A Bit of Serendipity

I took this photo during last week's writing session.

Last week I spent time at one of my favorite not-at-home writing spaces; a cafe serving a yummy ice blended mocha, and providing many tables and chairs on a large patio with plenty of shade. 

This week, I wanted to share something that happened during last week’s visit.

Two women sat at a table close enough to me that I could overhear bits and pieces of their conversation without even trying. It felt serendipitous that of all the available tables, these two women sat near me. After all, I was sitting off to the side, near a wall, trying to distance myself from any loud chatter and distractions. 

Within a few minutes, I learned the two women were middle school science teachers. I heard them talking about sixth grade, about sedimentary rocks and fossils, about a project requiring a long roll of adding machine paper. (And I admit to feeling old when one of the teachers had no idea what adding machine paper even was.)

These two teachers spent their own time lesson planning. These were “off-the-clock” conversations. Because that’s what teachers who are passionate about teaching do. Your teacher brain is never really off, and teachers don’t actually get “the whole summer off,” as many non-teachers believe. Teachers are always working in some shape or form. It brought back memories of my own lesson planning days and the blended mochas my closest teacher friend and I used to enjoy while brainstorming and planning for our fourth graders. (I’m thinking of you, Nance!)

As if that wasn’t enough, after a bit of quiet individual work time, the two teachers began chatting again. I heard different phrases this time — it’s so lonely, I look fine on the outside, many people don’t get it.  

I learned that one of the teachers lives with an invisible illness. The other teacher’s partner lives with an invisible illness and was asking questions about how to best support a chronically ill loved one. 

I momentarily sat there in shock. 

What were the odds? 

Not only were these two women teachers, they were also among the target audience for my memoir! (My target audience includes those living with chronic illness, especially invisible illnesses, both physical and mental, as well as friends and families of those living with chronic illness.)

That day at that cafe, I had spent a portion of my writing time researching literary agents to query my memoir-in-essays. 

And then these two women entered the outer edges of the writing cocoon I create for myself at this cafe. 

I took it as a sign.

Disability Pride Month

Parasailing in Maui with my son, June 2022

July is Disability Pride Month. The designation coincides with the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) being signed into law, thirty-four years ago. 

In prior years, I’ve written about Disability Pride Month. (You can click here to read my post “There Is No Shame” from July 2021, and click here to read “Disability Pride Month Reading” from July 2022.)

This year, however, I’m having a really hard time putting into words how I feel about this month and how it impacts me. Partly because within the last couple of years, my physical abilities have decreased, and my dis-abilities — things I can no longer do or only do with extreme pain — have increased. 

I live with an autoimmune disease that most people have never heard of, that most healthcare providers don’t fully understand. A chronic illness that has no cure. And it is this part of my identity that is the catalyst for my currently-querying memoir-in-essays. 

One day, when you pick up my memoir in your local independent bookstore or public library or multi-floor Barnes and Noble and begin reading it, you will find that my disability identity is only a part of my story. I’m so much more than my body and how it can and cannot function. 

I am Wendy Kennar.

I am a white woman married to an African-American man. 

I am the mother of a mixed-race son.

I am a college graduate, the first in my family.

I am a ketchup-using tomato-disliker.

I am a morning apple juice drinker.

I am a night shower-er.

I am a handwritten list maker.

I am an envelope decorator. (Which means I am someone who still mails cards and letters the old fashioned way, with a stamp on the envelope.)

I am a save-the-avocado-for-last salad eater.

I am a chocolate ice cream only consumer (except if I’m eating a Vanilla Soft Serve ice cream at McDonald’s, which is the only thing I eat from McDonald’s.)

I am a daughter. A pen pal. A friend. A neighbor. 

I am a Los Angeles native.

I am generally a no-crust-for-me pizza-eater.

I am a woman who has never spent any time in the snow. 

I am a woman who owns more pairs of earrings than shoes. 

I am a curious person, who wonders about all sorts of things. (Why do you walk a red carpet at awards shows? Why red? Why not blue? Or purple?)

I am adventurous. (I have gone parasailing twice, ridden in a hot air balloon twice, and gone zip lining once.) 

I am a disabled woman. 

But that’s not all I am. 

The Word Collector

My sixteen-year-old son and I spent some time in his bedroom the other day, re-organizing his bookcase. (The same white Ikea BILLY bookcase that used to be in my childhood bedroom many years ago.) During college, I worked in a public library; I’m happy to help when someone wants to re-organize a bookcase.

Many of my son’s once-favorite picture books had sat on those lower shelves for several years now, largely untouched and unread.

“I don’t want to donate them, but I don’t want them out on my bookcase,” he said.

I understood.

There are some books that are so firmly rooted in memories that you can’t possibly imagine parting with them. For our son, that included Curious George books and a large stack of Todd Parr books. 

From his stacks, we did find a few to donate, and I found one I have now placed on my bookcase — The Word Collector by Peter H. Reynolds.

I could mention the book’s charming illustrations. 

Or the short and sweet author’s note on the inside of the front cover. 

Or the encouraging author’s note at the back of the book: “Reach for your own words/ Tell the world who you are/ and how you will make it better.”

But really, I’m keeping this book because of sentences like these:

Jerome began stringing words together.
Words he had not imagined being side by side.
He used his words to write poems.
He used his poems to make songs.
They moved. They delighted.
Some of his simplest words were his most powerful. 
Jerome eagerly collected more and more of his favorite words. 
The more words he knew the more clearly he could share with the world what he was thinking, feeling, and dreaming.”

I am proud to be a word collector.

Readers, do you have any children’s books you keep near your writing space? Any children’s books you just can’t part with? Please share. 

Please note: I am including a link to buy the book that I’m highlighting this week. If you use my link, I do make a small commission on your purchase at no additional cost to you. I am working with Bookshop.org which also sends a portion of the profit to support local, independent bookstores.

There’s A Lot On My Mind

I have a bit of a confession to make, my friends.

This week’s blog post has been a hard one for me to write. And I think it’s because of the date. 

This week is an “anniversary” for me. It was during this week back in 2010, when I woke up unable to get out of bed. I couldn’t stand up. I couldn’t walk. My left calf was swollen like an about-to-burst water balloon and bright red, like my then-two-year-old son’s stuffed Elmo doll.

That day marked both an end and a beginning. I just didn’t know it at the time.

So I’m a bit emotional, and I have all sorts of things going through my head this week. Thoughts about where I am currently — in terms of my physical pain and limitations, but also in terms of my spirit and emotional well-being. 

It’s because I have all these thoughts swirling around, like a soft serve ice cream that mixes chocolate and vanilla into one delicious, twisty dessert, that I initially wasn’t sure what I wanted to write about this week. 

But I think this reflection is fitting for this week:

A few days ago I finished listening to Jessica Fein’s podcast, “I Don’t Know How You Do It.” Her guest was bestselling author Jean Meltzer, someone I happen to just love — for her books and her passion and her message. 

(In case you’ve missed them, you’ll find links to my earlier Jean Meltzer-related posts here.)

On this podcast, Jean explained the twists and turns her life has taken, the many ways she has had to completely reinvent herself. 

There were a couple of things Jean said that I haven’t been able to stop thinking about. Maybe they’ll be helpful to you, too:

–  One: Jean talked about the years she spent ignoring her illness. Her determination to continue on, pretending as if she wasn’t ill. Until she couldn’t. Until she became so ill, she was housebound. In all honesty, I have heard Jean speak of this before, but this time I really heard her. And it scared me. Because one of the things I’m actively working on is truly acknowledging my own illness and physical limitations. I often do try to push through and act stoically. What if I’m headed on the same path? What if you only get a certain number of “passes” to act as if you aren’t chronically ill, and then your body comes to a full and complete stop? (Which is actually what happened to me back in 2010. I wasn’t physically ill at that time, but I was going through an incredibly hard time emotionally. I kept trying to push through, until I literally couldn’t. That swollen left calf kept me hospitalized for four days, and my leg was never again the same.)

– Two: Jean also spoke of her decision to live a joyful life. If her body would no longer allow her to do all she wanted, if her body made it necessary for her to re-invent herself and give up her career, then she was going to do everything she could to seek out joy in this new life of hers. Lately, I have been more aware that I tend to spend some of my days as if the prime objective is to cross off as many items on my to-do list as I can. And while these are not necessarily unpleasant (water the plants, sweep the patio, do my physical therapy stretches), they’re not necessarily joyful either. I often give myself one task to do after the other, without giving myself the time and grace to simply sit and read, for example. 

So that’s my self-appointed homework: being more honest about what my body can and cannot do and to actively seek out and infuse my days with joy. 

Thank you, friends, for reading. I realize this week’s post was a bit longer. Thank you for being with me on this journey. 

Working Towards That One Yes

Twenty years ago this month, I earned my first byline

And not just any byline, but a byline in the Los Angeles Times

It all felt so easy. I wrote a personal essay. I submitted it to the Times. They published it soon after. 

The publication happened not too long after I had taken a weekend course about writing the personal essay through the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program

That class was the first of many I would take in the Writers’ Program. I got incredibly lucky, because Barbara Abercrombie was the instructor for that class. (If you’ve read my blog for a while, you know I have written about Barbara and credit her with helping me find my way as a writer. You can click here to read the tribute post I wrote after learning of Barbara’s death.)

Since that first publication, I have learned that writing and publishing aren’t often that easy. In reality, I may have to submit a piece to several different websites and/or print journals, before it finds a home. Sometimes I don’t find a home for a particular essay, and I have to put it away for a bit and move on with writing something new.

Now twenty years later, I am having a whole new writing experience. While I continue to write for MomsLA.com, and write these weekly blog posts, and write personal essays to answer a variety of submission calls for both print and online publications, I am also querying literary agents. 

Querying requires a whole different type of focus and time commitment. After all, I am searching for the person who will not only be an advocate for my memoir, but also an advocate and supporter for my writing career. 

So far, I have queried 58 agents.

So far, I have received 15 rejections — which does not include those agents who state on their website something along the lines of, “If you haven’t heard from us in 10-12 weeks, consider it a pass.”

It’s just a part of the process. Because it really doesn’t matter how many no’s I receive. 

All it takes is one yes