This is dawn of a new day, not sunset of an old one. |
This story comes in two parts.
Part one:
I love sayings because I’m a
cliché kind of person. Aren’t sayings and clichés sort of the same thing? Anyway,
I particularly like one of the old ones, fish
or cut bait, or my personal profane favorite, shit or get off the pot. At this stage in my life, I think,
(tattooed right next to AARP on my ass should be), if not now, when.
Finally, this week, after all the
edits and angst,
HEAD-SLAPS, SPEED-BUMPS AND
LIGHTBULBS, one woman’s WTF, oops and ah-ha moments of life ……. is off to a
professional copy editor. (Like reconnaissance, the check went first.)
Once this puppy shines, my plan
is to query agents for six months, and if no one wants to pedal a huge chunk of
my life, I will get it out there on my own, with a sandwich board and free
lollypops.
I am under no illusions. Finding
readers, who will put down their hard earned doubloons to read a memoir about
non-famous me, will be a challenge. So, during my darkest moments of doubt, I
tell myself that the new editor of my column says I have fans. Like I have often spouted, I’m not a big
fish in a little pond, I am a minnow in a mud puddle, and that’s okay. So I’m
not totally un-famous, just somewhat known, kinda, sorta, maybe.
My op-eds, articles and columns
total in the hundreds, in newspapers, magazines, and on line. Fifty-nine, plus the force and fallout of
each one, are in this book. If all those pros over the years thought enough of my
work to publish and pay, than maybe, just maybe I’m onto something. Can you
tell I’m still trying to convince myself?
Yet, even after pumping up my
writer’s ego, I am making a change.
Part two:
Though I am told I have fans, big
news, two more pieces this summer and I am retiring my column, ENOUGH SAID. It has
been a great five year run starting in The
Shoreline Times and ending in The Day’s
8 ‘Times’ papers. I want to go from a
600 word-limit to book length. Now I will have the time to do it.
Part Three: Oh, here’s another one.
Then, Holy-moly, in August I’m
retiring from my 9 to 5. I’ll still be working part-time, (I mean really, how
clean does this matron’s house have to be?) That I will be able to write while
still in my PJs, rather than just before I have to dash out the door to go to
work, is, if not every writer’s dream, than at least this word-monger’s vision
of a writer’s life.
Part 4: Yup another part, the really important
one.
I have two grandchildren and a third due in a few weeks. Because of my age
and because they are all so little it is highly unlikely I will be around to
enjoy their young adulthood. That thought plays on my mind as time ticks on.
For them, that I existed, that I wrote about my love for their mothers and that
I adore them - I want them to know all of it.
I want them to have a record of what I have said regarding a myriad of every
day, serious, controversial and heartbreaking subjects. My words have value,
they matter to me and to the people who have communicated with me that
something I wrote meant something to them as well. I hope someday a little part of what I have written will be of interest to
my grand-kids too. Or maybe they’ll get a laugh out it.
That I have stimulated minds and discussions, moved hearts and brought
about joy and laughter, is my (bound and on a shelf) monument to being a person
with a purpose on this planet. My words are my legacy, from me to them, and to
everyone who has read my stuff all the way through to the end.
The End
Not yet.