
Freakishly, by chance, I discover my mother’s given first name is different from the name she used. I’d never heard a whisper of this secret. As a writer, the discovery is material manna. As a daughter… well, strange news, indeed.
In the inexplicable alignment of fate, I’m a month away from publication of my third book, Call It Madness, a novel about young woman Avah who unexpectedly realizes her mother lied two decades ago when she claimed Avah’s great-grandfather died, his beloved house sold. Now, I unearth this secret my mother kept so well. I carry my mother’s name that was at once her name and not her name.
Where is the dusky line between fiction and life? Impossible, this seems, impossible, that I’ve written about my life in reverse. Kierkegaard wrote, “It is really true what philosophy tells us, that life must be understood backwards. But with this, one forgets the second proposition, that it must be lived forwards. A proposition which, the more it is subjected to careful thought, the more it ends up concluding precisely that life at any given moment cannot really ever be fully understood; exactly because there is no single moment where time stops completely…”
How meagerly we know this world, the littleness of the stuff that structures our own stories. Stacking firewood on Sunday afternoon, I listen to a NYT story written by a sighted man about traveling with the unsighted. The upshot? How we understand the world in pieces. The whole is an impossibility for any one of us.
And yet, fiction aims to manifest a perfect miniature world, a shimmering sphere, a handful of secrets and mysteries revealed one-by-one, like a matryoshka doll. At its center, is there a grain of rice or a chip of coal? A folded fortune like a slip of paper in a sweet cookie, a koan to clench in a fist and ponder. A way to reflect the whole of life, this impossible life.
Your post strikes a deep note as I have been pondering similar questions, inexplicable quandaries that refuse to be grasped fully. Mysteries that will; not be solved.
The stuff of life.
“The unexamined life is not worth living” – Socrates
I read so much Plato as an undergraduate. This dictum has shaped my life.
So much depth to mine in this writing, Brett! I am thinking about a sighted person traveling with the blind…your mother’s hidden name. What is in front of us that we aren’t seeing, but are—perhaps—sensing. How to live forward facing. Can’t wait to get your new book!
Always so lovely to hear from you!
I had to laugh at this one. Until I was a teenager, I thought my mom’s name was Sylvia Lillian. However, one day, she told me how the name on her birth certificate was Lillian Sylvia, but everyone had called her by her middle name because she had two aunts and two cousins who were also named Lillian and it was getting confusing. She was 10 or 11 before even she knew what her real name was. When she was about 65, she had her name legally changed to what she had always gone by.
Likewise, I had to laugh at this, too!
Your words…. tugged deeply, very deeply inside my heart. 💜
Thank you. 💙