Tag Archives: memoir

Get an Autographed Copy of The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen

20151216_112430What do you do when your dream is shattered? Create a new dream. Life was coming together just as I had expected with a husband, children and the yellow kitchen I’d always wanted. It fell apart when my husband abruptly announced he wanted a divorce. I discovered  there is more to life than a yellow kitchen. Read about my journey to a new life and be inspired to make the most of yours in The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen.

For a limited time, I am offering exclusive autographed copies of the Myth of the Yellow Kitchen. To get yours for the just $16.95, send an email to rhoadawald@rcn.com. Free shipping.

Thanksgiving at my Table

ThanksgivingThanksgiving is a special time to remember all the good things in our lives. Not that we shouldn’t do that all the time, but this is a time to do it together. I wrote this some time ago, but it still applies today.

Whatever you are doing in this season, I hope you are able to enjoy the blessings around you.

Thanksgiving

I feast my eyes on the children
my children
grown, beautiful
building an order to their lives.

My eldest getting married
to a wonderful young man
Another in law school,
not quite together yet about his life,
his vocation, his love,
But together in his head, his vitality
his assessment of things.

And the youngest
when did she get so lovely,
so tall, so slim
so elegant,
getting off the train
hugging her brother.

I feast my eyes on my nieces and nephews
growing up, getting taller
building an order to their lives.
Carrying the chairs, setting the table,
laughing as I torture the turkey

I feast my eyes on the richness of the harvest,
of young people
having birthdays, arguing about politics,
growing older, entering adulthood.
I feast my eyes on the miracle of it all.

This poem was reprinted from The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen, a memoir about resilience in the face of life’s challenges.

 

Looking for a Thought Provoking Book for Your Book Club?

The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen explores the unexpected challenges life throws at us and how to we respond to them.
I wrote this book to show that you can not only survive but thrive through adversity. It’s an intimate look at the complicated sometimes troubled relationships we have to navigate and an insight into the victories we can create.
 This book can be used as a jumping off point for book club discussions on what life sends our way and how we respond. It’s a slice of real life intended to be both thought-provoking and inspirational.

Continue reading Looking for a Thought Provoking Book for Your Book Club?

An Ethical Will to Pass Along My Greatest Riches

 

Rhoada Wald with her children at a dance recital.
Rhoada Wald with her children at a dance recital.

I’ve been working on my ethical will lately. This is something that has nothing to do with money. It’s far more important.

An ethical will is your legacy. It incorporates what you’ve learned over your life and the values that you’ve cultivated that you want to pass on to your children and their children. Basically, it’s to bequeath an account of the values and ideas closest to one’s heart.

For me, I want to pass on a love of learning. Continue reading An Ethical Will to Pass Along My Greatest Riches

City of Resilience

Dear Marian and Beth

Did you hear that Juarez, Mexico was recently named one of the Rockefeller Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities? It’s because the city has managed to overcome difficult years of violence and economic recession.

I find this incredibly ironic since that’s the birth of my life of resilience in a way. It’s where I actually signed my divorce papers.

Can you believe that? Back then you actually had to travel to another country to get a divorce. Now, it seems so much easier, although of course it never is.

But for me, after all the arguing and all the waiting and all the time we had to live together knowing the marriage was over, I had to go across the border to make it final. Of course it wasn’t easy traveling then when you children were still so young, but I had to make it work.

I flew to a town in Arizona to and then drove to Juarez. It was my first trip out of the country. I never thought it would be for something like that. It all seemed so complicated.  My lawyer wanted me to stay overnight because the thought it would make it all more legal.

I was so nervous that night waiting in this  place where I couldn’t even speak the language. But I suppose I was a little bit excited too. Mostly just eager to be able to move on.

That city has gone through so much since then.  So much bad news. And yet, there’s a determination to fight the bad.

We always need to do that too. To refuse to give in to the troubles. To refuse to let them defeat us.

I’m glad to see Juarez is still hanging on. I hope you both will always figure out how to be resilient too!

Love,

Mom

Thanksgiving Feast

Dear Marian and Beth,

With another Thanksgiving here already, I thought you might like to see this poem I wrote years ago. So much has happened since then, of course.

Love,

Mom

I feast my eyes on the children
my children
grown, beautiful
building an order to their lives.

My eldest getting married
to a wonderful young man
Another in law school,
not quite together yet about his life,
his vocation, his love,
But together in his head, his vitality
his assessment of things.

And the youngest
when did she get so lovely,
so tall, so slim
so elegant,
getting off the train
hugging her brother.

I feast my eyes on my nieces and nephews
growing up, getting taller
building an order to their lives.
Carrying the chairs, setting the table,
laughing as I torture the turkey

I feast my eyes on the richness of the harvest,
of young people
having birthdays, arguing about politics,
growing older, entering adulthood.
I feast my eyes on the miracle of it all.