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here to read an excerpt from
Dropped Threads 2: More of What
We Aren't Told
Foreword
from Dropped Threads Read
the Afterword
The focus for
this anthology floated out one day amid soup and salad at one of
those gatherings where Carol and I take the emotional pulse of our
worlds – or The World, it seems to us.
“The woman’s
network let me down. Nothing I’ve ever heard or read prepared me
for this!” This particular yelp resulted from the plummet of energy
and purpose I experienced with menopause and quickly led us to wider,
more lively musings on what else had caught us unprepared, where
else we had experienced gaps between female experience and expression.
We were surprised by the number of topics and by the ease with which
they came to mind. The image of dropped threads from the fabric
of women’s talk occurred to us and the familiar, satisfying assumption
that women could talk about anything unravelled as we spoke.
We included
other women in our speculations: friends, colleagues and family
members took up the conversation with enthusiasm and immediate revelations
as though, for some, the topic was one they had wanted to discuss
for years. They identified gaps in their communal talk and named
life-altering surprises in their individual lives. Most spoke of
serious issues, of surprise bruisings or blessings, private moments
of intense connection or bewilderment. Other women reported insights
that bordered on the hilarious: one friend mentioned that her greatest
surprise was “sagging earlobes” and another claimed it was “a husband
who flosses his teeth in front of you and then expects passion in
bed.” The idea for an anthology of writings on the topic blossomed
naturally. We had obviously tapped into a rich vein of stories that
touched on defining moments in women’s lives. We invited a number
of acquaintances and friends to write these stories, the ones they
wanted and needed to tell, recognizing, of course, there would be
private spaces that everyone needs to keep beyond the claim of words.
We thought women writers would have interesting observations: what
subjects hadn’t they written about that needed communal airing?
We also asked women of other backgrounds, academics, ranchers, politicians,
homemakers, journalists, lawyers, to identify the areas of surprise
and silence in their lives.
The responses
were immediate and the topics wide-ranging: everything from the
joys of belly dancing to the shock of gender inequities in politics.
There seemed to be a general embracing of the license implicit in
our invitation, but also some reticence: more than one respondant
commented on the courage it would take to write on personal issues
that had long been beyond the limits of acceptable expression. A
few women identified experiences which they could not write on because
the pain was too new or the fear of judgment still too strong. What
was particularly satisfying to us was that we were contacted by
women who had heard of our venture and wanted their stories included.
One of these surprise offerings is among the most powerful of the
anthology.
The collection
of thirty-four reflective pieces is the end result of those conversations
and connections started back in the spring of 1999. Many of the
voices will be familiar to readers; others will be new. Some are
forthright and take the reader to the heart of intense experience.
Others approach distinctly personal moments with caution and then
veer away, as though the walls around the silences they’ve been
keeping are impenetrable. What unites all these writings is the
uncommon honesty, courage and acuity of emotion these women bring
to their topics – and to us.
They tell us
that once life slows down enough for reflection, women uncover truths
several beats away from the expected and the promised: female friendships
are often more central in our lives than those we have with men
and children; what we are told can be as limiting as what is never
spoken; and vanity, dominance and blasts of lust that break though
marriage and age barriers can be good things. From those who document
the private contours of grief and shame, we learn about survival
instincts and minute-by-minute coping strategies that rise up and
guide people to new spaces of accommodation. Other women point to
the individual colourings of common human happenings: spiritual
stirrings, aging and the discovery of fundamental gender inequities
continue to catch women unprepared because these experiences can
never be the same for any two people.
What the stories
and the essays indicate about the variety and uniqueness in women’s
lives is visually reinforced by the Vinarterta Lady sketch on the
cover. This stylized woman speaks to the rich rhythms and shadings
of our moods and approaches to life. As well, there is a mystery
about this sketch that reminds us of the impossibility of capturing
in any medium of expression all of what we are and what we experience.
There are still blank spaces before us, and women are still asking,
as one of our young contributors does, “What shall I tell my daughter?”
When we scan through the topics that even this collection has skipped
over – mother-daughter relationships, lesbian experiences, life
without partners or children, to mention some, we realize that women’s
conversational weaving will forever be a work in progress.
In the meantime
we’re reminded not to forget the joys and potential growth from
the uncharted. In the afterword Carol Shields writes a characteristically
wise, gentle unfolding of the central theme as it relates to her
personally. She tells of meeting the “surprises of self-discovery”
with “gratitude” and then nudges the reader into embracing the unexpected:
“Who isn’t renewed by startling scenery or refreshed by undreamed-of
freedoms? Surprise keeps us alive, liberates our senses.”
Our wish is
that this anthology will be liberating for readers. It offers a
community of voices that are relevant to everyone, not just women,
because the experiences recounted are ultimately those that give
us our jagged human dimensions of joy and sorrow. We hope readers
of all ages and backgrounds will be inspired by how the contributors
answered the initial question we posed and will be drawn to examine
their own crevices of surprise and silence.
Marjorie
Anderson, July
2000
Afterword
from Dropped Threads
I was twenty-one
years old, and standing in line to receive my Bachelor of Arts diploma
from Hanover College. Major in English, minor in history. It was
June, and the temperature was 97 degrees Fahrenheit. Under our black
academic gowns my girlfriends and I wore, by previous agreement,
nothing. Nothing at all. This was considered high daring in those
days, 1957. The night before, seven or eight of us had gathered
in the woods above the campus and conducted a ritual burning of
our saddle shoes. We were utterly ignorant of what lay ahead of
us, but imbued, for some reason, with a nose-thumbing rejection
of the suffocating shell of convention that enclosed us.
And yet most
of us were prepared to inhabit that safe place our parents had defined
for us. We married the same summer we graduated, joined our lives
with men no older than we were, and within a year we were buying
houses, having babies and planting petunias. Hardly any of us thought
of a career other than wife and mother. No one had suggested such
a notion to us.
The 1957 graduation
address was given by a very popular math professor at the college.
He began his talk by telling us that we would remember nothing of
what he would say that hot June morning. This was true; I sat dreaming
of my wedding, which was just six weeks away, and of the apartment
where I would live with my new husband. The charm of domesticity,
its sweetness and self-containment, pulled at all my passions. But
suddenly he broke through my daydreams. "I ask you to remember only
two things," he said. "Remember the date, 1957, and remember the
words tempus fugit."
I had studied
Latin, but even if I hadn't I would have known what that phrase
meant: time flies. Our convocation speaker was reminding
us that our lives would speed by before we had grasped them. It
was our responsibility to seize each moment and fill it with accomplishment.
Otherwise our life would be wasted, worn away with the turning years,
and we would grow old and disappointed in what we had made of it.
The phrase haunted
me in the ensuing years. I was occupied with babies and with the
hard physical work that babies involve. We moved several times and
so there were always new domestic arrangements to carve out. Cleaning,
cooking, coping, running errands - my days were filled with such
minutiae. It was in the calmer, cooler evenings that the phrase
tempus fugit would return to me, beating at the back of my brain
and reminding me that time was rushing by. I was spooked, frightened
by what this meant.
And then, quite
suddenly, I realized it meant nothing. Tempus did not fugit. In
a long and healthy life, which is what most of us have, there is
plenty of time. There is time to sit on a houseboat for a month
reading novels. There is time to learn another language. There is
travel time and there is stay-at-home time. Shallow time and fallow
time. There is time in which we are politically involved and other
times when we are wilfully unengaged. We will have good years and
bad years, and there will be time for both. Every moment will not
be filled with accomplishment; we would explode if we tied ourselves
to such a regimen. Time was not our enemy if we kept it on a loose
string, allowing for rest, emptiness, reassessment, art and love.
This was not a mountain we were climbing; it was closer to being
a novel with a series of chapters.
My mother-of-small-children
chapter seemed to go on forever, but, in fact, it didn't. It was
a mere twelve years, over in a flash. Suddenly I was at a place
where I had a little more time to reflect. I could think, for instance,
about writing a real novel, and I did. And then another novel, and
then another. I had a desk in this new chapter of my life, a typewriter
and a pile of paper that belonged just to me. For the first time
I needed a file cabinet and a wrist watch, something I'd done without
for a decade. I remember I spent the whole of an October afternoon
working on a single sentence; I was not by nature a patient person,
but for this kind of work and at this time in my life, I was able
to be endlessly, foolishly, patient.
In 1985 I looked
up from my desk and realized that the children had gone, all five
of them. The house was quieter now. The days were mine to arrange
any way I wished. I wrote a novel in which, for the first time,
there were no children. It was a different kind of novel than I'd
written before, with a more inventive structure. The publisher was
worried about this innovation, but I was insistent. The insistence
was something new, and it coloured the chapter I was living in,
my early-middle-age chapter. The woman I saw in the mirror looked
like someone else, but I knew it was really me, relocated in time
and breathing another grade of oxygen. I was given an office and
a key to that office. I loaded it down with plants and pictures,
a soft lamp, a carpet. It felt like a tiny apartment, offering solitude
and giving a new permission, another space in which to live my ever-altering
life.
Friendship took
time, but luckily I had time as I entered yet another phase. My
women friends provided support, amusement, ideas, pleasure, wisdom.
The two-hour lunch was a luxury I could afford during this period;
moreover, it was a kind of necessary music. The more words we tossed
into the air the closer we felt to the tune of our own lives. We
talked about what we knew and what we didn't know. Our conversations
were punctuated with the joyous discovery of commonalities, the
recognition that the narratives of our lives bumped along differently,
but with the same change rhythms.
But one day,
over a long lunch with my friend Marjorie Anderson, we spoke for
the first time of all that went unspoken, even in an age of intense
and open communication. There were the things our mothers hadn't
voiced, the subjects our teachers had neglected, the false prophetic
warnings (tempus fugit, for example) we had been given and the fatal
silence surrounding particular areas of anxiety or happiness. Why
weren't we told? Why weren't we warned? What contributed to the
reticence between generations, between one woman and another?
We decided to
ask some of our women friends to talk about the skipped discourses
in their lives and how they had managed, at last, to cope with the
surprise of self-discovery, stumbling on that which had been missing:
an insight, a truth, an admission, a dark hole. The proposals poured
in. This was an exciting time; Marjorie and I were exhilarated by
the ideas that were suggested, and astonished that so few overlapped.
The areas where woman had been surprised by lack of knowledge ranged
from childbirth to working with men, to illness, loss, friendship
and secrecy, to the power of sexual feelings, the frustrations of
inherited responsibility and the recurrent patterns that haunt us.
The finished
essays, which arrived like dispatches from the frontier, described
these varied experiences and reported on how they were confronted
or accepted. Each voice was separate, and yet each connected subtly
with others, as though informed by an underground stream. The essays
expressed perplexity at life's offerings: injury and outrage that
could not be voiced (Woman, hold thy tongue), expectations that
could not be met, fulfillment arriving in unexpected places, the
need for roughness, the beginning of understanding, the beginning
of being able to say what had once been unsayable. Or, in my case,
the apprehension of a structure that gave fluidity and ease to a
long life, the gradually (or suddenly) shifting scenes, each furnished
with its own noise and movement, its particular rewards and postures.
We move through
our chapters mostly with gratitude. Who isn't renewed by startling
scenery or refreshed by undreamed-of freedoms? Surprise keeps us
alive, liberates our senses. I thought for a while that a serious
illness had interrupted my chaptered life, but no, it is a chapter
on its own. Living with illness requires new balancing skills. It
changes everything, and I need to listen to it, attend to it and
bring to it a stern new sense of housekeeping. But I have time for
this last exercise. All the time in the world.
Carol Shields,
March
2000
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