you up and I’m made up of a thousand ingredients that have combined to make something comforting. If you want to get all metaphorical, you could use my argument to say I’m sausage: a bunch of leftovers stuffed into an unappetizing shell in a process nobody likes to see, but the finished product isn’t half bad if you don’t examine it too closely. Whatever. I’m what I am because of who I’ve been. I’m the average of the people with whom I’ve spent my life and I write about that life because I don’t know anything else.
I used to imagine myself teaching in a university. I used to think about knowing everything in the books I would have on a shelf, being an expert in literature or writing or poetry. I would imagine greeting students in a classroom, an academic with the respect of her students. I never got there, and at long last I’m okay with it. I fell in love, fell into life, fell apart, fell into jobs, fell into parenthood….I missed the mark I had set for myself and instead of regret, I have learned to like this life I have.
A blogger I love and admire recently wrote about the trajectory of her life and the impact of the disappointments and pain she had suffered. She wrote that instead of learning to survive, she learned to grow wild.
Think about that for a minute: plan out your life and despite your best efforts, you get something different. Is that failure? No – but it’s hard. And instead of looking at it as “Well, I guess I just need to make do and get through it,” you can think of it as an opportunity to be where you are and grow where you weren’t expected to. Don’t just survive. Grow wild.
And that…THAT is what this blog is about. Families and their aftermath. Being who you are because of and in spite of where you’ve come from. You can be an only child or one of twelve. You can be childless or child-free or a parent or an aunt or uncle. You can be estranged from your parents, orphaned, adopted, abandoned, a caregiver or someone unmoored from all family obligations. But everyone comes from someone else and we are all marked by that.
From the sacred to the profane, the minute to the divine—what we experience can resonate with others. That’s why I’m here. I could watch my daughter fly a kite or see a dead tree and find something in it that reminds me of something else, and it usually comes back to family. Whether it is a time of unmitigated bleakness or incandescent joy, I know how I got there and I want others to know about it.
Thank you for reading. Thank you for making the world a little smaller. Thank you for telling me about your lives, because I am better for it. I hope you can say the same.
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