Motherwriter
by Barbara G.S.
Hagerty
reprinted from
Literary Mama (Feb. 2009)
I took to the art
of writing instinctively. The art of mothering has come harder to me.
And for many years, these two activities -- one introverted, the other
extroverted; one a solo act, the other, at minimum, a duet -- seemed to
arise from different psychic impulses and belonged to parallel
universes. I naturally separated them. The surprise has been
in how they
have come together.
First, I became a
writer. I was a nerdy, dreamy kid, a walking train wreck of
ophthalmologic anomalies and introverted tendencies that can create a
bookworm. I had strabismus, astigmatism, myopia -- conditions and words
I didn't understand, but which rolled around provocatively in the
fertile landscape of my imagination. My lazy eye gave me an inward
expression and I lived out its silent directive, learning to look inward
at meaning, symbol, metaphor, and word, long before I knew the
vocabulary of introspection. I was clumsy at sports, bored silly with
volleyball, tetherball, basketball -- not a team player. Early
on, I realized that I was an outsider and that language was my natural
habitat.
When I was six, a small but transformative thing happened to me. A local
journalist read a short paragraph I'd written for the school literary
magazine, liked it, and arranged to have it reprinted in the local
newspaper. On the day that my words appeared in print, I became hooked.
No doubt my addiction arose partly from the intoxication of seeing my
first byline; but, I believe it is more complex than that. It was seeing
proof that the idea -- the necessity, even -- of formulating and
articulating one's viewpoint and projecting it to a larger world was
possible. On that day, I was like Ben Franklin standing in the rain and
lightning with his kite and his key.
What's so
mesmerizing about spending the whole day in a room alone, with just the
company of words? It's the limitless, unpredictable meander of the
imagination, the infinity of possibilities, the surprises delivered from
various regions of the brain: memory, hunch, and inspiration. Take a
fork in the path, wander into a cul-de-sac, or fall down the rabbit
hole. Set off in one direction, take a detour, and end up someplace
strange and new. Ever inward. Our frantic culture meanwhile exhorts us
to get up, out. Carpe diem! But I have always secretly belonged
to the Emily Dickinson School of Thought. For the writer's life IS the
life of the omnivore. As someone -- Augusten Burroughs perhaps -- said
recently, "Leaving your room is highly overrated."
I was much
entrenched in my writing lifestyle -- as a confirmed soloist who worked
at home, with a hard-working, hardly-ever-home man to have dinner and
sleep with every night -- when the first of our four, much-wanted,
much-adored children came along. Yet, if I came to writing like a
merganser to a pond, mothering was much harder for me, a fish on a
bicycle kind of thing. I did not enjoy pregnancy and found my one
experience of natural childbirth horrific.
Such was my
introduction to motherhood, an enterprise that for me swung between
holy
and holy hell.
The learning curve toward competent
motherhood was steep. Overnight, I became a mother, and overnight,
reverie, free-spiritedness, independence, and peace and quiet
disappeared. Eventually, my self-absorption dwindled and I discovered in
myself the capacity to enjoy raising children whose ages could be
expressed in double digits. But, all that happened slowly and over time.
As a thirty-year-old new mother, I worried constantly that the artist in
me would disappear under a pile of dirty bibs and crib sheets. Suddenly,
I was getting up several times in the middle of the night, boiling
pacifiers, cranking up the Swing-o-Matic, and retrieving Cheerios from
under the sofa. Instead of reading
The Golden Bough, I was reading
Goodnight, Moon.
And I was
unprepared for the wise tyranny of biology, when just five days
postpartum, I made a lunch date with a colleague. I had barely touched
my quiche Lorraine when my milk let down, my concentration faltered, and
my body commanded: Go home!
Yet, somehow I
persevered through my long, on-the-job training, learning to juggle a
child (later, children) and freelance assignments, cutting back on work,
taking more on, as the demands of life ebbed and flowed. Eventually, I
settled into a terrific gig, as a monthly columnist for SKIRT! Magazine
for its first five years. My support system was exceptional: regular
sitters, a helpful, hands-on husband, a mother and a sister who
lived five blocks and eight blocks away, respectively. Nonetheless, well
into my older children's teen years, I still thought of myself as having
two personae: one, that slightly bohemian person, the artist, the loner
who stood slightly outside the culture; the other, the mother whose job
was just the opposite: to carry the culture forward, both through the
birth process and later via actual trips in her minivan.
From time to time I
fantasized what my life would be like if I did not have the
responsibilities and encumbrances of a family. What if I did not
have to cook meals for six on a daily basis, settle sibling disputes,
sit through long games in the gymnasium, call out vocabulary on flash
cards, or find someone else's missing shoe or lost jacket at 6:30 a.m.?
What if each day were a luxurious tabula rasa on which to paint
words, eat a carton of yogurt for dinner, sleep whenever, read for hours
at a stretch, talk to fellow artists, daydream, or entice the muse? What
would it be like to be able to call one's time wholly one's own?
When the kids were
in middle and high school, I had my chance to find out. Rounding up my
best writing samples, I applied for a competitive fellowship to attend
an artists' colony for two blissful weeks. My application was bolstered
by the recommendation of a novelist friend, much established, who had
insight both into my work and my hectic life as a mother of four. I
never read his letter of recommendation, but, he once told me the gist
of it: “if any writer could benefit from two weeks at a writers' colony,
it's this woman." (Translation: please take this beleaguered mother in
and give her asylum!)
The utopia I
arrived at some months later -- suitcase and laptop in hand, expectant
as any first grader on the first day of school -- consisted of a complex
of buildings clustered on an expanse of pastoral land. Beyond its
boundaries, sweeping out to the far horizon in every direction, were
hundreds of acres of rolling blue-green farmland. About 20 writers,
visual artists, and composers were in residence at any given time. I was
shown -- as each Fellow was -- to a private, Spartan bedroom with cinder
block walls, a single bed, and reading lamp; a few hundred feet away, a
second room awaited me: a private studio for uninterrupted work.
Nirvana! There were no schedules to follow or chores to do and I can
recall no rules other than the sacred dictum never to interrupt
another Fellow at work. One could simply disappear into one's art,
if so desired, but most of the Fellows did come together for communal
breakfast and dinner in the dining room. After dinner, we'd write down
what kind of sandwich we wanted for tomorrow's lunch and turn in our
orders to the kitchen. The sandwich would appear, in a metal lunchbox,
as if by magic outside one's studio door at the noon hour the next day.
Full of talent,
ego, ambition and invention, the hilltop colony vibrated, thrummed,
practically levitated with around-the-clock creativity. It has
sheltered and nurtured over 3,000 artists in its time; among them are
winners of the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, and the
MacArthur genius award. The writer in the studio next to mine was
putting the finishing touches on a novel that would become a play on
Broadway (Wicked). There was a cross-dresser among us, and one
artist who painted in his own blood, puncturing his veins daily and
collecting fluid in a vial. I wondered if my scarlet letter, "M" for
Mother, showed and felt sure I was the only one in that heady Camelot
who could be counted on for cupcakes and carpools at home.
During those two
weeks, I concentrated by day on a collection of poetry I had assembled
over the years; evenings, I spent in the colony's darkroom, working on a
series of black-and-white photographs that were published in book form
three years later. But mostly, I worked on myself. Or the place worked
on me, in ways I could not have anticipated.
It's funny when you
at last get what you think you want. My two weeks in that greener
grass were cool, productive, and revelatory. I reworked poems,
printed photographs, took walks, naps, talked, thought, and read, read,
read. I played poker a couple of nights with the other artists, attended
occasional readings, visited open studios, and made a few friends.
But I also crept
down to the basement several times and used the pay phone to call home
and reconnect. Once again, the emotionally wise tyranny of biology had
kicked in. To my surprise, I found that I missed -- ached for --
the messy complications of life, the interruptions, and the human
encumbrances. In a word, I missed my family. I'd underestimated
the ballast that they were in my life; I'd not understood how they
enhanced, rather than subtracted from my work; I'd not realized that
through being part of a family, I had fundamentally changed. The girl
with the lazy eye, the competent parent, the bookworm, the artist, the
community member, the carpool driver -- I knew I was, without
contradiction, all these people. Identity, as I finally came to
understand at the writer's colony, is not a case of either/or but
rather of both/and. On that hilltop, I realized I'd grown up, and
my personae had fused. I had, at last, become motherwriter.
___
The
mother of four children, Barbara G.S. Hagerty is also an essayist, poet,
photographer, and cultural observer who lives and works in her native
Charleston, South Carolina. Over the years her work has appeared in a
large variety of magazines and newspapers, such as
The Los Angeles Times,
Town & Country,
The Ladies' Home Journal,
Saveur, and
Skirt!, among many others. She is the author
of two books (Purse
Universe;Handbags)
that explore the metaphors and cultural meanings inherent in the bags we
carry. Her poetry chapbook, The Guest House, was published by
Finishing Line Books in March
2009. |