I’ve
been in absentia. Tucked away writing my next book, a part guide and part
manifesto on how to create the time for
your life. If I said that left little space for me to write much of anything
else, that might seem a bit hypocritical to the
premise of my book. But it’s not. It’s called triage, a tool I use in assessing what needs to be at the
top of my to-do list. My newsletter has not been there, nor this blog, until now.
In a case of what can only be life imitating art, or is it art
imitating life, I have been thrown curve balls in the last week or so that
challenge the very core of what the book is all about. And so I found myself in
the last days before this book hits Amazon, forced to test drive to the extreme
what happens when the really big curve balls hit. I had to listen to my own
advice on managing, organizing and creating the time for everything I both wanted
and had to do.
It Takes An Egg Timer: A Guide
To Creating The Time For Your Life
has been written and edited and is with my very brilliant interior book
designer, Jamie Kerry. The cover is under construction with the extraordinarily talented
cover designer, Wendy Bass. My official release date of May 15, auspicious in
that it happens to be my brother’s birthday is two full weeks away. More than
enough time to read through, yet again and
again this short, inspirational,
motivational, informative, and at times entertaining guide/manifesto in that
way authors do as they strive for perfection.
I am
walking rather proud. This is after all my second self-published work. And I am
feeling pretty good how ahead of schedule I am this time and consequently much
less nervous. Well maybe. I don’t think I will ever not be on the edge before a
new book is birthed into the world. But confident enough that I was able to
relax and enjoy a four-day weekend spent in a Robert McKee Story Seminar from
9A-7P every day.
And
then the calls started. From my mother. My 89 year-old, fiercely independent
mother who still lives alone, an hour and forty-five minutes south on the New
Jersey Turnpike, and yes, on occasion still drives to the grocery store. Her
leg is bothering her, but this time it is not just the osteoarthritis and
absence of all cartilage. This time she says she can barely walk and the pain
is excruciating until I suggest she call 911. Then the pain subsides.
My
brother goes to her apartment. Things settle for a bit. He leaves. In between I
am trying to concentrate long enough to read as well as prepare for all that
marketing and outreach that goes into a book release. Yes, I use my trusty egg
timer in sixty-minute windows just as I suggest in my book. It is the only hope I have of getting anything
done. The ticking sound really does calm me.
I
clear my schedule and on Wednesday take Exit 6 to the Pennsylvania Turnpike to
find my mother crawled in a ball in her bed. She is in too much pain to walk.
She has not been drinking enough water because she is too afraid she will not
be able to get herself to the bathroom. She wears her medical alert necklace,
the one she has never been afraid to push to get help. Until now.
I
don’t ask, I tell her I am taking her to the ER. Except I can’t get her out of
bed to get dressed. We’re going to need the rescue squad but not, she informs
me before I help her dress and she puts on some lipstick.
To some this might seem like a good sign. To me, it is just my mother’s vanity,
her elixir to staying young.
I mask
my worry in crisis management. I’m
good at that. All those years of
working in a corporate office and having to draw on my testosterone reserve
while squashing my feminine energy to survive come in handy at moments like
this. I compartmentalize the excitement for my book. My attention and my time
are nowhere else but with her.
At
Abington Memorial Hospital they start running tests, drawing blood and ordering
x-rays. A team of doctors and nurses in what might be the nicest ER I have ever
been to, attend to her. There is some sort of infection in her blood that they
need to get to the source of. It was good, we are told, that she got here when
she did.
I sit
in the chair next to her, and she looks frail. Once standing at five–five and
three quarters she has shrunk to five-two. I want to burst into tears but I
save them for later. Seeing me cry
will only make her more afraid. At
this moment she needs my strength.
I
worry that maybe this is it. That maybe this infection has taken hold of her
and we are at the end. Her time.
But could it be? Just two weeks from my brother’s and the book’s birthday? A
book on how we have more time than we think we do? Why do beginnings always
have to be so inextricably connected to endings? It’s all too much to think about. So I force myself not to.
Not until the results are all back and we know what we are dealing with. I
close my eyes and concentrate on the movement of my breath. I am so grateful
that breathing and meditation are no longer foreign concepts to me.
I
watch her fall asleep. She is tired. A combination of meds and all this
attention and excitement. I see a tiny opening here. A few moments for me to be
there for me. And I seize it.
I find
the PDF in my iPad and I open my new book. It is dedicated to her, my mother and
her ever-faithful egg timer, the one she showed me how to use. I read and I
can’t help but smile. I ground in
my own words, transported to the original egg timer in the kitchen I grew up
in. My worry shifts to profound gratitude for this woman I have been lucky
enough to call my mother for all these years. She will like this book. Like
that she and the egg timer were the original sources of inspiration. I know she
will stay at least long enough to celebrate its grand entrance to the world.
I am right. I love it when I am right. By the
next day the infection is under control. The swelling has subsided. A therapist
is helping her walk. A few days in
the hospital and she is home, this time with a walker as her personal assistant
as well as the help of visiting nurses. And of course, an advance PDF copy of my new book.
I know
her strength and her will. I have after all inherited that.
She is not ready to go. Not just yet. Not before a party. For her son and this book. Neither of which would have been possible without her.
She is not ready to go. Not just yet. Not before a party. For her son and this book. Neither of which would have been possible without her.
4 comments:
Ohhhh I am soooo excited for you! Look at you, two books in one year! You go girl!
Thank you Colette! I am excited for your release as well! A big year for us both!!
When we met last August at Blogher, you were just about to publish your first book. How fantastic that you now have a second!
Like you, I recently left my ad agency job to go freelance. I'm happy to say I'm halfway through my first book, a memoir of my adventures as an Air Force brat. I'm calling it "80 Stories" because I hope to deliver 80 chapters by mid July in time to give it to my father at his 80th birthday celebration.
I look forward to hearing about your upcoming book and birthday celebration and hope your mother is able to attend and to savor every moment.
What a wonderful idea for a book! I look forward to hearing more about it.
The new book comes out next Tuesday :)
Post a Comment