Follow Your Bliss is a new series of interview blogs I'll be
posting about people who inspire me. These are friends of mine who have
courageously said NO to a conventional life, and followed their dreams
no matter the cost. Every person on this planet has a rich life story to
tell. My aim is to share a few of them here.
When you were a child, what did you want
to be when you grew up?
I don’t remember ever wanting to be anything
but a writer—well, okay, maybe for a while I thought about becoming a wandering
surfer or a professional tennis player –but being a writer was at the center of
my dreams from age 12 onward, after I wrote my first short story, one inspired
by my grandmother who suffered with mental illness. People talked about her, and I wanted her to have a voice, so the story I wrote was what I
convinced myself she must have wanted the world to hear.
Is your lifepath today relevant to your
childhood dreams?
Almost thoroughly, yes, but of course there
have been long periods when I felt lost. It’s only with a retrospective glance
that I see how that first short story I wrote encompasses almost everything I
do to this day. In all the memoirs, stories, essays and novels I write, in the
ghostwriting I do, in my teaching and in the creation of POPS (Pain of the
Prison System) for kids whose lives are touched by prison—my path seems to be
to help give voice to the voiceless, language to the silences. That’s why I
love the Emile Zola line: “If you ask me what I came to do in this world, I, an
artist, will answer you: I am here to live out loud.”
How did you get the courage to pursue the writing career you’re in today?
Honestly, I think it’s less courage than it
is rebellion and stubbornness. Since I don’t know how to do anything much else
but write and teach writing (and boogie board and play tennis), I find myself
here, doing this writing thing—though occasionally I still daydream about becoming
a wandering surfer…
What was the highest moment of your career
so far?
Most of my highs are those moments when I
somehow find the words to say what has been swirling in heart and mind and
soul, but perhaps the most recent high was finishing (after 10 years and 30
drafts) Desperado’s Wife and having an opportunity
to talk about it on national television (a nerve wracking high). But if I have
to pick one thing, probably the highest moment of my career so far was becoming
a syndicated writer in 1992 for one of the two columns I started writing in
Kingston, Ontario—but writing a regular column is, I think, what truly made me
a writer.
What was the lowest moment, and what did
you learn from it?
Probably the lowest moment (that I recall) was
when I finally realized if I wanted Desperado’s Wife to be out in the world, I
had to take it out myself. For a while I was just sad, jealous and broke. But
for the thousandth time I learned that it’s never acceptance that gives me the
deepest satisfaction, and that rejection, icky as it feels for a while,
vanishes as soon as a new project/idea is underway. I love Emerson on this: “Do
not waste yourself in rejection. Do not bark against the bad, but chant the
beauty of the good.” So I’ve learned to chant on…
Where do you see yourself in ten years?
Oh man… I see myself sitting in a room like
the room where I’m writing this. I’m on an island at an artists’ residency, and
outside my window magnolias are blooming and a cold spring wind is howling in
off the Atlantic. For the past two weeks I’ve been writing and wandering this
island, meeting new artists, eating good food, and I feel so whole and happy
and curious about what’s coming next (in my life and on the page), I can’t
imagine anything better. I’ll be writing. I’ll still be enjoying my wonderful
husband and children and friends, and I’ll be wandering— physically, mentally
and spiritually. And there’ll be a POPS club in every school in the country,
and I’ll be so proud of having made that happen.
What’s still at the top of your bucket
list, and how will you make it happen?
Top of my bucket list is travel to places I
haven’t been but have dreamed of going—India, Southeast Asia, South America.
I’ll pack a bag and take off—but that’s just the beginning. I’ll also keep
adding to the list.
Favorite quote: Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up. - Thomas Edison
Find all info on Amy Friedman's books and nonprofit here: http://www.amyfriedman.net
Watch Amy on the Katie Couric show:
Find all info on Amy Friedman's books and nonprofit here: http://www.amyfriedman.net
Watch Amy on the Katie Couric show:
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I love hearing your point of view- thank you for taking the time to comment and be part of the conversation!
love,
Hollye