Monday, December 7, 2009

Work In Progress

Ugh. Last time was so bad I think I scared myself off. Remind me never to write a bad second novel if I ever actually publish a first one; I"m not sure I can tolerate the self-loathing. But now, now--I begin again, feeling like a Democratic president trying valiantly to pass a health care bill or get Israel and Palestine to sit down to a nice brisket, or falafel, and just talk it out. Actually, I feel a lot better than that, for no good reason. Have I mentioned I'm about to turn forty? Yes. And although I'm not exactly doing back flips on mattresses like the cast of Glee (a reference only 1% of you, if you still exist, will actually get), I'm not dreading it in quite the way I expected to.

I will admit that back in the day, those days when I could drink more than a glass-and-a-half of wine without falling asleep mid-conversation, those days when I occasionally went for a run, those days when I knew--and not in a purely nostalgic way--that movies were also shown in real theaters on big screens with surround sound, I used to think forty sounded impossibly old. And then everyone else around me either was forty or almost there, like me, and it suddenly seemed still kind of like the beginning of things--the beginning of the middle of things, anyway, and I didn't mind the thought so much, not the way I had hysterically met the age of ten: that fateful move to two-digit numbers.

I think it must be said, and if you are reading this it is pretty likely you have at the very least met me and more likely know me well, that thirty-nine has been, in so many ways, one of the more challenging years of my life. Although the particulars of everyone's thirty-nine are unique, I suspect that when viewed through a long lens, perhaps from the sager (oh, I hold out hope) vantage point of fifty, mine will seem part and parcel of what happens to many of us at around this age, or rather stage in life, when suddenly the opening credits are firmly behind us, the characters have for the most part been established, and the plot is in motion, for better or worse. What then? we say, or I do. What now?

But this isn't what I thought it would be like, I sometimes find myself whimpering to myself (not in a crazy out-of-body way but in a pathetic, feeling-sorry-for-myself way), and I'm not even really sure what "it" is, although I guess in a vague way it means my entire existence. And it's not that the particulars of my thirty-nine are even that distinctive or necessarily bad--in fact many of them, such as my children, are in so many ways even better than I ever could have imagined, but that is such a simplistic thing to say when of course their sheer existence is a piece of what I mean: my life, the whole, messy, disobedient, unraveling but only within the confines, hilarious, exhausting, frustrating, incomprehensible, slippery, elusive, did I say messy?, whole of it.

What did I think it would be like? I'm not sure I ever thought much about it, although in fifth grade my best friend and I had an elaborate vision of our adult lives that involved pink taffeta dresses and Mercedes sedans, which I think says vastly more about our upper middle class suburban surroundings and the very early eighties than it does about my vision for my life.

I guess I am thinking now, right now, in this instant, as I sit at my computer at almost midnight on the Monday before I turn forty, on an evening before I will get up at 6:30 with my two little girls to give them breakfast (ponytails made while seated on stools at the counter, please finish your milk, Annika turning on the same CD over and over to hear the "Mama song," where's the backpack? where's the permission slip? downstairs with my splashing cup of coffee to put Lily on the bus), that what needs to happen for me to meet forty with any sense of equanimity, is for me to tell myself, and to believe it, that the story is not yet written, that what matters is to keep writing it, that often the best writing happens when you don't know just exactly what you are going to say.

So here I go, with forty in mind. Let me keep writing. I must.

6 comments:

Liza said...

Oh Amy. Happy birthday. A milestone of course, but once you are over it there's always another one rising ahead. So I'll tell you this right now. Forty is OK, fifty is too. Just keep digging into your soul, and the pieces of the story will percolate up, surprising and delighting you. Remain open to them, and no matter what birthday arrives, you'll find you'll continue to grow.

Christie said...

I got the Glee reference! As far as Im concerned, it's the best worst-written show on TV (don't get me started on my love/hate relationship with it.)

Anyway, I agree with you that life is meant to be constantly written. And the ending is far from set in stone.

Happy Birthday (a few days in advance)! May it be a happy and festive one.

Run Past Toad said...

Happy 40 Amy.

Glee, I hate to love it.

Great blog.

sheila said...

This is soooo wonderful Amy! I was hoping that you would write about turning 40, and here it is. And I'm taking in what you're saying, most of which is also true for someone turning 63 1/2 tomorrow.

I get the "Glee" reference too, even though we've given up on it.

Happy Birthday -- and welcome to middle age!

Elizabeth Stark said...

Amy, Your writing sustains me, and like much that sustains me, I forget to make good use of it for long stretches, but it is thrilling to come back and start to breathe again. Thank you. Forty is ahead of me, but just, and I am looking forward to your documentation of the year. One thing that occurs to me (triggered by your well-wisher who welcomes you to middle age) is that, as we writers know, the middle is long and requires a lot of substance to fill it up effectively. So yes, this is a beginning, as you say, the beginning of a long middle . . .

Ub said...

I get the Glee reference because I am a self proclaimed Gleek. Then again, I'm sure I'm on the younger spectrum of your blog readers lol
Though I have known you for a shorter time than most, I think you're a remarkable woman and I'm sure you are rocking at forty and will continue to be as the next forty years pass.

xoxo