Unexpected Gifts

Image by Couleur from Pixabay

Once or twice a year I’m reminded powerfully why writing and sharing our stories is so important. Usually the reminder is in the form of an email sent by a stranger. I can’t express what these unexpected gifts in my inbox mean to me. They often seem to come at a time when I need them most. 

I received one in January from a reader who’d discovered an essay I’d written in 2017. The essay, published in Motherwell magazine, described the period in parenthood when one of your children begins to outgrow the other. When I wrote the piece, my daughter was fourteen and my son was nine. She was navigating high school, he was still in elementary. Their once-shared path through childhood had diverged. 

Readers left comments throughout the years—sometimes older siblings, sometimes younger ones—each quietly devastating. But the email I received last month was from a mother. She was going through the same dilemma with her children, who were around the same age as mine were all those years ago. It was the most heartbreaking time she’d experienced in parenthood so far, she said. She wanted to know how it had turned out with my kids, who are now adults. 

It took me nearly an hour to draft my response. I wanted to say the right things. I wanted to acknowledge the fact that she’d reached out with a very personal story and let herself be vulnerable. Mostly, I wanted to give her hope.

Just like her email had given me hope. That we need each other’s stories. That they’re worth writing. That capturing something painful and sharing it can, nearly a decade later, continue to help others feel a little less alone. 

Read “Driving Lessons” in Five Minute Lit

Image courtesy of Five Minute Lit

My son turned eighteen on May 28, the same day this piece was published in Five Minute Lit. Another year gone by. Another milestone. They are adding up to one long road, and it’s sure to be a little lonely. Such is parenthood.

As always, thanks for reading.

Celebrating Ten Years as a Published Writer

Photo by Audrey Fretz on Unsplash

This month marks the ten-year anniversary of my first published piece, “Flight.” I will never, ever forget when Literary Mama accepted that story—I was over the moon. It was the writerly breakthrough I needed and kicked off a ten-year streak of publishing my fiction and essays in some truly wonderful magazines.

A decade is a long time, and although many of the magazines I’ve appeared in are still going strong (including Literary Mama!), several have folded. In the last year alone I’ve taken down seven links that led to defunct websites.

The good news is my stories belong to me, and there’s more than one way to make them available to you. One of my goals for 2022 was to add audio of me reading these orphaned pieces on my website. And then I thought, well, why not video too? So here they are!

I started with the four prose poems I lost when Mothers Always Write shut down a few months ago. Next, I hope to tackle the short stories that disappeared with YA Review Net, including the award-winning “The Lost Girls” and the Pushcart Prize nominated “We Never Get to Talk Anymore.”

If you’re looking for something new, the final video features an unpublished essay called “Enchanted.”

Thanks for reading/listening/watching!