Saturday, May 29, 2010

Keep smiling, keep shining

I have a new friend. He's blond, wears glasses and his face is set in an expression that never deviates from 'man on a mission' determination. He's four.

Yesterday marked his first school-wide assembly. He spent some time squirming and ended up sitting on the floor. Twice he covered his ears. He had trouble waiting and I can't say I blame him. I'm not sure the range of deficits this little guy carries around with him, but I'm guessing 'doesn't like loud' and 'get on with the show' are two of them.

His helper scooped him up and sat him on her lap. That's when it happened.

We connected.

He turned and looked at me. I think at first, he was attracted to my glasses, but then, he found my eyes. I stayed absolutely still. I glued a pleasant expression on my face. I waited.

We stayed like this for a long while. Then, he smiled. It felt good.

I hope he remembers. I'm writing this so I never forget.


*post title from "That's What Friends are For" Lyrics by Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Little Girl Lost...and Found

She's twelve. She's not like everyone else and try as she might to follow the crowd, there's a drummer inside her aching to burst out.


Last night she was lauded for being her. Not the her that tries so hard to fit in, but the her that hears the drummer.

There's nothing better. Not even chocolate.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Mos Eisley Cantina

Before we got married, we used to drive around back country roads and end up in odd little diners like this one. The food is always incredibly greasy but so good! They are populated by a motley crew of townsfolk who all seem to know one another well enough to say 'hello' but look at you as if you're a recent visitor from the Twilight Zone.

You have to know my guy to appreciate the twinkle he sometimes gets in his eye. I spotted it right off. He poured cream into his coffee, smiled at me and said, "they have pie." I cracked up. We've been married twenty-two years. We get each other's humor.

We talked about a lot of things today: songwriting, teaching, politics, the fact that Han shot first. We made up stories about the locals. Yeah. We're silly like that sometimes.

Earlier we met with 'the team' to write Speedy Pete's IEP. It's always an arduous process. SP's getting older. Today we were asked how we envision his post-academic future.

Whoa. Heavy-duty.

I'm not sure how to answer it. He wants to be a marine biologist. Am I supposed to say he can't? Am I supposed to tell them that he'll never go to college? Write him off before he even has a chance? Decide for him what he's supposed to be?

They must be thinking I'm someone else's mother.

We didn't give them an answer.

At the diner, we talked and laughed and recharged. It was a good day.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Say "Cheese"!


One day last summer, I was taking a picture of the hummingbirds that frequent my garden every July and I dropped my camera on the deck and smashed the lens. Ouch.

A few months ago, in a master stroke of genius, I left hubby's camera on my desk. Speedy Pete, my wild tornado of a child, used it as a percussion instrument and smashed its lens. Ouch.

With my man not working, I've had to wait for a new camera. The only reason we decided to get a new one was because Peach Fuzz is having her dance recital next weekend and I need to take her picture. So, with mom's day as an excuse, we bought this:



It's a simple point and shoot with a few bells and whistles, but she'll do. I'm not looking to be the next Ansel Adams, I just don't want my babies to grow up without me capturing every moment.

Friday, May 14, 2010

"We're not going to Guam, are we?"

A  plane crash, a tropical island, a polar bear, a mad Frenchwoman, a series of repeating numbers.

A hole in the ground, a science project, a four-toed statue, the end of the world.

A smoke monster, a trek through time, a long-standing battle between good and evil, and an alternate universe where a plane didn't crash.

At some point in the next week or so, all these random pieces of information are going to come together into coherent whole. That's my hope, anyway. For 119 weeks, I have eagerly sat in front of my TV, remote control in hand, poised to leap into the strange and confusing world of LOST (created by Damon Lindelof, J. J. Abrams and Jeffrey Lieber.)  I visit that world with a large group of fans. I'm thankful for them. I'd hate to feel this confused all by myself.

I'm thankful for another thing, too.

This show inspired my writing. It begged me to put things on paper whether they made sense or not. It helped me to trust the process; it taught me to ask "what if..." I accepted the challenge to view the blank page with  a LOST perspective. I learned it is okay to take your readers on a ride, to keep some things a mystery, to take risks, to just write the damn thing and see where it ends up.

I'm not sure whether the LOST writers had it all planned from the beginning or if they've been making it up as they go along. What I know for sure is they've freed their imagination, and in so doing, have lit a fire under mine.

Not a bad way to spend a weeknight.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Mother's Day


This is my favorite picture of my kids. It was taken almost three years ago at DisneyWorld on a stifling hot September day. All around us people meandered down Main Street USA taking in the sights and sounds of 'the happiest place on Earth'.

Not my kids. They were looking at ducks.

I took this picture of them because it made me laugh. At the time, the incongruity of it made me smile and shake my head the way parents do when their kids do something cute and incomprehensible.

Years later, I look back at this moment and realize it encapsulates everything I need to know about being their mother. No matter what I do, or how much I pay, plan, encourage, lead, direct, push and cajole, if I give them a chance, they'll show me what they think is important. And who am I to disagree?

I think they may have put the ducks there to remind me.

Thanks, Walt.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Behavior is Communication

You hear that a lot when you have a kid with autism. Kids with autism can't always say what they think, or how they feel, or what they want to tell you. Instead, you get behavior. And then you try to figure out what it means. Try, because while you won't always be successful (as a matter of fact, you will fail to figure it out a great portion of the time), you will still want to try, because, well...look at him. Wouldn't you want to know what he's thinking?


He's perfect, in every way. He looks like my husband, but with the slender fingers of a pianist. His hair has lost the reddish tint he was handed down from my grandfather. He has blue eyes. His face is changing, the way faces do when they wind their way through puberty. Above his lips soft hair forms a the beginnings of a mustache. He's almost as tall as me. He's growing muscles in all the right places. There are hearts out there he would have broken.

He aggravates us to no end. "How can he look like that and act like this?" "This" being the incessant, idiotic, bizarre strangeness that sometimes makes us all feel like we are going crazy. What is he trying to tell us?

Damned if I know.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Nicknames

I blame my father.

Not that he had a lot of silly names for me, he really only had one, and it wasn't even all that silly, but he did have a lot of other silly sayings he used to direct at me along with a wealth of affection. Things I can't even try to spell, that's how invented they were.

In that same spirit of silliness, I nicknamed the dogs, my husband, our relationship, the canoe, our kids.

I use nicknames often enough that the animals respond to them as readily as they do their true names. (For a cat, that's saying something.) Tish-Tosh, Snoo-Boo, Smoreo, Peebs.

I called my son "Speedy Pete" long before he began actually traveling at the speed of light, and my daughter "Peach Fuzz" for the downy soft fluff that covered her head on the day she was born.

Recently, I've been playing around with nicknames for my characters. Not all of them. Some of them are too nasty to merit a nickname. But, for others, I think it might be a way of fleshing them out, of giving them an intimate history with another, of showing the reader a side of them that might be otherwise hidden or secret.

I think this bears some looking into.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Names

It took us four days to name our daughter. Strange only in that we chose our son's name years before he was born.

I think about their names sometimes and the way they were chosen and whether or not we made the right decision. The fact is, their names suit them. Much as I wanted to call my daughter Margaret - Maggie, for short - she's not a Margaret or a Maggie. (We've her father to thank for that save.) And, while I still love Joshua and all the reasons we had for choosing that name, it's not the right name for my son.

My characters are also like this. No matter how they get named, be it an inspiration that comes while I'm composing, or a name I've researched, by the time I call them a specific something - that's who they are.

Usually, it's not a problem, but lurking in the back of my head, and sometimes on paper, is a guy I've come to love. He's got a story to tell even if I can't find all the words to tell it just yet. His name is Donnie Monk. Most of his friends call him Monk. Trouble is, he looks nothing like the nebbish TV detective with OCD and an anxiety disorder who just happens to have the same surname. And try as I might, I can't get Donnie to change his name. I've suggested a different spelling: Munk, Monch, Munck - nope, Donnie and I are having none of it. We like Monk.

Tony Shalhoub as Adrian Monk who is so 
NOT Donnie Monk

I've got a sneaking suspicion if I tried to pitch this story, an editor would insist upon a name change. So, what's a writer to do? 

I've got no answers on this one, but I'm really hoping I get to debate it with an editor someday. 'Course, by that time, Monk the TV show may be a distant memory. See, Donnie, told ya not to worry.