Oh, my goodness HI!!

I’m so sorry I left you hanging there for a couple of weeks. A mix of things kept me away from the blog. But I’m back, inspired by a line from Carole Radziwill’s Substack that she took from Anne Lamott’s book, Bird by Bird.

A Little Update

First and foremost, my edits finally came back from the editor for my YA fantasy novel that I’ve been querying, and I dove right on in there like Greg Louganis. Every day from 8am-5pm and sometimes beyond, I was adding to, subtracting from, and perfecting the manuscript until she was ready to print out at Staples. I feel like there’s still more to go, but I also feel like I’m right there. (More to come about this whole process in a future post.) But I say all that to say that I had tunnel vision and so everything else I’ve been working on fell by the wayside.

I have a small confession…I was feeling a little burnt out by all the blogging and social media posting and TpT store updating I’d been doing. So, the edits came at the right perfect time.

I know that I am in an era of growing right now. And growing takes time and it’s slow. But sometimes it’s hard to keep up the momentum of slow growing when we live in a world of virality. Where you are only one TikTok, blog, or Instagram post away from changing your life and gaining a million followers/subscribers/friends. The slow growing can feel like rejection. What’s wrong with me? Am I not funny? But I thought I was funny? Do I smell? But I’m wearing my best perfume!

But the truth is…there’s nothing wrong with me (I mean, there is, but that’s not the problem here). I need to stop comparing. Everything happens in the time it’s supposed to. And I recently started using the Dove Pumpkin Pie body wash and scrub, so I smell fantastic. Periodt. (Again, more on that in a future post. The not comparing part, not the Dove body wash.)

Now for that Anne Lamott Quote

After my OG RHONY summer where I watched seasons 1-13 for the first time, I have fallen deeply and completely in love with Carole Radziwill.

So, when I saw on Reddit that she had a Substack, I immediately subscribed and started looking around. In one of her Radzi Reports, she was talking about Taylor Swift’s new album, Life of a Showgirl, and how Swift is known for unapologetically writing song lyrics about everyone that’s ever done her wrong.

And that’s where we meet Anne Lamott.

“You own everything that happened to you. Tell your stories. If people wanted you to write more warmly about them, they should have behaved better.”

Ann lamott

As a writer, the sentiment of this quote is one I struggle with.

While it’s true that people should have treated you better if they wanted a better edit in your writing, I’m sorry to say that this is not the kind of writer I am.

Well, at least not anymore.

A Fateful Encounter

I went through an incredibly painful breakup in 2016. The relationship had never been good, but neither one of us had enough energy to end it. Or maybe we didn’t want to. Maybe it was some mix of both?

I wrote about it in 2015. And that writing got published. And it made the other person look like the bad guy. I tried not to throw him under the bus but ended up doing exactly that.

And then our situation finally ended. And I continued to write about it. Oh, God. That writing was INSUFFERABLE. I was so sad and trying to work out all that pain by emoting all over the various marble notebook pages and Microsoft Word Docs. I wanted to make meaning out of how emotionally desperate I felt. I spent a lot of time listening to Beyonce’s Lemonade, which fueled me to continue writing about him and the breakup and our relationship.

Someone should have stopped me. I should have stopped me. Eventually I did move on to other stories because I had other, more interesting stories to tell. Also, my heart healed.

Cut to five years later. December. I’m walking into Barnes and Noble as the man I had spent all that time writing about was walking out. We stopped and talked. It was awkward. We wished each other a happy holiday and moved on. Except when I walked out of the store, he was waiting for me in the parking lot.

(Can I also mention that I had a cavity filled right before this, so my mouth was numb and sagging from the novocaine? Yeah.)

Anyway. He brought up those essays I’d written from five years ago. The ones when I was allowing my very fresh wounds to guide my writing and then posting the bleed out on the internet for the world to see.

To distill our conversation to the bare essentials, he talked about how my writing was painful to read, how it offended him and his now wife (who was his girlfriend at the time of those writings), and that at the time he had been going through some tough stuff and it was immortalized on the internet for his friends and family to see (should they find it).

Well, that was a wallop of realization I wasn’t expecting for a Friday morning. But there it was.

By trying to work out my own pain, I had cosigned on capitalizing on his pain without his consent. Equally as bad is that I took one of the worst eras of his life and turned it into writing that I put on a public domain for all to see. For him and his wife to relive.

We Don’t Talk About Bruno

I haven’t written a creative non-fiction essay, memoir, or really anything about my life, aside from these blog posts, in a very long time. Years, in fact.

I don’t want to be the kind of friend that my friends feel they have to watch themselves around for fear of ending up the ugly monster in one of my stories, fiction or not. And I don’t want to feel like I have to watch myself around some of my writer friends who admittedly use their relationships as story fodder.

My relationships mean more to me than a good story. And not every piece of writing needs to be public. Even in a world where everyone is putting their every thought and feeling on the internet for praise and judgement.

What I did to him wasn’t fair, and I would never want someone to use my life for their work. It’s none of their business. And his business wasn’t mine to tell, even though for a time, his business was part of my story.

I can appreciate using painful relationships as a point of connection with an audience, as a means of catharsis, as a way to make sense of what happened. But I’ll leave that for other writers to do.

For me, those stories are kept in journals, are spoken about during phone calls and wine nights with trusted friends.

I will not use someone else’s pain for my prose.

Not anymore at least.


16 responses to “What Did I Miss While I Was Out?”

  1. wordancerblog Avatar

    Wonderfully raw and honest – just like Anne Lamott. I love her writing – Bird by Bird – but also Help! Thanks! Wow! – we must write our stories and other people will inhabit them and maybe not be characterized the way they’d want – but I think that’s okay. Your intent, I’m sure, wasn’t to hurt. It was to share your feelings, your story.

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    1. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      Thank you!! My intention was definitely not to hurt, but sometimes in love, war, and writing there are casualties. I try now to be more careful. Like you said, and I’m paraphrasing, we must write our stories and sometimes people don’t get the best edit.

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  2. Sharon Roy Avatar
    Sharon Roy

    I just finished reading Ian McEwan’s What Can We Know and the narrator who is researching a poet from our time period from the distance of a hundred years in our future. He has a great insight about all the digital detritus of our age:

    I’d like to shout down through a hole in the ceiling of time and advise the people of a hundred years ago: If you want your secrets kept, whisper them into the ear of your dearest, most trusted friend. Do not trust the keyboard and screen. If you do, we’ll know everything.

    Good advice. Thanks for sharing your wisdom. And congrats on your edits!

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    1. Sharon Roy Avatar
      Sharon Roy

      Oops. Ian McEwan’s novel is What We Can Know. Inverted a couple of words in my comment.

      Like

    2. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      Sharon, what a great quote! And how true it is. It’s so easy to put our lives online, including our versions of events, and not think about the fall out.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Stacey Shubitz Avatar

    That’s an excellent quote. So wise. Yes, people should behave better if they’re expecting positive pieces to be written about them!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      Absolutely! Do better to get a better edit!

      Like

  4. Alice Tabor-Nine Avatar
    Alice Tabor-Nine

    After I read your post, I sat for a few moments and just pondered your thoughts. Let me say, I agree: “I will not use someone else’s pain for my prose.” As I pondered your thoughts, a proverb came to mind: “Death and life are in the power of the tongue, / And those who love it will eat its fruit.” Proverbs 18:21 Perhaps as writers, we should rewrite it: “Death and life are in the power of the [pen], / And those who love it will eat its fruit.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      I like your revision of the proverb! The pen is so powerful, especially as we have access to so much with on these platforms. And once something is out there, it’s hard to take back. I think there are some people who deserve the bad edit, but those who are simply flawed humans maybe deserve a little grace. That doesn’t mean I won’t use the “power of my tongue” to eviscerate them during a wine night with friends. lol

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  5. Linda&Greg Avatar

    You make very good points about putting someone else’s pain out in the public domain without their permission. The year after I divorced I basically wrote a book about the experience. However, I need to rewrite Part One because it does just that. Thank you for the reminder.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      It’s so interesting to go back and look at our writing through different perspectives. Divorce is a death of sorts and so incredibly painful at that. I’m sure that part one of your book was what you needed to write at the time to get all those emotions out. And I hope that you are doing well on the other side of it! ❤

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Linda&Greg Avatar

        Actually, I really am! Four years after my divorce I married someone who truly understands and sees me, and loves me for who I am, not who he thinks I should be. I hope I can figure out what to do with all the writing.
        It sounds like you are in a better place, too.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

        Definitely in a better place! I’m so glad you found someone who treats you the way you deserve to be treated and loved. That kind of love is transformational. I feel the same way about my husband. So refreshing to be able to be yourself.

        Liked by 1 person

  6. drcarlamichelle Avatar

    Dearest, Robyn:

    What…a beautiful…read. I enjoyed this for more reasons than I have space and bandwidth to convey. It is insightful, introspective, funny at the most befitting times, and painfully (and poignantly) human. Did I mention transparent and vulnerable? What a personal, teachable moment to share.

    I would add, please forgive yourself. You were growing then – and you are growing now. You are wiser and more mature. You have learned your lesson(s) and become better for it, and while I think he had valid points (and perhaps I’m biased, because I now like you through your writing) there is a wee part of me that feels like he did indeed “do” the things that became the fodder, for which I believe he should take some ownership – as he so carefully fulfilled his desire to tell you the things you did that he didn’t like.

    He also did some things that you didn’t like. Things that were hurtful; unkind; scarring. Having a separate life doesn’t absolve you of the negative impact you have on others. I only hope you don’t bear all of the blame. In my unsolicited opinion, you shouldn’t. You are not (and were not) a bad person. You were a person who made choices that maybe weren’t best as you were seeking to make sense of searing pain.

    We are human…

    And you are better.

    I’m glad that you shared this caution.

    I’ve written about people and persons in my life and changed names and nuances. Some knew and some didn’t, but I can’t say that I regret it. One incident was sexual abuse. Another was physical abuse.

    Tonight, I wrote about people who have hurt me deeply of late, but it was bereft of definitive details that would link them to anyone in particular. It was generic enough to apply to the random, rude stranger.

    Nevertheless, I think you offer excellent advice – and I also think you are an exceptional writer. I look forward to hearing more of your story. I feel that through your words, I will embark on a wonderful journey.

    Thank you for the invitation.

    A Happy Reader

    With Warmest Regards,

    ~Dr. Carla Michelle

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Robyn Neilsen Avatar

      Dr. Carla,
      What an absolutely beautiful message. Thank you so much for your words of encouragement and kindness. It’s such a hard line to toe when we talk about those that have hurt us. Especially in your case with the abuse you experienced, the perpetrators of that violence deserve no grace or good edits from you, and I am so incredibly sorry that those experiences are part of your story. I have no words but to say to write those monsters into the ground.

      It’s hard to write the story of our lives without referencing the key players, for better or worse. And because humans have so many sides, it’s hard to convey that sometimes in writing. Because the man that I wrote about shows up in someone else’s life story much differently than he did in mine.

      I hope that your writing has helped you find some semblance of peace. That’s what I love about writing, the catharsis of it. And maybe once in a while someone else can see themselves in your story. Because if there’s one thing I’ve learned, no experience is unique. We’re all simmering in the pot together.

      A million thanks,
      Robyn

      Liked by 1 person

      1. drcarlamichelle Avatar

        Dear Robyn,

        I am just delighted to find such a happy space in this writing euphoria that is the “Slice of Life.” I enjoy hearing the stories and sentiments of other writers; “feeling like a real writer,” if I could allow myself such a privilege, and navigating the nuances by which we explore our individual (and collective) lives (for that matter).

        I so genuinely appreciate your kind words, thought and encouragement. I do not take them lightly. I extend personal thanks for inviting us into your space. I am learning from your journey and excited to see your success.

        With Warmest Regards,

        ~Dr. Carla Michelle Brown

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