So as it turns out, I'm not my mother. It's useful to be reminded of this because whenever I lose patience with my kid, the specter of my mother looms behind me. It's useful because whenever I'm depressed and feeling needy, my mother's face stares back at me from behind my forehead. And it's interesting to note that my clearest memories of my mother's parenting involve half-full jelly jars full of Franzia sloshing around and a shaky barefoot thing in terrycloth shorts towering over me shouting "most mommies say they love their children even when they're angry but I'm not most mommies and if you cross me right now I will FUCKING KILL YOU" and perfectly reasonable conversations on Sunday afternoons about how she never wanted kids in the first place so it's pleasantly surprising we turned out okay anyway and my memories still fall short of the reality. She's medicated now, so that's useful. My biggest apprehension was that she'd scar my kid for life, but discovering that we were opening a birth center with a (gasp) profit motive was enough to flip her switch from "manic" to "depressive" so she spent the bulk of her visit under a haze of lorazepam, two of which my daughter found on the floor after they left. And I was able to get the raised beds in and half the yard thatched because rather than entertain them all weekend, they holed up in my bedroom and slept all day such that we were incapable of, you know, getting clothes and stuff. She would occasionally send her husband out to request food, usually an hour or two after we mentioned in passing on their way to the bathroom that meals would be prepared. The food requested rarely aligned with the meals prepared. At one point my stepfather was instructed to accompany me to the store because I cannot be trusted to purchase canned soup. And that's an interesting one, too. My relationship with my stepfather is complex but objectively speaking, he's the best grandparent my side of the family can produce. He can hold a conversation, he's healthy and hale, he expresses interest in small people and he remembers names. My stepmonster is a quaint fellow that bears a striking resemblance to Dr. Huer from Buck Rogers that can take my daughter out on her pushbike for an hour and a half. I had lengthy discussions with him about Umberto Eco and Zoroastrianism. He's a career bureaucrat with the federal government whose exceedingly piss-poor taste in women happens to benefit my current family and my aims greatly while also destroying my former family. Which, hey, needed to be destroyed from before I was born. So... emotions are complex around that one. The couch, as it turns out, isn't a bad place to sleep. Other than the fact that you can't cuddle with your loved one. We spent 4 days there. My mother took one shower the entire time, but never changed her clothes. She's long been fond of polyester blends and has always considered deodorant to be a plot of the patriarchy; I had to smuggle it in as a teenager. But the laundry is done (WASH ALL THE THINGS) and they're a memory and I will never be my mother. My father has had a new girlfriend for about five years now. She's compulsive and a hoarder. As my father put it "I went from one crazy woman to another, but at least this one's just crazy. The first one was crazy and mean." It was interesting me to see her deprived of alcohol, medicated to the gills, sort of a Mrs. Potatohead of disdain and flatulence. She never lashed out, she never hit anyone, her verbal pyrotechnics were much diminished, but her face pinched up in disapproval every time anyone but her husband spoke. It was like watching a trigger pulled on an empty gun. You're safe, but you know that someone wants you dead. And it's easier grappling with my bullshit emotions surrounding money when I recognize what a truly crazy place they come from. My sister described my parents as "antipreneurial" and commented that the last time my mother flipped the switch while visiting her, it was because she floated the idea of flipping houses with her housing-contractor husband. Never mind the fact that the stepmonster owned an 8-plex and flipped a half-dozen houses with his dead wife; if we do it, it's because we're yuppie scum. Pretty easy to look down your nose at people when you're pulling down a 95% government pension until you die and social security and, somehow, not sure how she wrangled this, a $3k a month alimony payment even though she remarried. There are about two pickup truck bed's worth of plumbing fixtures in boxes in the spare bedroom. Faucetdirect.com had a sale that ended March 31 and our contractor is still a few weeks out from plumbing. Home Depot, for their part, canceled part of our order because who the fuck orders five sinks? I do. Because I'm a filthy fucking capitalist. But at least I'm not a mean filthy fucking capitalist.
You are not your mother!! and you won't turn into her later on. But one must ever be vigilant. DNA is funny stuff.She never lashed out, she never hit anyone, her verbal pyrotechnics were much diminished, but her face pinched up in disapproval every time anyone but her husband spoke. It was like watching a trigger pulled on an empty gun. You're safe, but you know that someone wants you dead.
This is novelistic writing. If it's not in your current novel, put it in the next one.
Yeah, avoid similes like the plague, so they say. But that one reads so perfectly. Send me your discarded similes. They needs some love. If memory serves me at all, wasn't Jonathan Franzan all similes all the time. I don't have books in front of me -- so I have to check that. and I'll never forget best-seller... Bright Lights Big City - McInerny's simile, speaking of the protagonist's boss: "She had a heart like a ten-minute egg." But you are probably right.
I'm realizing that you get to make every mistake you want after you've sold that first book, after you're repped, after people are trusting your instincts rather than the instincts of every professional that disagrees with you. Still doesn't mean it's a good idea, but nobody is telling you "you can't do that because I said so" as if you were a toddler. Fleisch-Kinkaid on the above passage is 8.9. F-K on my last chapter was 7.6 or so. I aim to keep it under 8.
simply-written books sell better. Thing of it is, you don't need Byzantine sentence structure to convey complex ideas. In fact, the more you edit and proof the more clearly you can express yourself. There's a place for complexity and there's a place for voice, but it's also super-easy to confuse the fuck out of half your audience and that's no way to make a living.
On that topic, are you still enjoying the Crosstrek? When I see them on the road I think they look great, and it hits my price, reputation, practicality and size check boxes.
I've had some time to think about the answer to this question. I need to preface it with a bit of understanding about my head-space about cars. I'm a brutal utilitarian when it comes to cars. I want to get from Point A to Point B, carry all my crap, get good gas mileage, be reliable and inexpensive to run over time. I don't care about status symbols, or the emotional context of owning a car. And I refuse to see myself as part of a 'culture' just because I bought something. Now that the "Darth Vader Car Review" theme is out of the way? I love the car. The switch from low vehicles with 15" wheels to a car that sits higher and rides on 19" wheels has me wondering why I did not do this sooner. The car holds my telescope with so much room left over that I have to fight the feeling that I forgot half my stuff. It handled snow by laughing at it; granted we only got an inch here and there this winter. I've run it through puddles, over shitty Kentucky potholes masquerading as interstates, and the package I have has auto everything which is wonderful. I'm looking forward to loading the thing up and going.... not sure where but it will be the end of a dirt road where the skies are dark. It is still a small car, but it does not FEEL like a small car. I've been doing 75-80 on the highway and getting 32MPG. The rear view camera that I thought was a joke is now a vital part of my drive every day. The downsides are all on me, not the car. I'm still fighting the urge to use the clutch as this is my first ever auto transmission vehicle. The constant velocity transmission still feels weird, but otherwise is great. The engine has a funny start which if you have ever driven a Mazda rotary you know; the engine when cool sits in a pool of oil so it has that sort of "guh" when it starts for the first 20 or so seconds. And the car is 7" wider than the last car, so I have to force myself to remember to leave more room when driving and parking. Yea, I dig the car. The 2016's are getting even better reviews making me wish the accident was in January not November. But no regrets at all.
Thank you for the thorough response! You hit on a number of things important to me. I'm not quite as utilitarian; I like a car to look and feel good. Small but not feeling small is one of the things I'm looking for, too. When I bought my Civic I test drove an Accord, and it felt too big. I show the Crosstrek as only 1.1 inches wider than my Civic and 0.2 inches longer. My Civic is a manual, and I'm glad you aren't annoyed with the automatic. The turn radius looks comparable to a Civic, too. It really seems like a good fit for me, and I appreciate your experiences.
The day I realized I was nothing like my mother was the greatest day of my life. She's the kind of person that flies under the radar while slowly chipping away at the self esteem, confidence, and overall mental stability of those around her. I think observing my siblings trying their hardest to gain her love and acceptance helped me realize that there was better ways to spend my time. It worked out really well. Cheers to you for also managing to not be your mother.