Sonia Marsh - Gutsy Living

Life's too short to play it safe

  • Home
  • About Sonia
  • Blog
    • Starting Over
    • Solo Cruising
    • Travel & Adventure
    • Peace Corps
    • Writing & Publishing
  • Books
    • Freeways to Flip-Flops
    • My Gutsy Story® Anthology
  • Media
    • Press Kit +Videos
    • Print Media
    • Awards-Reviews-Testimonials
    • Sonia’s Blog Tour
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for My Gutsy Story

“My Gutsy Story®” Linda Joy Myers

January 28, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 41 Comments

Linda Joy Myers

I AM Your Daughter

 I yearned for her all my life, couldn’t take no for an answer, used to the snaking line of her hose on the back of her legs as she jaunted toward the steaming train, the sharp edges of no and don’t get too close in her voice. All my life, I believed one day she’d wake up and see that I was a loveable daughter. One day she’d open her arms and welcome me into her heart.

When I was five we lived with her mother, my grandmother. One day, Mother announced that she was going back to Chicago without me. Through the years when I lived with her mother, Gram, in the middle of a fight mother would pack up her bag and run out the door to a cab.

A born peacemaker, I courted my mother’s approval. She’d given no signs of her disavowal of me until I was twenty, she visited once a year, but were her visits as much about seeing her mother, who had left her when she was six, as seeing me? Though Gram reclaimed mother after she remarried, they were always in conflict. After those abrupt endings that should have been happy reunions, Gram would sob, “Oh, my brown-eyed baby. Why can’t she just get along? Why can’t she…” Other times, Gram’s dark eyes stormed with rage at mother, long hours of diatribes against her. I didn’t know who to feel sorry for—Gram or mother. Or both.

I first visited my mother when I was twenty years old, having left Oklahoma to attend the University of Illinois. What a thrill it was to be in the city of my birth, the city my grandmother had moved to when she left Mother behind. Thrilled to be with her that first winter day, gasping against the wind, I rushed with mother to a jeweler’s where she traded antiques. On the way, she said, “Just wait for me and don’t talk.”

I knew that displeasing her could result in serious consequences, from being screamed at, torn down with criticism, or even slapped, so I nodded. For nearly an hour, miserably invisible, I hovered by the door at the end of the counter while mother flirted with the owner. Finally mother’s lilting voice,  “You see that girl down there. That’s my daughter.”

Her hips swiveled and she flashed a flirty smile as he said, “That’s impossible, you’re not old enough to have a daughter that age.”

I straightened up, ready to be proudly introduced after all, only to shrink back when she whispered, “Oh, really?” pleased to be seen as so young, ignoring me for another half hour.

When we left, I found the courage to ask why she didn’t introduce me.

“I have my own life here, and no one knows I’ve been married. So of course I can’t have a daughter, can I? I don’t want you ruining things for me.”

As I shuffled behind her, ashamed, small, confused, I didn’t know that I’d spend the next thirty years trying to get her to change her mind. I’d bring my children to see her in Chicago only to have her shepherd us down the back halls of her hotel away from view. I was always excited to go to Chicago, always hopeful she’d be different.

One visit in particular was a tragic example of her attitude. Standing in the elevator of her hotel, she looked me up and down. “You look like me. I hope no one thinks you’re my daughter.” In stunned silence that she would say such a thing, I watched elevator buttons blink, almost gasping for breath, feeling stabbed in the stomach.

After another visit being shuffled through back hallways, my eleven-year-old son said to me, “Why do you bring us here when she doesn’t want us?” He was much smarter than me.

“We’re never coming back.” I resolved, my dream infusing with reality.

But I was too cowardly to confront her. Her irrational outbursts and violence frightened me too much to try. That night, I howled my rage and tears, knowing that my dream of being welcomed by my mother would never come true.

Four years later, after no contact, she called, terrified about a brain tumor and lung spot. Would I come? I flew out that day. We arrived at the hospital where a nurse checked her in.  She glanced at Mother and then at me. “You must be her daughter,” she said to me.

“Yes,” I said, holding my breath. The nurse didn’t know mother’s crazy rules.

A beat, then a shriek, “Don’t tell them you’re my daughter!!”

The nurse froze, the woman in the next bed gasped. Calmly, I said, “Mother, you know I’m your daughter.”

Though I knew she was disturbed, and by now could see that she’d never stop denying me, I couldn’t prevent a tear rolling down my cheek.

Over those days I sat next to her hospital bed, the extent of her denial became even clearer: her attorney of fifteen years didn’t know I existed. On a day when friends were to visit, she told me,
“Come back in two hours. I don’t want questions about you.”

Stung, I shuttered myself as always, comforted by Van Gogh landscapes and Monet flowers at a nearby museum. On the way back, my rage built, along with shame at my own cowardice. I found her pacing, screaming accusations, criticisms; finally my silence broke: “Mother, you’ve denied me my whole life! I’m sick of it. I came here for you, left my children to be with you. I’m your daughter!!”

A small voice murmured, “When did I do that?”

I could have listed all the times she turned away, denied me, hurt me. But suddenly, beside me was a just a dying old woman. I put my arm around her. “It’s okay, Mother. It’s okay.”

In peace, we watched raindrops splash spring rain on the greening trees.

DCMM Cover Rev5.indd

Linda Joy Myers:  President of the National Association of Memoir Writers, & Co-President of the Women’s National Book Association, SF, is the author of The Power of Memoir—How to Write Your Healing Story, and a workbook The Journey of Memoir: The Three Stages of Memoir Writing. A new edition of her memoir Don’t Call Me Mother—A Daughter’s Journey from Abandonment to Forgiveness was released in January, 2013. She co-teaches the program Write your Memoir in Six Months with Brooke Warner. She coaches writers, and offers teleseminars and workshops nationally.

Linda has won prizes for fiction, memoir and poetry: First Prize, Jessamyn West Fiction Contest; Finalist, San Francisco Writing Contest for Secret Music, a novel about the Kindertransport; First Prize, poetry, East of Eden Contest, and First Prize Carol Landauer Life Writing Contest. www.namw.org.  Blog: http://memoriesandmemoirs.com

Sonia Marsh Says: Linda, you transported me into your life as a child, a young woman and finally a mother yourself yearning all your life for your own mother’s love, approval and recognition. I felt your hurt and anger throughout your story and your ability to forgive makes your story so compelling. Thank you so much for sharing your story, and congratulations on your new edition of, Don’t Call Me Mother.

 ***

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get published in our Anthology. Please contact sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

You can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

VOTING for your favorite January 2013 “My Gutsy Story®” starts on January 31st, and ends on February 13th. The winner will be announced on February 14th. We have a new sponsor, Carolyn Howard-Johson, who is offering her e-book as a prize: The Frugal Editor.

Please check out the following January “My Gutsy Story®”

  • Mary Gottschalk
  • Christine Lewry
  • Michael Jay

“My Gutsy Story®” Michael Jay

January 21, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 24 Comments

Michael Jay AuthorHeadshotCropped

“Gut Wrenching Wonder”

Like a fast forgotten dog bone hidden in a corner of a yard, I was quick to bury my feelings of guilt and shame.

At the age of ten, I was one confused and befuddled boy after asking my dad if we could “pretty please get a puppy”.

He all but said beat it.

“I’m allergic to dogs. End of story.” He lied.

It broke my heart to hear him say that.

A year later, I learned the real meaning of heartbreak.

My mom sat me down in the kitchen.

“Have a seat.  Let’s talk.”

I was certain she was going to tell me that my hard work in school had paid off and that we were going to get a doggie to call our own.

Already excited after a banner sixth-grade school day, I had sprinted all the way home.

Something good was about to happen.

I could feel it.

“You know no one can 100% predict the future, right?” She began.

“Uh-huh.”

“Well honey, I caught a glimpse of the future today when I went to the doctor.”

I smiled.

I was sure she was going to tell me that the doctor’s dog was about to have a litter of puppies.

I figured wrong.

“The doctor told me I don’t have long to live, buddy.”

“Huh?”

“Six months to a year, they figure. Perhaps a bit more.”

“Huh?”

I don’t even remember pressing myself into her.

I drenched her shoulder as she held me close to whisper.

“Listen up here. The way I see it, God is giving us a gift. It’s rare that He gives anyone time to prepare for their death, but it seems He is giving that gift to me.  So let’s make the most of the time we have left together.  Shall we?”

When my tears were spent, she planted a kiss on my head, then suggested I go outside and throw a ball around.

“I’ll call you when its time for dinner, buddy.”

Outside, the world spun around me.

I couldn’t even grip a baseball.

Days turned into weeks.

All the while, she took care to comfort my two brothers and my sister and me.

“At least you will always have your dad, long after I’m gone.” She promised.

Obsessing, I couldn’t help but wonder.

What good is it to have a dad if he won’t even let you have a dog?

Then it hit me.

Maybe God would make him change his mind now that our mom was dying?

Maybe that’s God’s plan.

I believed.

“His will be done.” I prayed.

Despite my father’s stubborn indifference to my request that our family get a doggie to call our own, I dropped to my knees every bedtime to try to strike a solemn bargain, praying harder than I had ever prayed in my life.

Night in and night out, I told God that I would endure anything – if only He could figure out a way to allow us to have a dog.  Amen. Woof-woof. Bow-wow.

Meanwhile, our mom stayed true.

Knowing each morning could be her last, she took one day at a time to prepare us all for life on our own without her.

Months later in the first week of October, still battling her illness, her focus heightened when our dad dropped dead.

The Christmas that followed brought another surprise.

Our mom could not contain her excitement.

“Look, you guys.  Look what Santa brought us!”

Finally, we had our puppy!

Uh-oh.

Dear Lord in Heaven.

Were those my prayers God answered?

What in the world have I done?

On this miraculous Christmas morning, it made me ache to wonder.

 

*   *   *   *

Six short months later, birds were flying low beneath a darkening midday sky when I learned the sorry truth about what it means for a boy to man a shovel. And I thought math was hard.

Even my blisters wept that day.

“Hip dysplasia is not at all uncommon with large, popular purebreds from puppy mills.” The vet told us.

Had it not been for my mom standing nearby, I would never have managed.

Resting her wrists on my shoulders, she looked me in the eye. “Come on, Mikee. You dig. I’ll pray. I’m not going anywhere.”

She made me do it with those exact words.

In time, her insistence that day would prove to be a godsend; for had she been any less resolute, I would no doubt have remained forever unmindful of a much bigger truth that no one in the world could know.

My puppy isn’t all I buried on that tear-filled eighth-grade afternoon in June when I said good-bye to my beautiful Old English sheepdog, Duchess.

“Not bad for a first-timer with a shovel,” my mom offered, with a smile just right and a hug for good measure. “Hold onto your dear mother here, mister.”

Two simple graveside prayers later, she leaned into my shoulder to give my arm a loving squeeze.

“It’s ok to be sad, buddy,” she whispered, just as my tears came flooding.

Intended or not, with that lesson in closure behind me, I could feel my confidence grow.

And by the time my blisters callused, I had become all but certain I could handle just about anything life threw at me.

Until tonight.

My dad is dead. My puppy has been put down and buried. And now, my mom is lying lifeless on a heavy steel gurney in a dark lonely recess of the basement below.

I tried to settle by rolling onto my side to pull the covers tight.

It must be a dream.

 

Michael Jay Book Cover

 

Meet Joe Black visits The Wonder Years in the true story of  DOG WATER FREE, a coming-of-age memoir about an improbable journey to find emotional truth that lands a dumbstruck orphan from the unlikely side of Detroit front and center before England’s Queen, America’s Maestro, and the first non-Italian Pontiff in more than 400 years.

Publisher: BookBaby Fall 2012.

______________________________________

 

Michael Jay’s Bio: Michael Jay grew up in Detroit where he attended Catholic Central High School with help from an anonymous benefactor. A graduate of Harvard College, he earned his MBA at Northeastern University in 1983. His coming-of-age memoir, DOG WATER FREE, is dedicated to his college roommate, Tom Wales, who plays a pivotal role in the story, and who many believe to be the only Federal Prosecutor in U.S. history to have been killed in the line of duty. Michael lives in Idaho. To read an excerpt from the true story of DOG WATER FREE please visit

You can connect with Michael Jay on Facebook here and check out his website.

DOG WATER FREE
An improbable true story about hope and faith and a young mother’s love that fosters a coming-of-age journey to find emotional truth.
Now available at Amazon Kindle, Apple iTunes Books, Barnes & Noble Nook, WH Smith (UK)
and Kobo (worldwide). Also Available at www.Lovereading.co.uk 

Sonia Marsh Says: Michael, what an incredible heartbreaking story. You mentioned, “I was quick to bury my feelings of guilt and shame,” and I can imagine what a unique, coming-of-age memoir you have to share with the world.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get published in our Anthology. Please contact sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

You can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here

VOTING for your favorite January 2013 “My Gutsy Story®” starts on January 31st, and ends on February 13th. The winner will be announced on February 14th. We have a new sponsor, Carolyn Howard-Johson, who is offering her e-book as a prize: The Frugal Editor.

Please check out the following January “My Gutsy Story®”

  • Mary Gottschalk 

  • Christine Lewry

Next Monday, we have Linda Joy Myers “My Gutsy Story®”

“My Gutsy Story®” Mary Gottschalk

January 7, 2013 by Sonia Marsh 35 Comments

Mary Gottschalk

Welcome to Our New 2013 “My Gutsy Story®”  Series

“Giving Up the Illusion of Control”

“Can’t we just sail around the world now, instead of waiting until we’re retired?”

My story begins with that simple question to my husband Tom, posed on a snowy February night in 1985.

The answer seemed an obvious “no.”  At age 40, we both had successful careers in high finance. My success was all the more significant as a woman in what was still very much a man’s world.  Abandoning the career I’d worked so hard to build seemed crazy.  After five years at sea, I’d be approaching 45 and totally out of touch with the ever-innovative financial markets.  The odds of getting back into that competitive world would be perilously small.

But something didn’t feel right.  Tom and I both worked long hours, week in and week out.  We had no time to enjoy the fruits of our success. Life seemed to passing us by.

And so, Tom and I held hands and jumped off the corporate ladder. Barely seven months later, we headed out of New York Harbor on a 37-foot sailboat en route to the rest of the world.

Almost nothing on that voyage worked out as planned.  But what I learned, as I recounted in Sailing Down the Moonbeam, is that sailing is a metaphor for life. The route is not well marked.  You can’t control your environment.  All too often, you end up somewhere other than where you intended to go.  As Ted Turner famously noted, there’s no point in worrying about the wind; the only thing you can do is adjust your sails.

It was a lesson I learned early in the voyage, and it changed my life almost at once.  But the way that lesson applied to my career was not apparent until years after the voyage ended.  That is the story I will share here.

 

I began my professional life as a researcher and problem solver for companies with financial exposure to interest rates, currencies and commodity prices. I loved the work, which appealed to my analytical nature.  It seems I was good at it and I moved steadily up the corporate ladder.  But with each move, I was spending more time managing people and their schedules, and less time doing what gave me a sense of satisfaction.  A nagging concern about my ability to master the job I’d been promoted into—I hated routine and didn’t think I was a very good people manager—was a significant factor in my decision to leave on that sailboat.

At the time, I felt I was running away from a looming sense of failure.  But as the analogy between sailing and real life began to rise to my consciousness, it struck me that during those last few years in New York, I’d been trying to control the metaphorical wind … trying to make my career go in a direction that my introverted, analytical persona was not designed to go.

With the realization came an understanding of what I wanted, what I was willing to do— when and if I returned to the work-a-day world. I liked research and problem solving.  I didn’t like jobs with routine and repetition.  I didn’t want to manage people.  I didn’t want to waste energy trying to be good at what other people thought I should do.

With that insight came another. Fancy titles and big salaries mattered far less to me than having an interesting job in which I could continue to learn and grow.  As I thought back over my career, the jobs I had loved most had constant variety with little or no managerial routines, as well as the opportunity to learn even as I used my analytical skills to help others.  It was the classic consultant role.

It was easy enough, sitting on the deck of my sailboat, to say what I wanted.  But what if the world didn’t care what I wanted?

And for a time, it seemed the world didn’t care.  When I did go back to work, I started out as a mid-level financial consultant in Auckland, New Zealand, much lower in the pecking order than I’d been when I left New York.  Within four years, however, I was running the financial risk management practice for Peat Marwick in Australia.  In 1994, Arthur Anderson recruited me to return to New York.  In 2000, I was appointed Chief Financial Officer of one of the twelve Federal Home Loan Banks.

Although I didn’t seek them out, promotions and handsome salaries came my way.  It was like being paid to go to school.  It seems that what mattered was not being good at everything, but focusing my energy and attention on doing what I loved and was good at.

 

With the benefit of hindsight, a career decision that initially looked like a “gutsy” thing to do seems to have been the safer course of action.  In New York, every rung on the corporate ladder is a stop on the road to somewhere above. If you don’t move up, you’ll get pushed off.  I have no doubt that, had I stayed on that management track in New York, I would eventually have been pushed off by someone who loved managing people in a way that I did not.

My point is not just that I took a risk and it worked out.  My point is also that doing what is expected, following the conventional path may, in reality, be the riskiest choice of all.  We all know people who stayed in jobs they didn’t enjoy just because they thought the job was safe—and lost their jobs in the last recession.

I often wonder what would have happened if I hadn’t gone sailing. Would I have stayed in a miserable job? Perhaps not. But if all I did was change jobs in the competitive, high pressure world of New York, I would not have learned the lesson I absorbed as I crossed the Pacific Ocean … that you can’t control your environment … that you can only control how you respond to it.  Given that reality, you might as well spend your time doing what you love.

Go for it!

 ***

Mary Gottschalk Bio:

Mary has made a career out of changing careers.  After finishing graduate school, she spent nearly thirty years in the financial markets, as an economist, a banker and a consultant.  Her work took her to New York, New Zealand, Australia, Central America, Europe, and amazingly, Des Moines, Iowa.

Along the way, she dropped out several times.  In the mid-1980’s, Mary and her husband Tom embarked on the round-the-world sailing voyage that is the subject of her memoir, Sailing Down the Moonbeam. Several times, she left finance to provide financial and strategic planning services to the nonprofit community, both in New York and Des Moines.

In her latest incarnation, she is working on a novel, writing for The Iowan magazine, and lecturing on the subject of personal risk.

 Mary Gottschalk book cover

Mary has two websites which you can view here and here.

Please join her on Twitter and Facebook, and her memoir, Sailing Down the Moonbeam  is available on Amazon.

***

 Sonia Marsh Says:

“Abandoning the career I’d worked so hard to build seemed crazy,”

and yet, this is what you did. I find it amazing that stepping out of the corporate world into a world where nature is your boss, can give you clarity, and make you realize what’s important in life. You state the message you learned with such clarity:

“that you can’t control your environment … that you can only control how you respond to it.  Given that reality, you might as well spend your time doing what you love.”

Many of us need to hear your message to get the courage to take a risk, rather than staying in a situation we’re not happy with.

Do you have a “My Gutsy Story®” you’d like to share?

NOW is the time to submit your “My Gutsy Story®” and get published in our Anthology. Please contact sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

You can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story®” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here


 

 

 

“My Gutsy Story” Winner, Paris Book Event + More

December 12, 2012 by Sonia Marsh 9 Comments

100_1953

Today is special . Why?

  • We have a “My Gutsy Story” last-minute WINNER
  • I’m signing books at WH Smith in Paris from 5-7pm tonight
  • Madeline Sharples, nominated me as a “Master Networker” and I’m grateful for her hosting me on her blog today.

As many of you know, I’m in Paris and due to the time difference (9 hours ahead of California,) I’m watching the last-minute voting.

Jerry Waxler is the WINNER of the November “My Gutsy Story.”

Congratulations Jerry. This was a very close call with 2nd place winner Susan Weidener.

 

Jerry Waxler
Jerry Waxler

 Sonia Marsh Says: “I am on board with your global vision of sharing our stories and breaking down barriers through a Memoir Revolution.”

 

 Susan Weidener won 2nd place. This was such a close race, and I want to congratulate you Susan for your inspiring “My Gutsy Story.”

Susan Weidener
Susan Weidener

 Sonia Marsh Says: What an inspiring story of courage and re-inventing yourself after the loss of the man you loved. I am sure your memoir can help us feel “energized” and motivated to follow our passion, just as you did.

Jerry Holl: won 3rd Place.

Jerry Holl

 

Jerry Holl

Sonia Marsh Says: This is really a true example of a “My Gutsy Story,” Jerry. You did what so many long to do: quit their corporate job, and take off to follow an adventure or a passion.

Elaine Masters: Your story was amazing.

Elaine Masters

Sonia Marsh says: “You prove something that I am a firm believer of: getting away from the familiar, getting out of your comfort zone to an unfamiliar environment helps you grow and strengthens you as a person.”

 

DECEMBER IS DIFFERENT.

I am posting from Paris this week. I plan to share stories and photos, from Paris and London, where I am doing an event at WHSmith on December 13th.

I am collecting new “My Gutsy Story” submissions for 2013.  NOW is the time to submit your own “My Gutsy Story” and get published in our Anthology. Please contact sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

To submit your own, “My Gutsy Story” you can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

 


Interview with Memoir Author Madeline Sharples

December 6, 2012 by Sonia Marsh 18 Comments

Madeline Sharples

It’s my pleasure to introduce you to a fellow memoir author friend, Madeline Sharples, who wrote: Leaving the Hall Light On: A Mother’s Memoir of Living with Her Son’s Bipolar Disorder and Surviving His Suicide.

Madeline is on her virtual book tour, and I had the pleasure of becoming her friend and meeting her in person, at her home in Manhattan Beach, as well as at the Hollywood Book Fair.  I wrote a review of her book on Amazon and Goodreads, and decided to ask her a few questions which intrigued me about her honest memoir. But first, a brief synopsis of her memoir.

 

Leaving the Hall Light On: A Mother’s Memoir of Living with Her Son’s Bipolar Disorder and Surviving His Suicide charts the near-destruction of one middle-class family whose oldest son committed suicide after a seven-year struggle with bipolar disorder. Author Madeline Sharples goes deep into her own well of grief to describe her anger, frustration and guilt. She also shares the story of how she, her husband and younger son weathered every family’s worst nightmare—including struggles with her own thoughts of suicide, and ultimately, her decision to live and take care of herself as a woman, wife, mother and writer.

  • “A moving read of tragedy, trying to prevent it, and coping with life after.” Midwest Book Review
  • “Poetically visceral, emotionally honest.” Irvin D. Godofsky, M.D.
  • “Moving, intimate and very inspiring.” Mark Shelmerdine, CEO, Jeffers Press

My Questions and Madeline’s Answers:

1.     What were the warning signs when your son first began to experience symptoms of bipolar disorder? (Anything at all happen during childhood that was different?)

Just before his first manic break in February 1993, he had traveled from New York where he was attending college at the New School to attend my mother’s 85th birthday celebration. I have a wonderful photo of him playing Happy Birthday on the piano with her sitting beside him. He was perfectly normal. He was calm, loving. He talked easily to everyone and readily smiled as he posed for a photo with his brother and cousins. For the two nights he was with us, he slept easily in his childhood bedroom, and kissed and hugged me when I said goodbye to him at the airport.

Two weeks later he was calling us up every few minutes, writing all over his apartment walls with a blue felt-tipped marker, and saying people were lurking in doorways out to get him and poisoning his food and cigarettes. His clothes were strewn all over the place, his dishes were stacked up—all behaviors so foreign to the orderly and neat guy he normally was. Most important, he was a jazz musician no longer able to sit still long enough at the piano to play a song through from the beginning to end.

In those two weeks after he returned to New York City, he played three successive gigs with some older musicians in Brooklyn, rather than with his own group, and had not slept for at least two nights in a row. He also drank heavily during these performances. So it is possible that this burgeoning jazzman lifestyle of little sleep, little food, and lots of booze sent Paul over the edge. He was also so affected by the news of the heroin-overdose death of one of his classmates he became unintelligible and had to be taken from his school to the hospital.

Paul was born with his third and fourth fingers connected on both hands. And because he was trying to separate them himself, we decided to have hand surgery performed just after he turned two. He had a scary time in the recovery room and had to wear casts that looked like boxing gloves for ten days afterward. As a result he had to quit sucking those fingers cold turkey. A few other events when he was two come to mind: we moved, his brother was born, and his beloved grandfather became very ill with cancer so he couldn’t play with him anymore. Later on in Paul’s teens he had an affair with a much older woman. I think the effect of that affair might have been a factor in how he related to women afterward.

2.     How do you give support and comfort to a person who doesn’t want support or comfort?

We were in a hopeless situation. Because Paul was an adult child, we had no control. We couldn’t help him unless he let us. We felt like our hands were tied behind our backs—and by him. Paul was the driver—it was all up to him. We were out of touch and out of control at his choosing. All we could do was hope for the best, that somehow he would integrate what everyone had been telling him for so long—that his survival and recovery were up to him.

At the same time we concluded no matter what, he was our son and our responsibility. We would never turn him out into the streets. No matter how painful it was being with him, having him living with us, experiencing the effects of his illness on him and our family, we would take care of him for as long as he needed us to.

3.     How did you maintain your sanity (during) and after your son’s suicide?

A long list of things helped: friends and family, getting back on my exercise program, pampering myself, writing in my journal and taking writing workshops, attending the Survivors After Suicide meetings at the Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services organization, finding a job outside my home, and being respectful of each other as a family. We stuck together as a family, we moved through our grief in our own way and in our own time, and we came out the other side as a family closer than ever before.

4.     Did your marriage suffer as a result of your son’s bipolar disorder and suicide? So many couples end up divorcing, you didn’t how did you manage that strength between you?

At first we had a hard time just being together because our grieving methods and coping mechanisms were so different. My husband would keep saying that I needed therapy. To spite him, I wouldn’t go. That is the truth of it. He was afraid I was having a breakdown; I was afraid he was drowning his pain and anger in alcohol.

Yet, I think the main reason we survived Paul’s death at all was because of the strength of our marriage.

According to Bob, our marriage survived by a combination of my persistent drive to deal with the pain, suffering, and loss, and his willingness to wait until I got better. We realized early on that our grieving processes were different, so we were patient with each other about that. We also give each other a lot of space. We respect each other. We both are good at what we do professionally so there’s no competition or jealousy there. We have no reason to put each other down. We don’t get into arguments about the small stuff or let the small stuff get in our way. We’ve lived through too much big stuff to let that happen.

This love has also been the glue that has kept us together—a glue stronger than the trauma of Paul’s death. It was enough to help us in the most trying of times that a couple could ever go through. Plus neither of us has any other place to go. We’re together in it for the long haul—richer, poorer, sickness, health, and a son’s death.

5.     What can a person do to help and comfort a family that has experienced a suicide or other tragedy? What is the best approach when you speak to a mom who has gone through what you went through?

I don’t know if this is the best approach, but here is what I would suggest. Of course offer condolences, and explain that even though we have both been through this experience, I would have no way of knowing how you feel. Everyone grieves in her own way and for however long it takes. Everyone has a different reaction to what comes her way. I would make sure the mother has permission to grieve – to cry, to laugh, to do what it takes to express her emotions. I would also suggest taking good care of herself – get some exercise, eat healthy, get pampered, buy a new dress, go to work, find a creative outlet. Looking good will help you to feel good. And even if you don’t feel good, pretend. Pretty soon you won’t have pretend.

Also, feel free to reject everything I’ve suggested. These are things that helped me, but that doesn’t mean they’ll work for you.

And, most important, I would tell her to not let anyone tell her how long or how to grieve. So many people told me it’s time to move on already. But what did they know? Grief is so personal it must be respected and allowed to run its true course.

6.     How did your elder son’s illness and suicide affect your thoughts toward your younger son? Did Ben ever feel left out and not as loved?

It’s all about Ben now. He was my younger son. Now he’s my only son, the person I worry about the most. I think of all the disasters that could happen whenever he travels—by car, by plane, and even on foot. On days when I fear he is in danger, my heart and gut react more than ever. Now I try to hide my worries about him as best I can. After all, he is a grown up and has a wife to worry about him now. But still….

Some time ago I wrote that Ben is the reason I chose to live when I was most despondent after Paul died. That is still true. There is nothing I wouldn’t give him or do for him. Even before Paul died that was so. He and I spent so much time together as he was growing up. I was his first tennis teacher and warm-up partner, and I took him to all the tennis tournaments he competed in from the time he was seven until he graduated from high school. I worked with him on his tennis attitude such that he had a reputation for being the “Iceman” on the courts. I helped him through his losses, his nervousness before a match, his strategizing, and his triumphs.

Now I am the champion of his career. He comes to me for advice and I readily give it. He comes to me for editorial suggestions on the scripts he writes. And even though he doesn’t come to me for monetary help anymore, I would still readily give that to him too.

I don’t think Ben felt left out or not as loved during Paul’s illness or after his death. However, he had a hard time believing the behavior Paul displayed during his manic episodes were a result of his illness and not just his moodiness. So Ben stayed away a lot during those years. He just didn’t like being around his brother whom he loved very much after Paul got sick.

Sonia’s Extra Questions:

a) As a mom who has an 18-year-old son joining the Army and wanting to fight in a war, what advice do you have for us:

Not to fear the worst.

I think I can understand your fear. I have that fear about losing Ben even though there is no chance of his going into the military now because he’s too old. However, the thought of my child in danger of any kind brings out my worst fears. Of course, Ben thinks I’m silly, but I tell him I’m a mother, and that’s what mother’s do. Mothers worry.

b). What do you think is different for a mom who looses a child who is killed at war, than one who commits suicide?

Even though one could rationalize that one died while serving his country and the other died for naught, I think a mother will suffer from the death of her son no matter how it happened. Losing a child, not the way the child died, is the

Author’s Bio:

Madeline Sharples is an author, poet, and web journalist who spent most of her professional life as a technical writer and editor, grant writer and proposal manager. Through the tragedy of her son’s mental illness and suicide, she has become a thought-provoking expert on the affects of mental illness and suicide on family members—and, more important, on how to keep the surviving members of your family together and move forward in the aftermath of tragedy.

Madeline Sharples studied journalism in high school and college and wrote for the high school newspaper, but only started to fulfill her dream to work as a creative writer and journalist late in life. Her memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On: A Mother’s Memoir of Living with Her Son’s Bipolar Disorder and Surviving His Suicide, was released in a hardback edition in 2011 and has just been released in paperback and eBook editions by Dream of Things. It tells the steps she took in living with the loss of her oldest son, first and foremost that she chose to live and take care of herself as a woman, wife, mother, and writer. She hopes that her story will inspire others to find ways to survive their own tragic experiences.

She also co-authored Blue-Collar Women: Trailblazing Women Take on Men-Only Jobs (New Horizon Press, 1994), co-edited the poetry anthology, The Great American Poetry Show, Volumes 1 and 2, and wrote the poems for two photography books, The Emerging Goddess and Intimacy (Paul Blieden, photographer). Her poems have also appeared online and in print magazines.

Madeline’s articles appear regularly in the Naturally Savvy, PsychAlive, Aging Bodies, and Open to Hope. She also posts at her blogs, Choices and at Red Room and is currently writing a novel.  Madeline’s mission since the death of her son is to raise awareness, educate, and erase the stigma of mental illness and suicide in hopes of saving lives.

Madeline and her husband of forty plus years live in Manhattan Beach, California, a small beach community south of Los Angeles. Her younger son Ben lives in Santa Monica, California with his wife Marissa.

You can purchase Madeline’s memoir here at Red Room ,  Amazon or Dream of Things

Take a look at Madeline’s moving book trailer.

Join Madeline on Facebook and Twitter:@madeline40

Madeline blogs here and here, and also has her website.
I hope you read Madeline Sharples memoir, and thank her for answering all my questions. Please leave your comments for Madeline below.
 DECEMBER IS DIFFERENT.

Next Monday, December 10th, I shall be posting from Paris. I plan to share stories and photos, from Paris and London, where I am doing an event on December 13th.

I am collecting new “My Gutsy Story” submissions for 2013.  NOW is the time to submit your own “My Gutsy Story” and get published in our Anthology. Please contact sonia@soniamarsh.com for details.

To submit your own, “My Gutsy Story” you can find all the information, and our sponsors on the “My Gutsy Story” contest page. (VIDEO) Submission guidelines here.

Thanks and don’t forget to VOTE for your favorite November “My Gutsy Story” on the sidebar.

 

« Previous Page
Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Sign up for my Gutsy Updates

Sign up to receive awesome content in your inbox, every month.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Welcome to My New Life

Welcome to My New Life

Do you feel trapped?
Let me Help You Rediscover Your Freedom.
I divorced at 58, and now belong to myself.
If I can do it, so can you!
Let me help you find your purpose and become your own best friend.

Click the cover to buy on Amazon

Recent Posts

  • Will Robots Help Us Age at Home? The Future of Robots for Seniors
  • Do You Really Want to Live to 120? The Truth About Healthspan vs. Lifespan
  • I’ve Forgotten How to Drive — My Tesla’s Drives Better Than Me

Also Available At:

Latest from the blog

  • Will Robots Help Us Age at Home? The Future of Robots for Seniors
  • Do You Really Want to Live to 120? The Truth About Healthspan vs. Lifespan
  • I’ve Forgotten How to Drive — My Tesla’s Drives Better Than Me
  • Why I Quit Dating Apps at 68—And My 35-Year-Old Son Has the Same Problem
  • Solo Cruising Doesn’t Mean You’re Alone

Top Posts

  • Will Robots Help Us Age at Home? The Future of Robots for Seniors
  • Pregnant at 53
  • Home can be anywhere you choose it to be.
  • Showing love every day.
  • My Road to Becoming an Author by Jonathan Yanez
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Loading Comments...