Sunday, February 16, 2020
All That Was Once Home
A friend shares that her husband is brain-tired after a trip to South America, finding the struggle to understand and speak in Spanish exhausting. That they both did their best to master the language and put it to use during their vacation was admirable.
Though I didn't have the words, never called it brain-tired, I remember that feeling, a memory from a time long ago. A time when I was an undocumented teacher in Mexico City, building my understanding of both language and culture while also trying to survive economically on an irregular income paid in pesos.
The comment and the memory serve as reminders each day I walk into the classroom. My students – immigrants and refugees from around the globe – are tired. Tired from low-paid, menial labor and overburdened with family responsibilities. Tired from living on the edge, unsure where their next meal will come from or if they’ll be able to pay the rent and keep the heat on. Tired from fear of current immigration policy and the constant threat of violence, family separation, or deportation. Tired of wondering what the future may bring for them and their families, here as well as back in their home countries. And yes, brain-tired from using a language and coping in a culture foreign from all they once knew and loved. From all that was once home.
Monday, January 20, 2020
February Author Events
With the holidays another fond memory and gray Seattle winter here for the next few months - 59 days, to be precise - I'm ready to settle in for some quiet reading time. If you're like me, winter is perfect for getting caught up on new releases and for checking out local author events.
If you're in the Seattle area, I hope you'll consider coming to Third Place Books for my first reading of The Ex-Mexican Wives Club. I love this bookshop and look forward to reading there once again.
If you're in the Seattle area, I hope you'll consider coming to Third Place Books for my first reading of The Ex-Mexican Wives Club. I love this bookshop and look forward to reading there once again.
6504 20th Ave NE
Seattle, WA
Thursday, February 6, 2020
7:00 - 8:30 p.m.
Or perhaps the Eastside is more convenient for you. If so, consider marking your calendar for February 28 when I have the pleasure of returning to my hometown library in Issaquah.
10 West Sunset Way
Issaquah, WA
Friday, February 28, 2020
4:30 - 6:00 p.m.
I look forward to seeing you soon!
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Finding Forgotten Joy
Why am I so often blinded by the negativity in my world? I tell myself (and anyone who will listen) that 2019 was a tough year, that I’m glad it will end soon. Too many scams, falls and financial woes – and that’s just on a person level. If I follow the news too closely, I’m ready to close myself in a dark room for days on end.
Instead, I decide to page through my 2019 calendar (yes, I still keep a paper planner in addition to the cell phone calendar). It’s an eye-opening exercise that I highly recommend to anyone who tends to focus on the negative as I found myself doing.
Perhaps the holiday letters that some folks write each year are all
about reminiscing the positive. So, here’s my Happy Holidays Letter to
all. It turns out 2019 was not such a bad year after all, simply a very busy
year with a few bumps in the road.
Last winter was a time of hikes, snowshoeing and cycling. Tom and I took part in the Seattle Viaduct Ride before demolition began. A month later we did a 3-day, town-to-town ride in Oregon’s beautiful Willamette Valley.
Spring brought another weekend of cycling, this time in Grayland, WA where we stayed in a state park yurt and explored the cranberry bogs by bike and the beach on foot. The first weekend in May we began a major home remodel that monopolized the entire summer. No regrets, just a long summer of hard work and construction chaos. In June we celebrated our daughter’s graduation from the University of Washington where she earned her Master’s in Social Work. To celebrate Mother’s Day, Erin took me on a mother-daughter camping trip – a childhood tradition revisited.
Summer was glorious in Seattle – lovely weather and no
forest fire smoke. In August, we enjoyed my
mother-in-law’s annual visit, always a welcome pleasure. In early
September I had the unusual experience of attending a slumber party in Las
Vegas (I’d never been) with a dozen other Medicare-aged women with whom I once
attended high school. An odd and rewarding event. The remodel allowed little time
for hiking, but still we managed a half dozen adventures into the woods before fall
rain made hiking miserable and cycling impossible
Autumn was brighter and more glorious than I ever remember,
and I was born and raised in the Pacific Northwest! October was a full and
fabulous month. Four days after celebrating my 65th birthday, my
sixth book was released. But best of all, I learned we will be grandparents in
the coming spring. I am overwhelmed joy! In November, Erin and Elliot took us
to his family cabin on the Olympic Peninsula for a much-needed retreat for all
of us. It was a lovely weekend of long beach walks, great food and lots of card
games. Erin always wins! Now December is here and 2019 is coming to a close.
Winter break from teaching has been a time to take stock and prioritize for
2020. We learned that our first grandchild will be a boy. I can focus on little
else!
2020 will be fabulous, but then 2019 was really nothing to
complain about either. It’s all in how you look at it. Have you taken a moment
to scroll through your calendar? You might be surprised to find joy buried
there.
Friday, December 20, 2019
A Lucky Day?
I find a spot in
the large lot as close as possible to the supermarket. A truck, maybe an SUV, is
parked on the right; an older model sedan to the left. Tight, but not too
tight. Enough space for my door to swing open just fine. A shadow sits behind
the wheel of the sedan. A better look reveals a heavy-bellied man who seems to
be snoozing.
I sit for a moment thinking
about my earlier purchases – a bathroom rug, kitchen towels, a sweater – is it
too much? Money is tight. With a sigh, I gather the empty grocery bags from the
passenger’s seat, brush my graying bangs from my eyes, and swing my legs from
the car. With two feet planted on the ground, and leaning forward slightly to
hoist myself up, my eyes glaze the wet concrete and land on what looks like a
small piece of paper almost under my car. A bill. Never one to ignore even a coin
on the ground – lucky penny, I say if anyone sees my awkward stoop – I pick
up the money. It is folded twice, halved then quartered. For a moment I wonder
about the shadow in the car. Could it be his? Unlikely, I tell
myself.
I head to the restroom
at the back of the store. There I settle myself, slip the crisp, new bills into
my wallet, and decide that maybe, just maybe, it’s my lucky day. Then, I go
about my shopping, filling the small cart with fresh vegetables for the soup
planned for the evening. At the checkout I reach for my card, reluctant to use
the bills snuggled next to it.
As I approach my parked
car, the passenger door to the neighboring sedan is open wide. A large woman
leans into the front seat. She is tearing through the car, her grocery bags,
her purse. Tissues, a hairbrush, plastic bags, crumpled papers are strewn on
the ground between our cars.
She sees me, or perhaps
the man still in the driver’s seat tells her I am there. When she stands and
turns, I see anguish in her eyes and tears streaming down her dark face. Her
tall body is wrapped in layers of threadbare fabrics: full-length skirt, multiple
sweaters, scarf sliding from her head.
“Are you looking for
something?” I ask.
Her arms flailing toward
the gods, the woman wails, “My two hundred dollars. My two hundred dollars.”
I reach forward and
touch one raised arm. “It’s all right. I found it. Here on the ground. I didn’t know
who it belonged to.”
The woman stares in
disbelief as I open my wallet and pull out the folded bills. Before I can hand them
over, I’m folded into a dancing embrace of pure joy.
“My money. My money.
Praise the Lord. Thank you. Thank you, dear lady.”
I feel the woman’s full
body shaking, trembling as her arms smother me against her ample chest.
“It’s okay now,” I soothe.
“You’re okay now. Here, take your money.”
As the woman stuffs the
bills under the layers of fabric covering her chest, she asks, “What is your
name, dear lady? We will say a prayer for you.”
“Arleen,” I say and am again
wrapped in a warm embrace. Disentangling myself, I slip into her own driver’s
seat and wish the woman well.
Monday, December 16, 2019
Stories to Share
How can you write about all
that stuff?
Doesn’t it feel weird to share
your secrets?
I couldn’t do it.
You’re so brave.
In one way or another I’ve heard
these questions and comments from readers since the publication of my first
memoir. My response has been, I’ll admit, a bit flippant, perhaps even rude at
times.
Such is the nature of memoir.
That’s why it’s called memoir.
But through the years I’ve
thought a lot about the truth behind both the questions/comments and my
responses. There is no doubt that memoir writing involves honesty, a bearing of
the soul in search of personal understanding and universal truth. It is the
telling of truth that readers connect with, the universal human experience that
truth touches.
I’ve come to understand that my
comfort with memoir lies in another, perhaps more deeply buried belief. We all
have buttons – expressions, comments, behaviors – that set us off. Understanding
where they come from or how they are formed is likely found in the field of
psychoanalysis. One of my buttons – or triggers, though I dislike that term –
is when someone says something along the lines of: That’s just the way he/she
is. People don’t change.
I don’t share that belief. I
never have. People can and do change when they mindfully make the decision to
do so. As Leonardo Shaw points out in this interview a friend shared with me recently:
“We all have within us, at any moment, the power
to transform the quality of our life.”
—Leonard Shaw
I am not the same
insecure girl I was in high school, or the same young woman making so many
mistakes, so many errors in judgement, or even the same young mother grappling
with first family tragedy while struggling to build a new family of her own.
We change when we
choose to be self-analytical, to question our past and work to build new
patterns of behavior. It’s hard, time-consuming, continuous work. The work of a
lifetime. But it is possible. So when people ask in ore form or another if I’m
not embarrassed to tell the secrets I share in my memoirs, my response has changed.
Now I say: I’m no longer that person. People change.
I feel compassion for
that younger me, but I am no longer her. She helped me become who I am today. She
gave me stories to share.
I hope you enjoy these stories of my years working as an undocumented teacher in Mexico City in the 1980s and
reconnecting with the women I knew during those turbulent years.
Friday, December 6, 2019
Seattle Writes: Join Me in West Seattle!
I'm excited for the opportunity to substitute teach for Seattle Writes, a Hugo House writing program offered in collaboration with the Seattle Public Library. I'll be covering for Jeanine Walker on Wednesday, December 11 in the West Seattle Library. This is a special pleasure as I will be teaching in my local neighborhood library!
Join me and other West Seattle writers as we explore memoir and the use of memoir techniques in other writing genres. All skill levels welcome. I hope you'll join us!
Join me and other West Seattle writers as we explore memoir and the use of memoir techniques in other writing genres. All skill levels welcome. I hope you'll join us!
Seattle Writes: Writing Circle With Hugo House
West Seattle Library
2306 42nd Ave SW, Seattle, WA
Wednesday, December 11, 2019, 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.
Friday, November 8, 2019
First Concussion & First Review
It was supposed to be a treat to myself for the completion
and publication of The Ex-Mexican Wives Club. The hills surrounding Lake
Chelan were alive with fall color and autumn sun. Orchards vying with vineyards in a
dance of glory as my friends and I arrived mid-afternoon. We settled into the
cottage and walked downtown for an early dinner. Later, after a stop at the
local bookstore to set up a reading and a few glasses of wine at a Chelan favorite, we stocked up on groceries and headed home on foot.
Was it the new eyeglasses I’d picked up the day before or
the few glasses of wine I'd just enjoyed? Was it grocery bags in both hands and a crack in the
sidewalk? Was I looking over my shoulder, cracking jokes at the friends behind
me? Whatever it was, I landed face down on concrete.
It’s been three weeks since the release of The Ex-Mexican
Wives Club. Two weeks since I fell. My face has healed. The
concussion has not, so plans for public readings are still on hold. That said,
I’m pleased to share the first Amazon review of my new memoir:
There are certain authors that I follow so I don't miss
the release of a new book. Arleen Williams is one of those - one of my
favorites! Of her three memoirs, this book, is the best one yet. It is a fascinating
story of her years in Mexico and the people she met while living there under
challenging circumstances. In this book, she traces back through old letters
and journals to piece together faded memories of a turbulent time in her life -
and then reaches out to find the women she knew then to better understand both
her own story and their stories. This book made me think about the people I've
known as I moved around the world. Imagine taking the time to find out whatever
happened to this or that friend who was so important to me at one time in my
life. But Arleen actually did it!
Perhaps this book is my favorite of the three memoirs
because, book by book, more pieces of the story are filled in. In the previous
memoirs, the years in Mexico are alluded to. With this book, those years are
now explained. I recommend that readers gobble up all three memoirs, The
Thirty-Ninth Victim. The Ex-Mexican Wives Club, and Mom's Last Move. They all
hang together like an intriguing puzzle. Now I'm waiting for the next memoir!
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