There's many things that made this book come together. I had a roller coaster of a last five years between family upheavals and trying to finish a degree. I reinvented myself a couple times, and shifted myself between people, trying to figure out a better life for myself and my family. One of the great challenges of motherhood is trying to maintain a sense of self, while still giving yourself wholly and completely to the loved task of raising yourself some mini-me's. I think because you want the best for your kids, you forget to make sure that you remember to keep in touch with yourself. After so long, if you and the self haven't talked much, then you find you're not even on speaking terms, and are just going to have to spend some time reconnecting. You can't be the direction for the little people, if you, yourself, have no idea where you're going.
One of the people that helped nudge me in the direction that ended up producing this book, let's call her Rinie, just passed away last week. She was young, a child like me, having just had a birthday last week. She and I had a bad blowout before she moved away, and we never did make it right. But what I can say about her was that even though she had many serious health problems, that girl lived life with a vengeance. She seemed to live to spit in the face of her health problems, with grace and dignity, and above all else, no need for a plan. Flying by the seat of her pants was just fine, thank you very much.
I've always needed a plan. If I don't know where I'm going, or how I'm going to solve whatever problem, I kind of feel like I'm in a panic. Call it a fear of failure, or call it terminal control freakitis. Whatever it is, my ability to just trust that the universe is going to take care of me so let's just enjoy the moment, has always been lacking. And, Rinie had her moments of passing control freakitis too, but she handled it so much better than me. She was able to see when it was time to move on, and not spend too much time dwelling on what could have been. It never blinded her to what could hopefully be.
She loved her fantasy stories, and her world of pretend was rich in her own mind. She gave me a book she had once written, and in my temper tantrum at her, I tossed it away. It might be in a closet. I hope it's in that closet. I was stupid for never having read it, and I really should have. But her world of pretend was further enriched by authors that she shared with me, and they, in turn, changed me too.
Those authors and our own theoretical talks about another plane helped create this book. I might have still written it without the world as shaped by Rinie in my life, and it might have been a different story still great in its own right. However, it would not have been what I love it as now if not for her.
Thank you, Rinie, for being in my life for the short time you were in it. I am better for having known you, and I hope your next adventure has just as many opportunities to fly by the seat of your already worn out pants. I miss you, even though we've not talked in three years. Give Joni a hug for me too, and maybe we should have this little talk one day.
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