When you write
a memoir you must choose which stories to tell—and how to tell them.
Do you write
from a stream of consciousness? Can you find the edges? Do you tell the truth?
Even to yourself. When you write over time, over years, reflecting, re-membering,
re-writing, “down the bones” as Natalie Goldberg says, does the truth change?
Can you
extract the last drop of sweet to bitter, that which James Baldwin called art,
or plumb the bottom of what Jungians call the complex—the tight tangle of
repressed material we carry like a moat in the eye? To heal a complex Jung says
one must drink the very last drop to turn bitterness to wisdom. With your words
will you cross the river Styx into the underworld and make as William Styron
did “Darkness Visible”?
What we dare
to write does not stop being daring when we dot the last i and cross the last T
and close the computer unless we are prepared to burn our pages along with our
bridges and press the delete button. But if memoir is to be a piece of our
individuation we may decide to take that step that Jung called the most
difficult piece of the individuation process and reach across the void and say this
is my story and my story is my truth.
And there may
be those who get it and there will be those who do not. But once you let it go
it is not yours. It has a life of its own. It is a line in the sand and in the
mind of the reader. It disappears with the tide or becomes a thorn in a shoe.
Or just perhaps it touches a heart in hiding. And a door opens.