Skip to main content

This book stuff is harder than it seems...

So as I think I may have mentioned, I have to write a book for my MA in Creative Nonfiction, and I decided to write a memoir about this whole GB experience, including childhood stuff and family dynamics in addition to the process of surgery and the mental and physical results of the change.  I thought it would be so easy.  I mean, I spend 90% of my time thinking about my body anyway, how hard could it be to put those thoughts down in the form of an interesting, structured narrative?

NOT, that's how easy.  I haven't written one single word of the book, and I'm having a really hard time starting.  And the longer I put it off, the more afraid I am of failing at my goal to write a funny, frank narrative; I'm terrified it'll end up as a 'poor me' memoir, and I'll have proven my dad right in saying that this project is self-indulgent and useless.  And that's not the only surprise stumbling block...

When I tell people what I'm writing about, they all seem shocked and impressed that I'm willing to talk so openly about my body insecurities.  They seem to think that's something most people would be uncomfortable with strangers reading.  But I have no problems with that; strangers I'll never meet can know everything about my psychotic mind and I'll have no idea, so what's the big deal?  What I didn't predict, and am having some serious issues with, is the whole classroom experience. 

When we workshop our pieces in class, not only do our classmates read them, but we then read them aloud and discuss.  This is extremely helpful, but it's also extremely difficult sometimes, like when you've written an on-the-fly piece describing in detail the hideousness of your ass.  Yes, I did that.  Last week.  It was awkward to read aloud, and I kind of wanted to cry, and it was hard to convince myself that everyone in the room wasn't staring at my ass on the way out.  But I did it.

It gave me pause, though.  Writing has always been my favorite way to sort out my shit, get down feelings that I'm too embarassed to talk to someone about– the BF and I do some of our best relationship convos via email because we're not afraid to say things when the other person isn't staring back at us crying.  The distance between writer and reader is my safety net.  I'm much more comfortable writing a post here about my sex life or my jiggly shoulders than I am reading that same post aloud to a group of people I see twice a week.

And it's not just them.  If this book (if I ever write it) does get published, my family might read it.  I mean, they might not– they've never been the most interested in my writing– but if they do, and I've written about my mom's issues with body dysmorphia or my sister's terrible eating habits and sudden weight loss through thyroid medication, they might be hurt.  But isn't that a memoirist's duty, to plow on without worrying about hurting people?  I've kind of always thought that if the book is 85% me humiliating myself and 15% me humiliating others, then they should be able to forgive me, but humiliation isn't really relative, is it?

Gah.  The more I think about all this the more I feel like I can't write this book.  My teacher quoted somebody (she couldn't remember who) in class last week regarding the writing process: "successful writing requires an extremely high tolerance for imperfection in the early stages and an extremely low tolerance for it in the late stages."  She was referring to the writing itself, and that certainly applies to me (I'm such a perfectionist about this stuff that I stop myself from getting anything done in the first place because it's never good enough), but I also think it applies to content and people you may hurt in the end.  Best to worry about that stuff when the manuscript's first draft is finished, I suppose.

Ugh, but how can it ever be finished if I never start it?!

Comments

Anonymous said…
You need to read Lit by Mary Karr (http://bit.ly/9TQP00). It's depressing as shit and the 3rd memoir in a series of three (it was so depressing, i couldn't go back and read the first two, knowing that all that still had to happen to her LATER in life. But it does a lot of good things: 1) it deals with a lot of imperfection, herself: CERTAINLY, but also other people in her life 2) if you can make it to the end, she writes about the process of writing her first memoir, and dealing with family reactions. Anyway, consider it research, and then it is like you are writing when really you are crying into your pillow at night because her life is so difficult.
Anne said…
um.... i'm not sure i need any encouragement to cry into my pillow these days, but maybe i'll put it on my amazon wishlist for spring...
Andrea said…
If you start working on your book, I'll start my paper on Generalized Anxiety Disorder... 1 2 3 GO!
Anne said…
deal! i'm going to start today!

Popular posts from this blog

Do fat women have it worse than fat men?

I've always said that being fat is harder on women than it is on men.  Not only is there a lot more societal pressure to be stick thin rather than just healthy, which men don't seem to get, but it's a lot harder to be seen as physically attractive if you're even ten or fifteen pounds overweight. Anyway, it seems I'm not the only one thinking these things.  There's an article in the NYTimes today about overweight and obese women doing worse than men financially, an interesting angle on the effects of obesity, and in it they say: Why doesn’t body size affect men’s attainment as much as women’s? One explanation is that overweight girls are more stigmatized and isolated in high school compared with overweight boys. Other studies have shown that body size is one of the primary ways Americans judge female — but not male — attractiveness. We also know that the social stigma associated with obesity is strongest during adolescence. So perhaps teachers and pee...

Can technology help me Lose It, or will I get lost in the numbers?

A few weeks ago I downloaded a new app for my iPhone called Lose It. It’s a calorie counter, but it also incorporates exercise, and the best part is that it’s pretty non-judgmental, as these things go. It lets you choose your own goal, and how fast you want to lost the weight, and then it just calculates the numbers for you. For example, I told it my current weight (I don’t want to talk about it) and that I wanted to lose thirty pounds (yes, hopelessly idealistic) in six months (hey, you gotta have some realism). And it told me my calorie allowance was roughly 2,100 per day. Way higher than I expected! Which is the other thing about this app: it makes me feel good about my eating habits! I have it tracking my nutrients as well, and besides the fact that I eat about twice as much sodium as I’m supposed to (yeah, yeah, whatever. Salt is gooooood), I’m pretty on-target with everything else. And I’ve been coming in under my calorie count pretty much every day. Even Easter! And I...

Memo to medical professionals: the 'weight' issue

I have a bone to pick with the medical community, although it's probably well hidden beneath layers of fat. Yes, I'm talking about the way that doctors and medical professionals deal with weight. A few months ago, I asked my friend if she liked her 'lady doctor,' because I needed to go in for my annual check-up and I don't have a doctor in SF. Her response was something along the lines of "yeah, I like her because she doesn't talk a lot. I mean, except to tell me to lose weight." At this point, she shrugged, as if this is par for the course. For the record, this friend, while not slender, weighs less than I do. So I went online to Yelp (otherwise known as the bible), and I chose a doctor who gets rave reviews. He's a man, unfortunately, but I figured I should just suck it up and give him a try. And I liked him, mostly. The only thing he did that bothered me was that he talked a little too much. Oh yeah, and that he kept slipping in comment...