Reading, writing...that's what I do.

Love for the printed word, love and belief in ideas.

After My Father Died, I Spent Hours Doing This….

I was three when my father died. It was June, it was summer. In time, maybe in the fall and certainly the following spring, I spent hours on the swing that hung from the aging cherry tree in our backyard. Yes, back and forth, back and forth. Hypnotic. 

But truly, what does a child so young know about death? He or she learns about vacancy…I kept asking my mother WHERE DID MY DADDY GO? I kept wandering our home looking for him.  

And that is how I learned about loss…not just a doll or a toy, but a person I loved, someone who hugged me, sang to me. His voice, smell and touch were suddenly gone.

But the swing in my backyard was something I could do…on my own. The swing was a place to be. It was sunshine and movement…and it was singing. But it is only recently that I truly discovered or remembered from nursing school, that such an activity would provide a three-year old with a healing process.  

The back and forth movement of a swing provides powerful sensory input that calms, regulates and organizes the nervous system. It stimulates the vestibular system (inner ear) to improve balance, spatial awareness, and core strength, while the rhythmic motion promotes emotional regulation, reduces anxiety, and enhances focus. 

I don’t know for a fact that my sorrowing mother asked my pediatrician about this particular activity, but I do know that he told my mother to LET ME BE, not to force me to do things, to allow me to live…because in doing so, I was also healing, and now I know I had found a way that helped me do so. AMAZING. 

And if years ago I had put all of this together, with the science behind it, realized the documented physical and mental reasons…it would mean so much more. ( We probably covered this in nursing school….) 

But now it says to me that children KNOW what they need in a time crisis, and thus they find something to sooth them, get through that particular time of sorrow and confusion: a new baby; a new parent; a move, the loss of a friend. 

THE IRONY of this is not lost on any of us. We still have habits that we go to when we are angry, confused, or deeply sad. Many adults us alcohol. My mother was careful, limited herself. But as I grew, I watched adults and saw how alcohol could change them…and I did not like it. 

Why? Because I experienced too early in my life, that in order to feel safe, I needed to rely on the behavior of adults. My father should not have left me. Really! WHY DID HE DO THAT? 

It was a time when I found comfort in the things I could relay on: my mother and her steady love and care; my home and my brothers. My neighborhood. I think within me was this voice beating like a drum: no change, no change. You cannot tolerate change.

Final Thought: I am currently reworking a short non-fiction work I wrote years ago. It is the story of growing up in Chicago, in the Beverly neighborhood, in the house where my father died, where my mother raised the three of us. It is the story of how we grew and thrived. And in my next post I will share some of it with you. Thanks for reading, Beth 

People of Means by Nancy Johnson

When a writer has a writer friend who has climbed the mountain and published TWO amazing novels with New York publishing companies, WOW. 

For me, that friend is Nancy Johnson, author of THE KINDEST LIE, a Book of the Month Club selection and a Target Book Club Pick…and recently, PEOPLE OF MEANS, a William Morrow novel. 

I met Nancy at a Writing Retreat sponsored by Women’s Fiction Writers Association, or as it came to be known, WFWA. When we realized we were both Chicagoans, a bond formed. When her first novel was published, I immediately purchased a copy and wrote a review. Breaking into New York publishing is no easy task. Nancy’s second book meant some changes…a different publishing company for one. But like all writers, when we believe in our work…we do not give up. 

This novel is a close-up history of characters caught in the battle for civil rights. 

Johnson writes: One little Black girl, who had to be no more than five years old, with  pigtails and barrettes on the ends of her hair, carried a sign almost as big as she was. It read: END RACISM SO I CAN GROW UP. TV and newspaper photographers crouched on the ground in front of her to capture what had made so many people stop and take notice. The girl posed, enjoying the attention. 

 

Nancy Johnson and I were both born and raised in Chicago, her novel addressing movements and problems that she experienced and I did not. 

One of the characters in PEOPLE of MEANS explains: “I’ll tell you what it’s like. I’m a single mother. It’s just the two of us, and Falana has no where to play, no where that’s safe to run around and be a child. She climbs in bed with me when gunshots go off. She takes cold showers at night because we don’t have hot water. The city has never done anything about that.”

This is Johnson using her characters to relate how things were, to underline and make history personal and human. Which is what we readers NEED, so that we can fully understand the struggle Black people endured in this country for decades.

In the novel a White man threatens, “They string y’all up on trees here in Tennessee and bring the whole family out to watch.” This, and then: “Travis Lee slid one finger covered in black grease down the front of Gerald’s freshly laundered white shirt.”

Soon after Johnson writes: Gerald opened and closed his hands, inhaling deeply. He was still alive, but the man had sapped his spirit, making him feel low like some creature that crawled underneath your shoe. Gerald turned his anger inward. Why had he gotten ahead of himself, letting his hopes rise higher than his station in this world? Gerald stood next to his dead car, the exhaust from Travis Lee’s station wagon covering him in gray haze. 

YES, Nancy Johnson knows how to end a chapter, leave us in a world of sadness and anger. Yes, she writes of those things in the past…but we all know that in many places this evil, this prejudice still exists. It should make every person wake up and fight for equality for everyone of us.   

Years ago, I benefitted from a Pullman Scholarship to help pay for my college degree. Johnson’s character Darius says: “As long as Pullman porters have been transporting money for the MOVEMENT, we’ve never had reports of any of them stealing. It’s hard to explain, but ones who do it treat this as a scared duty, an honor. Those men don’t even tell their wives about this.”

Yes, this is history, this is Johnson writing about Chicago, about prejudice, about the struggle to live a good life. Johnson’s skill is having characters from the past COME ALIVE for us on the page. People of means is history, struggle punctuated with LOVE, STRENGTH and surprising conclusions. Nancy Johnson’s latest novel is a MUST READ.  

Fiction…..A Very Short Story: The Result

 

Angela is in love. But HE doesn’t know it. At least Angela is pretty sure. She sees him once a week when she goes for the therapy…having a bad knee has become fun.

Angela sits at the edge of the table, watching him. His hands touch her kneecap, the back of her calf. His hands are warm, his eyes….she waits. They sometimes talk.

She knows she is waiting for the knee to get better, but also waiting for him to see if anything lies between them, in the silences. They talk of exercises, how to go up and down stairs…body mechanics. He says words to her like femur, soft tissue.

In the car driving home, she listens to the radio, has it loud, vigorous in her ears. But also his words, “Let’s see how you do this week. You’ll be okay.”

But in some ways she is not okay. She thinks of him, plans what they will talk about, considers that maybe her knee isn’t getting better, because her mind doesn’t want it to.

She turns down other opportunities, using her knee as an excuse. At some level she knows that’s crazy. It’s all crazy. He is married and she…what chance does she have…soon her knee will heal; then she reminds herself to make a new appointment.

In four weeks, he is ready to dismiss her. Feeling foolish, she smiles at him, goes through the motions, flexes her knee, lets her leg rock back and forth…the knee working, her calf hitting the deep edge of the table. He stops writing, reaching out to grab her leg, stop these unnecessary movements.

They don’t speak, though they are looking at each other. Soon his hand drops away. Her therapy is done, it’s over. He’s given her the help she needed and what she came for.

As she slides off the table, he taps her knee one last time, because now she is pain-free…right?

She tries to say something like Thank You…forgets herself, has to smile, has to walk away.

Analyzing THE PIT…Jennifer Obel

Dr. Jennifer Obel is a retired oncologist who writes about the intersection of medicine, ethics and public policy. This piece appeared in THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE. 

In between patients at my oncology clinic, I couldn’t catch my breath. I asked my nurse to check my oxygen level and pulse. My chest felt heavy, as if something were pressing on it.

I sat in the same examination chair my patients use, watching the monitor and running through possible diagnoses. But I knew what this was.

A panic attack. My mother had just called. While she felt fine, her routine CT scan showed fluid around her lung. I didn’t need anyone to explain what it meant. I’m an oncologist. Pleural effusion, in this context, is definitive: It meant her cancer had spread.

She didn’t know yet. I did. Over the next two years, as she lived with Stage IV lung cancer, I moved between my roles as daughter and doctor, managing my own patients and quietly absorbing her suffering. The message from my oncology division was clear: Keep working. There was no space to feel.

That expectation is not incidental. It is structural. The system holds because the people inside it are asked to absorb more than they should.

That’s why a scene in the HBO medical drama “The Pitt” stopped me.

She didn’t know yet. I did. Over the next two years, as she lived with Stage IV lung cancer, I moved between my roles as daughter and doctor, managing my own patients and quietly absorbing her suffering. The message from my oncology division was clear: Keep working. There was no space to feel.

That expectation is not incidental. It is structural. The system holds because the people inside it are asked to absorb more than they should. That’s why a scene in the HBO medical drama “The Pitt” stopped me.

D.Rr. Samira Mohan is dealing with a chaotic emergency department while fielding calls from her mother. The pace is relentless. Her body gives way to chest pain, sweating and a sense of impending doom. She is triaged as a patient. But it isn’t a heart attack.

When she returns to her duties, Dr. Robby, the attending physician, dismisses it as “mommy issues.” It was one of the first times I felt seen, and it came from a TV show.

“The Pitt” reflects the failures of our health care system — overcrowded emergency rooms, too few doctors and too many patients. It shows an uninsured patient who is suffering from diabetic ketoacidosis, a condition in which blood sugar spirals out of control, but who leaves before his treatment is complete because he cannot afford to stay. It shows a son who drives for more than an hour so his critically ill father can get dialysis after they discover their local hospital has closed.

But what the show captures with unusual insight is something more fundamental. “The Pitt” reveals not just what the system lacks, but the self-sacrifice required of the medical team in order for health care to stay afloat. Medicine does not just demand our competence as professionals. It demands that we ignore ourselves and our needs, even when the personal cost is high.

In a recent episode of “The Pitt,” a student doctor who leaves promptly at the end of her shift instead of working over tells a senior resident that 60% of emergency physicians report burnout. Hers is a quiet act of refusal. Because in medicine, the expectation is that we should stay through exhaustion, personal crisis and the slow erosion of self we are trained to ignore.

Every part of medicine functions this way. The emergency department is just where the strain is most visible. In the operating room, care depends on layers of people — nurses, anesthesiologists, surgical technicians, assistants — contributing a different piece of the whole. Oncology clinics run on the same coordination, as do inpatient teams.

It is less like a hierarchy than an orchestra, each person entering at the right moment. There is little margin for error. When one note is missed, whether from fatigue, overload or distraction, the entire performance begins to unravel.

“The Pitt” is filmed the same way, the camera moving continuously from one person to the next, as if there is no pause in the system. Burnout is not simply an individual condition. It is the predictable result of a system that operates without a buffer.

Health care redistributes strain. When one physician is exhausted, others compensate. When a nurse is stretched too thin, someone else absorbs the delay. To patients, the system appears relatively intact because the people in it bend to keep it that way. But when enough people are depleted at the same time, what appears to be an isolated error is often the predictable result of a system pushed past its capacity.

“The Pitt” lays bare these pressures. In the first season, a charge nurse takes a break outside from a relentless shift. A disgruntled patient follows her and punches her in the face, knocking her to the ground. She returns to work.

In the second season, a patient under the influence wraps his arm around a young nurse’s neck and chokes her until the charge nurse intervenes. Though shaken, the novice nurse insists on finishing her shift. There is no pause long enough to process what happened and no space for recovery.

I have done this myself. Years ago, I had a nonviable pregnancy and chose a surgical termination — not because it was an emergency but because it fit around my clinic schedule. I saw nine patients that morning before driving to my gynecologist’s office for the procedure. I returned to work the next day without time to mourn. It was practical. I did not feel I could risk miscarrying at work because of the pain, the bleeding and the disruption it would cause me and my patients.

This is what medicine teaches: Endure hardship and organize your life around the expectation that patient care is paramount. While we call resilience a strength, it is often a requirement that does damage over time. The system depends on people carrying on without time to recover or reflect.

At the Art Institute of Chicago, there is a painting I often return to: pointillist Georges Seurat’s “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte.” It depicts a calm afternoon along the Seine River in Paris. But step toward it, and the image dissolves into tens of thousands of points, which you can see only up close.

“The Pitt” is that way, too. From a distance, the system seems coherent. Up close, it becomes clear that the system depends on individuals taking on more than they should, persisting when they should be allowed to stop and breathe.

Art preserves a moment by showing a historical portrayal of how people lived. It does not have to define the future.

Starting In The Right Place

I have a novel that I want to publish. And please do not laugh. Because everyone reading this might say: “SO, big deal. We all have a novel we have either written or its all there in our heads!”

Yes. I get that. Mine is a kidnapping story, that over the years has changed…and changed again. And yes, I have blogged about my writing heroes like Donald Maass, who read portions of my work, praised my creativity. Was I thrilled? Yes. But the novel is still unpublished. 

At a writing conference, here in Chicago, I met an agent who eventually also rejected my query…thus, I went on and queried another 20 agents. All of them either sent back a standard NO…or basically ignored my query. IT IS TOUGH OUT THERE.

One agent said she was looking for a rich, intense, female-centric domestic suspense, with marginalized characters in the starring roles. Perfect description of WHEN THE COTTONWOODS BLEW. Thus my log line in my query: 

When Ella Singleton’s only child is abducted, memories of her dead mother Cecile, take on new power, propelling Ella into a search that will not only redeem four-year-old Sarah, but also extricate Ella from a debt Cecile and society owe the kidnapper. 

So, I will never give up on this novel, or the two others I have written. (I shortened one, wrote about it being available on Amazon KDP. TITLE: AFTER PAPA LEFT.

I’m also preparing to release a nonfiction work: 10055 Wood Street, the Story of a Family. I wrote it to remember my childhood, to honor the four people who learned how to support one another, help one another after my father died, leaving my mother with a six, three and three-month old. It’s a story of LOVE, FAMILY, of the woman who raised an English professor-published writer; a well known and loved music writer-promotion artist….and me.  

But…am I starting in the right place?

“Mama, I can’t do this shit. Make it stop, make it stop!”

Sixteen-year old LaToya Jackson, primigravida, no prenatal classes, now in labor, Ella Singleton’s first patient on her 3-11 shift.

“I need you to push, LaToya, like we just talked about…you can do this…so when you feel a pain starting, take a deep breath, bear down and push, like you mean it.” 

LaToya’s mother with her, silent, sitting in a chair, watching the television, occasionally leaning forward, as if by some miracle the birth might already be over, her new grandchild waving as he or she appeared in the world.  

“I can’t do this shit, Mama. Make it stop. Tell the lady, make it stop.”

 Ella tried again. “LaToya, you are having a baby, everything’s okay, but you have to push. It’s what all woman do to have a baby. Your mother had to, I had to…” Ella struggling to keep her voice firm but quiet, her patient just a girl, a sixteen-year-old girl having a baby. And though Ella had helped many like her at Chicago Community Hospital, LaToya was more frightened, fragile…her chart failing to indicate that maybe some boy she hardly knew…or a man who took advantage of her innocence was the father, LaToya’s face one of pain, fear…Ella having to urge the girl again, eager for her to finally get it, stop thrashing, focus and push this baby out, each push now revealing more dark hair that advanced, then receded, LaToya writhing in the grip and the release of her contractions..

“Now remember, when the pain starts, hold your breath and push.”

Ella had experience with patients of all ages, different backgrounds, she able to remember her position, focus and not get caught up in her patient’s pain, though being a mother, Ella still remembered the burning of perineal tissues, every pain receptor lashing out at the weight, the force of that head.  

 “Mama, please.          

“You can do this Toy.” The mother’s voice like warm pudding, smooth, soothing, she glancing at the girl, then at the television, face flaccid, the distance in her demeanor palpable in this chaos of beeping monitors, thrumming IV pumps, the click of the blood pressure machine beginning its fifteen-minute check…and then LaToya screaming….“Shit—cut me, make it fucking stop.”  

 Familiar words, Ella checking the infant’s progress on the fetal monitor, the fetus’s heart tones dipping during a contraction from pressure on the umbilical cord. Time to have LaToya change position, get the baby off the cord, heart tones quickly recovering, 130’s, 140’s—strong, quick beats, Ella moving to the head of the bed, wiping the girl’s forehead with a cold cloth.   

 “You’re doing great, almost time to move to the delivery room, you can do this, LaToya, I’ll help you have this baby.”

 “Mama?” Tears now mingling with sweat on the girl’s face, then the crumpling of smooth skin, LaToya grunting, “Get this outa me!”

 Now Ella moved quickly, no need to again check her patient with sterile, gloved fingers…when LaToya bore down, a large circle of dark curly hair, approximately four centimeters.   

 “MOVING THREE!” 

Thanks for reading. 

MEMORIES of Margaret in the Garden

When one green shoot suddenly appeared in my garden, I took a photo of it, posted it on social media.

I didn’t get a huge response, but readers did immediately respond. SPRING is a meaningful time for many of us, the air is warmer, rains are welcome, and we find ourselves being called OUTSIDE. Surely, many of you live in climates where SRING means little. And that is lovely. When we were in California recently, we played croquet, took walks and flew kites. AWESOME.

But now we are home in Illinois, and the arrival of SPRING is always very welcome. The sun is soft, the air is warm, and we are once again called outside. The feeling of lightness, of eagerness to watch green shoots pierce the ground is part of living in temperate climates.

It’s a call to nature, a call to breathing in the scents and sounds of SPRING. Children suddenly appear, shout out to one another. Adults are eager to walk the dog, extend that walking time….share a smile when approaching anyone out for the spring stroll. And yes, the arrival of  spring and warm weather is more meaningful to people who live in temperate climates. Spring is a gift of change, of adventure and the longing to be outside. But it is also a reminder of work that needs to be done: wow my windows need to be washed, my garden planted, my bedding changed…time to put away those heavy quilts. A busy time, but also a welcome time….because humans thrive on change, on awakening to time in the garden.

Elizabeth Kelsey, who moved from Florida to New Hampshire, wrote in her piece in TIME: I can trust that longer, lighter days will inevitably return. I can navigate change.” Which is always good thing for all of us to learn.

My Aunt Margaret was a true gardener. A writer and editor for a publishing company, I believe she was never happier when she could “work in the garden.” Spring meant clearing away winter debris, waiting to see what perennials had made it through another Chicago winter. Then she would  make several trips to the Singler Florist. I imagine that some days she walked there, the shop being a block away. I also imagine there were cheerful conversations with Bob or his mother…they not only being avid gardeners but also Margaret’s cousins. They admired her garden, were eager to show her a new rose or a perennial shrub that might fill an empty space near the western end of the garden.

And when I, as a child, found a small plot of soil along our driveway and mentioned it to Margaret, she was eager to help me choose some annuals that might encourage me to also become a gardener. I never earned the gravitas that Margaret did. But in a few weeks, when I am out in the garden…weeding, raking and getting ready to plant, I will think of her, how happy she alway was, down on her knees, planting…which I have come to realize is something very simple and basic: in our family, we all just LOVE digging in the dirt.

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