Just
be curious. That has long been my mantra
as a writer. Its corollary is don’t come
to snap conclusions or quick judgments about people or characters, lives or plots. Along
similar lines, Mary Ruefle reports that Galway Kinnell has said “the secret
title of every good poem might be ‘Tenderness.’ I bring up Mary Ruefle because
she provided no bibliographic trail back to Kinnell, so I couldn’t go to the
source for some context to this rather sweeping statement. If Kinnell is referring to the subject-matter
of a poem, it constrains poetry mightily.
It seems to preclude literature of anger or protest or trauma, which we
are of necessity writing and reading in an era of Trump, populism, #Me Too, and
Idle No More, and in a time when Reconciliation is moving very slowly—except to
some extent in literature where important voices are being heard and respected
and important stories are being told. But if you think of tenderness as a kind
of patient attention that keeps oneself out of the equation, you begin to see
the point of Kinnell’s suggestion. When literature intersects with mental and
physical health, writers need all the
curiosity and tenderness we can muster, because we are dealing with humanity at
its most vulnerable.
I
inherited my mother’s diaries and slips of paper and cardboard that were
drifting around her house when she broke her hip, which was—as it is for many
older people—the beginning of a long descent.
She began half a dozen notebooks with two recurring plaints: how does she live with a husband who struggles
increasingly with dementia, but who still believes he should control their
lives, and how does she cope with her own periods of depression—some of them
caused by her relationship with my father, others for which we will never know
the cause—ill-informed as we really are about the brain. Then there was the puzzling effluvia, like a scrap of paper with "Bill Schneider looks like my dad" or a
piece of card board from a package of panty hose with the ill-spelled words,
all of them with extra Gs: “My leggs hurt so.
Meggan is here.” This was written
after she broke her hip but before my sister rescued her. She must have believed that if no one would
rescue her they would come for the dog.
Prompted
by a visit to her immediately following the broken hip, I wrote a poem I called
“Traces” that uses as many of her own words as I could. I took this to my wonderful poetry group, and
I blame Dr. Grande for asking with Troni-like enthusiasm “Do you have more things like this?” I had been collecting my mother’s favourite phrases,
like “Are you ready, Hezzie?” or “with studied carelessness,” since her death,
because I could somehow find another side to her in her own words. I had also saved the letters she sent to me
and to Veronica, my daughter, letters which are cheerful and even zany. And I
had, of course, those diaries and fragments.
On my drive home that night, the words “an Abecedarius” bubbled up
through my unconscious where consciousness immediately took charge because it
could see how attempting to find memories, diary entries, favourite expressions
for every letter of the alphabet forced me to move beyond my recent vision of
her as someone who struggled with depression and dementia, to see and even
restore the more complex person.
So,
two long very confessional paragraphs later, I can come to one conclusion about
literature and health. Form matters—for
both writers and readers. Form always
conveys an author’s world view—consciously or unconsciously. Thinking about form in tandem with thinking
about people struggling with their health gives the author a kind of additional
meta layer that can speak of something more complex, more philosophical, than
the immediate vagaries of body and mind. And while those emotional narratives of ill-health
and struggle preoccupy readers at an almost visceral level, this other layer
might provide a vision of meaning or meaninglessness, courage or cowardice,
complexity and patience and fear and serenity in the face of the fragile mind’s
and body’s insistent struggles and demands.
For the letter V, I have used "vacuum" as a word or trope that threads together
three elements of my mother’s life:
housework, depression, and the skill and thrift and delight with which she
managed family vacations. Here is the second stanza, the one related to her mental health.
Also
the space behind
her
diaphragm where instead
of
breath there is sometimes
nausea,
sometimes
a
ragged baffling vacuum
larger
than anger
longer
than the decade
of
her Valium hallucination
of a
single chair in a blank room.
Or
the hollow
behind
the white
harlequin
mask she wears,
the
same shape
as
her black cat’s eye glasses
Some
days the mask
vacuums
up
her
tenderness.
Now,
I’ve lied here, but you wouldn’t know that.
My mother never took Valium, though she did get some half-assed advice
from our family doctor about getting out more often—advice that didn’t take
into account my mother’s extreme social anxiety. But one of the things we do when we write
about mental and physical health is to bear witness to body and mind in
extremis. Millions of women did take Valium,
“mother’s little helper” as the Rolling Stones called it, as they struggled to
make meaningful and autonomous lives for themselves after the Second World
War. During the war, many of them had
worked; now they were told to go home and be good consumers to stimulate the
economy. Is it any wonder that both
Britain and North America had a mental health crisis on their hands? So bearing witness to a larger experience
seemed more important than telling the truth.
Yet
tenderness was also necessary for that second stanza. Bearing witness to my mother’s depression,
which she frequently talked with me about, meant making that state of mind as
visceral as any other illness. Patient attention demanded my handling of both
historical and social context and the body and mind under duress--as well as her personal struggle. Here I find the Valium and the cat’s eye
glasses. Here I give voice, through
metaphor, to the “ragged baffling vacuum larger than anger and longer than [a]
decade” that is one of the physical manifestations of depression. It was not a comfortable tenderness; I did
not enjoy spending time inside my mother’s (and, truth be told, my own)
depression to struggle to bring it to the page.
But that is part of bearing witness.
While
we are bearing witness to breakdowns of mental and physical health, it behooves
writers to acknowledge what we do not know, places our bodies and minds have
not gone. After all, admitting you don’t
know something—or doubt—is an agent of Enlightenment, a necessary antidote to careless
assumptions, dogmatism, or extremism, all of which are the opposite of either
curiosity or tenderness. Once again, my
mother talked to me about losing words and things, but it was mostly through
talking to her—or in one case not talking to her because she had put the
phone’s earpiece to her mouth, and so couldn’t hear me—that I inferred we had
moved beyond those weeks when not remembering—again—where her false teeth were
was a joke. The gaps in her memory had
become much more terrifying, isolating, threatening, forcing me to acknowledge
that she had gone somewhere I could not navigate. Hence the final stanzas of “Dementia” read
No
one ever returns
breaks
the wax seal on the report
complete
with maps and timetables
as
if this were an escape route
a
diversion from ache and loneliness
or
the minotaur’s labyrinth.
There
is no string long enough
There
is an ethics to this. There are whole
universes that the writer can imagine.
Writers can use shards of their experience to conjure up whole inner
human worlds. But there are some places
we cannot and should not go. We have
seen this debated in Canada around the issue of settler writers appropriating
the voices of indigenous people. A
similar injunction might be considered around the issue of appropriating the
experience of those whose mental illness is beyond our ken or whose physical
suffering we cannot imagine. Pretending
to the reader that we know what we cannot know inevitably minimizes the
particular experience of those who struggle with mental or physical illness.
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