Chandra Hoffman blogs about being a mom who finds a way to make time for writing on Meg Waite Clayton's 1st Books.

This week's guest author, Chandra Hoffman, published Chosen - her debut novel - this summer. Best-selling author Ann Hood calls it "riveting ... enlightening, terrifying, and big hearted." You'll definitely get a taste of that big heart in Chandra's post about how she found the gumption to start writing through the support of her mom-in-law. Enjoy! - Meg

My mother-in-law died in the early hours of August first, while the East Coast birds sang their dawn chorus. It was her favorite time of day, and as we drank tea and watched the sunrise, my family took a teaspoon of comfort in that, that her spirit might be soaring and dipping with the swallows, calling out with the wrens and the finches.

Cheryl and I had planned to write a children's opera based on this birdsong phenomenon; she brought her flute whenever she visited, because she had to practice for her concert schedule, but also so we might get serious about this opera project. She would do the music, but, “You’re the writer,” she told me.

She always rose with the sun. When she was at our house, it was to make recordings of the birds and chicory coffee and memories with her grandchildren. When we took our annual winter vacation to the Cayman Islands, she was the first up, reading an entire novel on the screen porch, waiting for me to lumber out of bed and join her on her next morning ritual, a walk of the entire Seven Mile Beach, collecting sea glass. At her home in Buffalo, she spent her winter-dark morning hours in the bathtub on the phone, talking shoes and thrift and art with her sister, an even earlier bird on the West Coast.

My mother-in-law and I were well-matched from the moment her son introduced us—high energy, creatively hungry, lovers of vegetables and words and walking. At that point, she had already endured breast cancer for two years, diagnosed at an untimely thirty-seven. Her cancer was a third person in our relationship, someone hunkered down in the backseat behind us, lurking predatorily. We were good at addressing it when it reared up, but even better at ignoring it.

It was a happy day for us all when five years after meeting, her son and I married, when I started affectionately calling her Cherry, when she gave me a heart-shaped antique silver necklace because I was “the daughter of her heart.”

When we were together, we took occasional breaks from Scrabble and walking marathons. If we weren’t cruising thrift or shoe stores, we were crunching rice crackers and carrot sticks, composing children's stories and contest winning poetry, scribbling them on index cards we kept tucked in her dictionary. If she was in Buffalo, where she was the director of UB’s flute program or preparing for concert perfomances from Southern France to Carnegie Hall, we spoke on the phone daily. She talked with my husband on his hour-long commute to work, to me as I washed dishes and folded laundry, and then the capper, several hours doing knock-knock jokes and stories with our young sons in the evening.

When she visited, she welcomed my boys' early morning companionship--tidepooling on the beach washed in sunrise, stories in the kitchen, breakfast picnics on the porch with the birds serenading, while my husband and I slept in and counted our blessings.

If it truly takes a village to raise a child, she was our village’s sage. The majority of our beach walk and phone conversations became about ‘our boys’, her son and grandsons, analyzing their behaviors and theories. She sent me beautiful journals, ads for writing contests and articles on motherhood. I have one from her on the concept of ‘thumos’—male energy in young boys that I have worn thin, copied for all my friends with sons.

Once, faced with a crossroads in our lives, the house we rented going on the market, deep holes in our resumés that reflected our early wanderlust, I asked Cherry’s advice.

“You’re a writer,” she told me again, and I laughed. Our son was a full time job, born with challenges that required several hours of expensive specialists a week, my constant devotion.

“No, no,” I told her, “I need to do something that makes money.”

She insisted I send out the stories we’d been playing with, things I’d dashed off and sent to her for her keen editing, her economic and whimsical way with words.

“Where would I find time?”

“Get up in the early morning, put on the kettle, put in a load of laundry, and write.”

Instead, I started an event planning company, despite her constant affirmation that I was a writer, despite the fact that her very existence proved a woman could be both a successful mother and artist.

Her cancer moved, breast to lymph to lung to brain. At her encouragement, I applied to a school in California for my masters in creative writing. The same day I was accepted, I learned I was pregnant, this time with a daughter.

“How can I do this?” I sobbed to her, meaning get my masters across the country with three kids under the age of five; meaning, be a mother to a little girl?

“Early mornings,” she told me. “Get up before they do.”

I resisted. She had told me for years that she had no sympathy for her college students who came in whining that they didn’t get enough sleep.

“Get over yourself!’ This was one of her favorite sayings, delivered with emphatic affection. “I haven’t slept through the night since I had Jonathan at nineteen!”

“What about the other, being a mother to a little girl?” I whispered, because my relationship with my own mother was often turbulent.

“Think of our relationship as a model,” she told me frankly. “Love her like I love you.”

I finished graduate school, my novel manuscript as my thesis. I had a daughter I named Piper, which means ‘flute player’, because though we all denied it, we were losing our Cherry. In June, she went in for a treatment that injected chemotherapy directly into her tumor-riddled brain and suffered a massive seizure, the beginning of the end.

I finished my novel that summer as she died slowly, still resisting rising in the early mornings. I watched my sons struggle to comprehend their loss, too early an introduction to death. I ached for my husband as he lost the woman who was as much his best friend as she was mine.

In the hospital, Cherry had promised me she would haunt us, afterwards, and she did. That summer, we were constantly visited by dragonflies, alighting on the shoulder of my son while he canoed on our pond, sitting on my knee at the beach and buzzing about us as we planted three cherry trees in her memorial garden. On the morning after my novel sold, I stepped outside at dawn to see not one but dozens of dragonflies swirling overhead.

How did I finish that first novel and start my second?

I set my alarm for 5 am. It’s not pretty. In the winter, it is worse. My house is cold and dark and my bed is warm and full of people I adore. But I tug on the knee-high baby blue fluff momma furry boots Cherry bought us both on her last Christmas and I put on the kettle, put in a load of laundry and I get started.

Spring and summer, it’s better. I sleep with the windows open so I can hear the birds, often waking ahead of the alarm to turn it off, slipping out of the bed that by morning is a tangle of children’s limbs and loveys and cats and snoring. I sit down with my tea, and my computer, serenaded by the hum of the washer and the beautiful chorus of the birds that my mother-in-law loved.

And I write, because she taught me, you can be a mother and an artist, but you have to get over yourself, and you have to rise with the dawn chorus. - Chandra

RELATED:
For more stories about how writers got started, check out the 1st Books archive

Views: 29

Tags: #things we care about, Chandra Hoffman, motherhood

Comment

You need to be a member of She Writes to add comments!

Join She Writes

Comment by Annie Boreson on July 28, 2011 at 3:10pm
I'm sure if you could hear her today she would be saying, "You're the writer." And you are...that was lovely.
Comment by suzi banks baum on July 28, 2011 at 2:40pm
What a gorgeous dedication to Cherry. I can hear her advise even here, to me, as I write while I could be making dinner. Make art when I could be doing a million other things. I hope Piper likes birds. I would love to get to know you more Chandra. We have a host of things, like dragonflies, mothers and in-laws, kids and laundry in common. Hugs to you, Suzi
Comment by Lisa Romeo on January 23, 2011 at 1:23pm
This was beautiful. I think it's so important for writers to locate and acknowledge their sources of inspiration, and you've done so in such a lovely way. Plus, now your story is an inspiration to others. You were both blessed to have one another!
Comment by Chandra Hoffman on November 30, 2010 at 7:32pm
Thank you all for reading. It is so meaningful for me to share who Cherry was, her inspiration and her memory. Every writer needs someone who really believes in them and I was lucky enough to have her...
Comment by Ashlei Austgen on November 30, 2010 at 11:06am
Chandra - you have such a gift. In your words, in your mother-in-law and her ""hauntings." What a soul. I'm so very sorry for your family's loss, but oh what a wonderful experience you all had.

I set my alarm for 5 every morning this last month for NaNoWriMo. At 2 this morning, I finished my 50,000. I thought I would sleep in tomorrow. Now I'm thinking I'll continue the ritual.

Thank you for the inspiration to keep the habit alive.
Comment by Karen Wojcik Berner on November 30, 2010 at 7:56am
I am sorry for your loss. You were very fortunate to have such a wonderful mother-in-law. I am grateful to her and to you for reminding me "...you can be a mother and an artist, but you have to get over yourself, and you have to rise with the dawn chorus." I think we all need that, don't we? Thank you.
Comment by Padmavani Karkera on November 29, 2010 at 11:51pm
Beautifully written... and considering how beautiful your mum-in-law was and how much she has influenced you... I am not surprised. Loved reading you... Thank you.
Comment by Hallie Sawyer on November 29, 2010 at 9:56pm
Wow! To have a mother-in-law that you adored and one that supported you as if you were her own is absolutely wonderful. What a great honor to her with this essay. Love it. :)
Comment by Helen Gallagher on November 29, 2010 at 5:32pm
Chandra, this is the most eloquent personal essay I've ever read. Amazing writing, and an incredible tribute to your mom-in-law. What a wonderful woman she was! I will never forget her spirit.

I'm sorry for your loss,
Helen
Comment by Mary Lynne McLintock on November 29, 2010 at 2:44pm
I have a lump in my throat for what you have lost and downright envy in my heart for the exceptional relationship with your mother-in-law. What a blessing to have someone so giving in your life. Beautifully written, thank you.

Latest Activity

Kate Powell added a discussion to the group Artists Who Write
Thumbnail

Artists Who Journal

Do you draw in your journals?   When you are traveling or all the time?  How does drawing/making art add to your writing experience?  Do you like watercolor or markers or pencil or?I thought this might be a fun place for us to share how we journal,…See More
7 minutes ago
Dana Sitar posted blog posts
7 minutes ago
Starr Gardinier Reina left a comment for Cynthia Close
"It's a great site. Welcome!"
8 minutes ago
Jody Gore posted a blog post

I Prefer 'Pushing up Daisies'

The Bucket List. Never liked that title. I imagine it comes from the popular phrase, 'kicked the bucket' ! I prefer the title, 'Pushing up Daisies'. I am aware they essentially mean the same thing. When you are dead, you're dead! I get it. I am…See More
10 minutes ago

Members

Badge

Loading…

© 2013   Created by Kamy Wicoff.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service