Tag Archives: writing

Who am I? Asking in Retirement

Some time not so long ago, I was asked to give a speech about my perspective on life given all that I’ve lived through. It’s not the sort of thing that’s easy to summarize. It involves a lot of questions. I am sharing some excerpts for others who might be asking those same questions.

For me, the study of aging is an evolving process adding new ideas and perspectives over time.  Probably I have more questions than answers.  My basic question is what is the meaning and purpose of this stage of life. 

But first some background.                                                                                        

I was a faculty member at Empire State College, a branch of the State University of New York, and worked primarily with adult students.  Many of them were dealing with questions about aging, aging related to their parents or themselves.  No one on the faculty had experience in this area.  I decided to apply for a sabbatical to research and study aging.  I was interested in the topic both for myself and the people I was teaching.  I researched many questions about aging and participated in a week-long workshop with Elizabeth Kubler Ross on Death and dying. 

When I moved to Boston, I became involved with the program at Harvard, the Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement.  Aging was a forbidden word even though everyone was retired and could be considered the older generation.  I, with others, initiated a discussion program called Conversations on Aging and led several workshops on different aspects of the concept.  I also taught several courses on aging at HILR and Brandeis.  With others, we produced a book, New Pathways for Aging, and changed way aging is discussed.  For this book twenty-seven people wrote essays on some aspect of their lives.  At least for a time, we changed the way aging is viewed at one institution. 

The New Age of Aging

We are living now in a generation that I call the new age of aging.    It is new because we are living longer than any previous generation and can live for 20 or 30 years after retirement.  Not only are we living longer, we are also physically and mentally vigorous.  What are the possibilities for these long years of retirement? 

Theorists and researchers who focused on life stages were prominent in the 60s and 70s.  They perceived each stage of life with a focus, a role, a time to go to school, a time to build a career, to marry, and have children.  Life after 65 was almost an impossible dream.  For example, Freud framed the meaning of life as work and love.  For a long time, I thought that was brilliant but what happens in this framework for people no longer working.    

How the Roles Change

For our generation, a generation living longer, are there roles we should be fulling. What fits our lives now?  What are our tasks during this stage of life?  The American dream, retire at 65, play tennis and golf works for some people.  But it is a long time to play golf, if you live to 80 or 90.  Now even 100 does not seem unlikely.

Who are we as individuals, as parents, as grandparents, as citizens, as members of Temple Israel?  How did I change after retirement?

We are living healthier lives, healthier than any previous generation and maintain an intellectual vigor that is actualized in such programs as HILR, the Harvard program and TILLI.  There are also programs for retired people at Brandeis, MIT and Regis in the Boston community. 

Archibald MacLeish, the poet, asked a question during an interview with Benjamin DeMott in 1979, 

“Now if you realize this—what the purpose of your art is—you come to see that you are laboring at your art not only to make works of art but to make sense of your life–those dark and bewildering moments of experience.  Of course, you want to be admired—to be a great poet.  But who is a great poet?  Maybe a handful in the world’s history.  So that’s irrelevant.  What’s really going to come out of your work is something else.  If you have succeeded at all, you have become—however small a part—of the consciousness of your time.  Which is enough.  No?  The question at the center, the poet’s question remains the same:  who am I?” 

What a great question.

Who am I? Who are we? 

What is my identity now that I am no longer raising a family or nurturing a career? 

What are my choices?  What are our choices?

What are the challenges?  What are the opportunities? 

How did you define yourself before retirement?  How do you define yourself now?

Stan Davis, now deceased, wrote thirteen books, taught at the Harvard School of Business, was an international consultant, and was one of the authors of New Pathways.  He wrote:

“The time since retiring has been a slow process, letting go of a self-image that had evolved and developed over four decades and finding a new one.” Because older adults face a roleless role they often have a diminished sense of identity and personal worth. 

Letting go of a self-image framed by work is a difficult transition.  These extra years that we have do not automatically mean happiness and a great life.  We have to take an active role in thinking about how we want to manage these extra years of good fortune.  

As Time Goes By – The Mystery of Aging

Bits and Pieces of Being Older

 Suddenly, at least it seems suddenly, I am a member of a new generation, an older generation who is living longer, longer than my grandparents, longer than my mother and father, longer than anyone I ever knew, even longer than my younger siblings. 

I don’t really feel old, whatever feeling old means. To me it is a great big mystery.  Before this time of life, I had many roles, a wife, a career, a parent, a friend.  There doesn’t seem to be any rules or roles for this stage of life.  Some people believe older people have wisdom.  But what is wisdom?  Is it simply living longer that makes one wise?

I have more questions than answers.

What is ageism?  It is the descriptor that chronological age is what it is all about and that this stage of life is about decline and loss.  It is not the truth, it is a stereotype because people of any age are different from one another.  Like sexism and racism, ageism is prejudice. 

Am I Growing Old?

Now, I am walking seventy laps rather than one hundred.  I swim thirty laps when I used to swim seventy.  Should I keep trying to keep up with the earlier days?  Growing older means thinking about mortality, my mortality, and that is so difficult.

I decided to make a Rosh Hashanah dinner again.  So many people are not here, Kay and Don, Hy and Sheila and we will miss them.  I have done it for at least forty years.  This year Rosh Hashanah was a bit different because some of the people who came every year did not and people who had never joined us before came.  It was wonderful, the feelings of community, of different generations talking together.  We talked about hope and the problems of our country.  I know I won’t be here in ten years so I might as well do it now.  Everyone loved being here together but we missed the ones who were not. 

Two grandchildren are getting married next year.  Will I make it?  Will I dance at their weddings? 

A New Horizon

What is ageism?  It is the descriptor that chronological age is what it is all about and that this stage of life is about decline and loss.  It is not the truth, it is a stereotype because people of any age are different from one another.  Like sexism and racism, ageism is prejudice.       

Each morning I get up and think, “well what will it be today?”  What new adventure?  What part of my body will echo the years gone past, the running, swimming, and long hikes?  

At this stage of life, there is so much freedom—to do whatever I want to do and can afford, to go to the movies, meet friends for dinner, join a club, a group, a class, teach a class.  My options are infinite; I just have to imagine what I want to do. what I can do.  This is the last phase, I will try to do my best.

Who Am I?

This poem, Who Am I, appears in The House Loved Us…A Collection of Poems about Life and Loss. How do you define yourself? Can you? What if it changes day by day?

I am tough, strong, fierce, powerful, bright,

achieving, that is, I’m that way today.

I work hard, believe in the work ethic, have lots to do, children, grandchildren, bills, worry, writing, and work.

Sometimes I think I’m a writer. I had two rejections. Does that make me a writer?

I am a successful mother, a failure with men.

I am in perpetual motion, but often feel as if I’m standing still.

I’m someone who always worries about money. My worry has nothing to do with how much or how little I have in the bank.

I love ideas, ideas about anything, gardening, meaning, the future of the planet, how to cook asparagus.

I started out being conventional, but somehow it didn’t work for me.

I love newness and hope each day will bring something different.

I’m a professional, believe in professionalism, and try to be professional, even if it kills me.

I’m bright, dull, insecure, confident, smart, not knowing, passionate, distant, anxious, brave, generous, mean, conventional, and daring.

I am a mother, daughter, sister, aunt, grandmother, niece, friend, lover, woman, professor, feminist, humanist.

I’m constantly changing my mind about who I am and where I’m going.

                             Solitary Confinement

                                       

1

For me, solitary confinement began on March 20th, 2020.  That is almost two years ago.  March 20th was the time we really began to absorb the fact that we were in a worldwide crisis.  A new and strange virus was circulating in the world, people were dying everywhere, particularly people over sixty.

My apartment was the best place for me.  I had all my things, I could write, I could be involved in the HILR and Temple programs on zoom.  And this could not last forever.  We were wrong.  It is now January 2022 and we really don’t know how long it will last.  The second variant has evolved and who knows if there will be a third or a fourth or even a fifth, ad infinitum.

I heard on the news today that a new variant, a third, is appearing in Europe.

On one level, you get used to it.  At least I did.  I am not depressed.  But there is a melancholy I feel, I am at the later stages of life.  Do I have any power or control over what I wanted this last stage of life to be?  Does anyone? 

In 2021, two new babies were born into our family–Noah and Killian.  But their parents, my grandchildren, are careful, rightfully so.  But how do I feel?  Estranged in a very deep and personal way.  I have seen both.  Noah several times and Killian once.  I can’t go to their homes, see their weekly changes and growth and rejoice in the longevity I have and the expansion of my family from four of us, my three children, and me to, now, almost twenty.  I respect my grandchildren for the protection of their families, their newborn babies.  But I miss the old way.  Will it ever go back to normal? 

2

Besides my family and me, there is the rest of America and the rest of the world.  Will we recover?  What price will we pay for this long siege?  What price will I pay? 

My food habits have almost gone berserk.  I ate three popsicles yesterday.  Today, I will try and limit myself to two.  Two months ago, I lost eleven pounds, I had some kind of illness.  Two weeks later I gained back the eleven pounds and now again, I need to watch what I eat.  Solitary confinement is a great setting for eating all the wrong things, not doing my exercises, and taking my daily shower at three in the afternoon instead of in the morning. 

When I was young with three small children, I was often at home for several days.  One or more of the children was ill and I was the mother, nurse, maid, and wife.  The good wife that I was, I picked up the toys before Charly came home.  After a long day’s work, it was better to come to a neat home with quiet children and no toys all over the living and dining rooms.  That was a difficult time for me, but I never thought of it as solitary confinement but it was in a way.

Yesterday it snowed all day.  Today I dressed warmly, put on all the right clothes including boots, and went out for a walk.  Oh, to breathe that nice clear air.  But the streets were dangerous, places I had to walk carefully because they had not cleaned the snow and they were very slippery.  Back home to solitary confinement.

3

I watched the Australian tennis final this morning, I love Nadal.  I have watched him since he was a young player, nineteen I think, with a long ponytail.  My son watched it at 3:30 a.m. and he told me the results.  Everyone thinks that is crazy but I love watching tennis.  I don’t need the tension to appreciate it.

I took several literature courses with Bob Steinberg at HILR.  He died several years ago.  At the first session of one of his courses, he showed us how he always read the last few pages first.  And I have learned to do that too, it allows me the freedom to enjoy what I am reading without unnecessary tension.

So here I am in solitary confinement rambling on about lots of things that may have nothing to do with being so alone.  But then, what does someone do in this kind of setting.  How do people in jail sustain the experience, some for years?  Do they ramble on?  What do they write on?  They surely don’t have computers. 

new-born babies.  But I miss the old way.  Will it ever go back to normal? 

4

Besides my family and me, there is the rest of America, and the rest of the world.  Will we recover?  What price will we pay for this long siege?  What price will I pay? 

My food habits have almost gone berserk.  I ate three popsicles yesterday.  Today, I will try and limit myself to two.  Two months ago, I lost eleven pounds, I had some kind of illness.  Two weeks later I gained back the eleven pounds and now again, I need to watch what I eat.  Solitary confinement is a great setting for eating all the wrong things, not doing my exercises, and taking my daily shower at three in the afternoon instead of in the morning. 

When I was young with three small children, I was often at home for several days.  One or more of the children was ill and I was the mother, nurse, maid, and wife.  The good wife that I was, I picked up the toys before Charly came home.  After a long day’s work, it was better to come to a neat home with quiet children and no toys all over the living and dining rooms.  That was a difficult time for me, but I never thought of it as solitary confinement but it was in a way.

Yesterday it snowed all day.  Today I dressed warmly, put on all the right clothes including boots, and went out for a walk.  Oh, to breathe that nice clear air.  But the streets were dangerous, places I had to walk carefully because they had not cleaned the snow and they were very slippery.  Back home to solitary confinement.

5

I watched the Australian tennis final this morning, I love Nadal.  I have watched him since he was a young player, nineteen I think, with a long ponytail.  My son watched it at 3:30 a.m. and he told me the results.  Everyone thinks that is crazy but I love watching tennis.  I don’t need the tension to appreciate it.

I took several literature courses with Bob Steinberg at HILR.  He died several years ago.  At the first session of one of his courses, he showed us how he always read the last few pages first.  And I have learned to do that too, it allows me the freedom to enjoy what I am reading without unnecessary tension.

So here I am in solitary confinement rambling on about lots of things that may have nothing to do with being so alone.  But then, what does someone do in this kind of setting.  How do people in jail sustain the experience, some for years?  Do they ramble on?  What do they write on?  They surely don’t have computers. 

Charly, my ex-husband, once had an internship in a jail and they had a visiting day.  I went.  I know people live in jails, but seeing the jail and the bars and the people in it is another experience.  How do they do it?  People watching everything they do.  And they do it for years.  And what about the people in solitary confinement.  They often cannot even see outside their cell.  How do they manage?

I am having trouble managing my solitary confinement in a beautiful apartment in a lovely building in Brookline.  Yesterday I watched the snow falling and it was surreal.  Do they ever see snow from their captivity in jails and solitary confinement?

I Am The Heart

from The House Loved Us…A Collection of Poems About Life and Loss

I am the heart

that beats for family

beats for women

beats for all

Sing a song of care

Let my heart beat loudly

when life tries to end that force.

I beat for those I love

I hear the cries

of people, men,

women, children

crying for their losses.

Let my heart not harden

against the people who

have hardened their

hearts against me.

I am the heart

Sometimes broken

by the weight

of misdeeds, of

cries that harbor

in the body of the heart.

I beat for those I love

who do the right thing

no matter the price

they pay.

I am the heart

one of many

conscious of the burden of people

everywhere.

Hear the wails of

broken marriages, loss

of family, the quiet

whimpers of the

sleeping child.

Sometimes no one hears me

no matter how strong

the heart beats.

I am the heart

joyous but

afflicted with

the sorrows of the world.

The heart is heavy,

burdened

I can’t do everything.

When my heart is broken

and weeps and weeps

but then revives itself

open, ready for the love

kindness, and generosity,

of nameless spirits.

Life Treats – a Poem about Food

As we gear up for another round of New Year’s Resolutions that inevitably include eating healthier, I came back to a poem I wrote some time ago on this very theme. Of course, it wasn’t so much about eating healthier back then. It was just about maintaining that certain type of figure. You might think that would matter less over time, but it turns out that is not the case.

Come be with me

And we shall feast

On all the foods

I hate to eat.

Potatoes, ice-cream

candy galore

Goodbye to foods

we did adore.

No breads, spaghetti

or red meat.

All the foods

that are a treat.

Where’s the chocolate

the cake to munch.

Goodbye, goodbye

Now what’s for lunch?

Lettuce, spinach

What a treat

Are we doomed forever

these things to eat? 

Come eat with me

and we no more

Will feast on foods

we both adore.

Come eat with me

and we will prove

How abstinence molds

the body smooth.

salad vs dessert

World War II: Chaos and Order

This is part 2 of my recollections of World War II, a time of atrocities and resilience. These are things that should not be forgotten.

I remember those weeks we watched T.V. as the Allied forces liberated the concentration camps.  We could not believe what we saw, people so emaciated, they could not move, ovens where they had been cremated, rooms with crowds of people standing naked, thinking they were waiting for a shower.  Slowly, they were gassed.  It was unbelievable but real.  We could also see the faces of the Russian and American armies that liberated these camps.  They could not believe what they saw.  It was beyond everyone’s ability to imagine this level of cruelty and mass extermination.   

The newspapers and T.V. were also filled with stories about the Japanese, the camps they had for captured American soldiers.  John McCain, the hero, and later Senator, was severely tortured.  Who could watch such atrocities?

I was still going to college when I became a nurses’ aide.  I worked on the days I was not in school and on weekends.  We wore blue and white uniforms and I was assigned to St Luke’s Hospital on Morningside Drive and 112th St.  One of my first assignments was to help a woman clean up the blood on her body, her clothes, and the bed.  She had attempted to self-abort and this was a Catholic hospital.  Another day a woman had diarrhea all over the bed and I was assigned to clean up.  I did all these chores and many more.  And the nurses, all nuns wearing habits, were so compassionate and caring.  For me, this experience turned out to be more than a nurse’s assignment.  I learned much about life that I did know in my sheltered Jewish environment in the Bronx.

At this later stage of life, I don’t see films anymore about Nazis and what they did.  I really can’t bear it.  Although not religious in a theological sense, I feel strongly about retaining my Jewish identity.  I read about antisemitism but still don’t understand it.  Why do people hate others just because they are Jewish?  When I was first married, we were living in Washington, D.C. and I heard a man in People’s Drugstore say to someone else,” I won’t Jew you down.”  I was shocked.  I never heard that expression before.

Israel independence was announced by David Ben Gurion in May, 1948, much to the dismay of the Arab world in Israel.  The conflict between these two worlds is still going on.   But it became a haven for Jews all over the world, those who escaped death during the Nazi years, and many Arabic Jews who fled their countries, seeking a safe haven.

The historic perils of that time still live on.  In the obituary columns in the Boston Globe (July 11, 2021) and The New York Times (July 16, 2021) there were articles about “Esther Bejarano, 96: death camp survivor who fought antisemitism,” and “Esther Bejarano, Survivor Who Fought Hate with Hip-Hop, Dies at 96.”  Her parents and sister were killed.  She was inducted into forced labor and later joined the orchestra at Auschwitz-Birkenau.  They played as Jews were brought to the camp for extermination.  “We played with tears in our eyes,” she said in 2010 during an interview with the Associated Press.  

According to the articles, she married, had children, lived in Israel, and died in Germany where she was born.  Resilience was the order of the day and often astonishing. 

The impact of that time never seems to end.  Every now and then an article appears about the art and artifacts that were stolen from Jewish families and synagogues during the Holocaust.  The journeys of these highly regarded and expensive works of art were diverse and often ended up in various museums in Europe or peoples’ homes. What to do with them when discovered?  Often the original surviving owners would search for years for the art and archives that had been stolen from them during the Nazi period.  Many of the original family were dead or old and frail.  (Boston Globe, July 24, 2021). 

On April 15th, 2021, Boston celebrated Israeli Independence Day by lighting up a bridge in Boston with blue and white lights, the national colors of Israel.  Hundreds turn out every year for the celebration.

After this generation dies, who will remember the atrocities of this period in history?  Or will the impact of these atrocities remain forever?   Have we learned anything about avoiding such horrors?  Who knows? 

World War II: Some Memories Never Fade

On April 15th, 2021, Boston celebrated the 73rd anniversary of the Israeli Independence Day by lighting up a bridge in Boston with blue and white lights, the national colors of Israel.  Hundreds turn out every year for the celebration.

After this generation dies, who will remember the atrocities of the period in history that led up to the Independence?  Or will the impact of these atrocities remain forever?   Have we learned anything about avoiding such horrors?  Who knows? 

Here, I share some of what I remember about the 1940s when America was at war.

America was at war. Terrible things were happening in the 1940’s.  Pearl Harbor was bombed by the Japanese. Young men were drafted and many died.  Jews were being killed by the thousands, really millions, in Europe.  Gays and lesbians were also incarcerated. The Japanese were storming the South Pacific.  There was rationing of some foods, I don’t remember which ones.  Gas was also rationed.  In schools, children were practicing what to do in case of an air-raid.  Nazis from Germany invaded Russia, then called the Soviet Union, and many were killed in combat.  They did not anticipate what a Russian winter was like. 

I was fourteen when the war started, but it went on for several years.  At that time, I belonged to a group of young men and women, we called ourselves The Debites, after Eugene Debs, a famous socialist. All the boys were drafted into a branch of the American military.  I still remember our anguish when we found out that Robert had been killed.  He was our leader and so handsome.  How could a young man who had a life of such promise be killed in his twenties.

There was all the news about Jews in Europe being sent to concentration camps.  In my family, it was a constant topic of conversation.  We are Jewish, and lived in a Jewish neighborhood in the Bronx.

I remember my father signing some document so a particular family could come to America.  He signed many of them.  Someone asked him, “Can you really take care of all these people?”

 “They can take care of themselves, they just need to get out of Germany,” he said.  “But, if they need help, I will find a way.”

This was another side of my father that I never knew before.  He was in the sausage casings business and together, he and I, sent fourteen small salamis to men we knew overseas.  We did not know if they would get them.  And my father assured me they would be edible even though they travelled so many miles, by ship, overseas.  All the years of the war, we did the same thing, wrapping and sending a salami to every address we could find.  

When a friend of our family, Gene Schneider, came home, he thanked us for the salamis, and said “everyone loved them, we were so tired of military food, and they were always eaten in fifteen minutes.  We were so far away from home, but the salami, more than just food, reminded us that there was still such a place as the United States with good things to eat.”  Gene was eighteen when he went to New Guinea, he was stationed there for four years. We never heard of New Guinea until the war.     

Many of the Jewish people I knew came to the U.S. in the early years of the 19th century.  I don’t know why all my grandparents came, but my mother’s father came because he was going to be conscripted into the Russian army where Jews never knew how long they would be forced to serve.  For my grandfather, it meant forever.  He left Russia with a different name to avoid arrest.   

All these Jewish people, some I knew, and some I didn’t, were in anguish about what was happening to the Jewish people in Europe.  They came from different countries and for different reasons, but they understood anti-Semitism no matter the country or the form it took. 

Franklin Roosevelt was almost a God in the Jewish community in which we lived. The question of why Roosevelt did not accept the Jews and the ship, the St. Louis, has always been an open question and much has been written about it.  They were not accepted in any country, returned to Europe, where they were all killed. 

We lived in a two-family house.  One day, a few years later, there was this loud wail on the stairs coming from the second floor.  Mrs. Alexander was coming down the stairs to tell my mother “Roosevelt just died.”  Our community was in mourning.  There are no answers to some things that happen in life.  

(To be continued…)

April Fools Revisited

This was written a year ago. A lot has changed, but not as much as we had hoped, I think.

Today is April 1st.  April fools day.  Where did that come from?  Is this a joke?

No, it’s not a joke.  What’s funny about hundreds of thousands of people in hospitals, thousands dead? What’s funny about that?  More people have died in the last few weeks than all the people who died in the World Trade Center bombing.

I have been holed up in my apartment now for nineteen days, alone, not seeing anyone, except when I go to the lobby to get food that was delivered and sometimes my mail.  My mail has decreased in size and content–one or two envelopes, one with an advertisement and one, a bill.  I haven’t gone out now for nineteen days, except for an occasional walk, so I don’t spend any money.  And the doctors and dentists are all holed up in their own homes too so I don’t buy anything and I don’t see any doctors or dentists and I don’t have as many bills.  That’s another joke.

What do I worry about?  I am alone and that is not easy.  But what is it like for couples or families locked up all together for who knows how long.  One daughter’s business has gone crash.  How will she and her husband deal with it?  How can they help themselves?  My grandson, Michael, lives and worked in Philadelphia.  Now the business has folded, he is alone in Pennsylvania with no work and no family.  Megan and Joe were to be married June 16th.  That will be canceled, until next year.  And they live in the hotbed of the crisis, Brooklyn, New York.  She told me one thousand people live in their building when I asked about New York density.

And the same for Todd and Marissa my oldest grandson and his fiancée.  They are all working at home and they never go out for anything.

Just for fun tonight Marian, Beth, John, and I had a four-way conference call.  Marian and Beth are my daughters and John is Beth’s husband.  We talked about everything, how we are, what we laugh at, what we see on television, what are we worried about.  I have three children.  They married and among them had six grandchildren, and we became a family of thirteen, including me.  Three of them are now a couple, Justin is married to Jason, Megan is engaged to Joe, and Todd is engaged to Marissa.  What started out as three plus me is now sixteen.

Isn’t that wonderful! We are a force, a group, a loving group and when the grandchildren have children we will be even more.  More to be joyous and to think about during this “pandemic.”

What happened to me that is new?  I talk more on the phone with my family, with people I have known for a long time, and with my brother.  My home has become more than a home.  It is a protective nest, a nest to bury my head in, to watch the news on a daily basis—or almost every hour.  Sometimes I feel safe here.  I hardly eat, I miss my ice-cream and I am losing weight. Why I am losing weight, I have no idea and I have to try and eat more, even without the ice-cream.

chocolate ice cream

Some mornings I get up with extreme anxiety and I don’t know how to deal with it.  Today I went out, I drove to the drugstore and waited outside for Monica to bring out my prescriptions.  I never met Monica, but I couldn’t recognize her even if I knew her, she was wearing a mask, a gown, and gloves.  How nice she was to leave her job, even for a few minutes, to do this for me. She said, “The pharmacy is very busy, I’ve never seen it so busy and I don’t know if we can do everything.”

This is the pandemic as they call it.  It is also April Fool.  When I grew up this first day in April was the day to plan and carry out all kinds of crazy jokes on family and friends.  What a joke.  Today, even April Fool is not funny.

Writing Bravely

writingA friend recently sent me his opinion of The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen.
 He talks about  my being brave, which means a lot to me, but that’s not how I think about it. Really, I shared my story because I wanted to offer encouragement to others who face struggles. I hope that people enjoy what I’ve written and can learn from it too. To me, it was only natural to start writing about my life and I couldn’t really stop. He doesn’t feel the same way about writing, but I am touched that he was able to appreciate what I did.
This is what my friend wrote:
The best autobiography I’ve ever read is Growing Up, Russell Baker’s account of the years before he became anyone, or did anything readers had any reason to be interested in. By page 20 or so of The Myth of the Yellow Kitchen Baker’s book popped into my mind; I can’t offer a memoirist any higher praise than that. 
 
Your book is wonderful: fluid, funny, touching, and astonishingly brave. Another writer might envy you such an interesting and varied life, filled with travel, vivid family members, and domestic ups and downs. But bringing them to full life and making me care about them, which you have done brilliantly, takes a special gift. And the courage you show in revealing your doubts, fears, hesitations, and setbacks takes something else entirely.
Get a copy of the Myth of the Yellow Kitchen