When I was in grade six,
I asked my friends, "What's the worst age?" as we climbed the steps
to our classroom.
"This one,"
one said.
The other agreed.
"We're old enough to know, but too young to do anything."
I had to think about
that. I was expecting an answer more like "202."
For me, eleven was a
good age because I got to read a lot of books and eat bananas and Baby Bell
cheese, although I'm happier now. I was more anxious when I was younger.
Would I get the highest
marks? (Yes, but not past
elementary school. High school and university bring all the most brilliant to
the yard.)
Would I fall in love and
get married? (Yes, to my high
school sweetheart. Still love you, babe. Younger than me by three months, ha
ha. Pic enclosed.)
Would we have children? (Yes, after shedding many
tears.)
What would I DO when I
grew up, like everyone was asking me?
That one's tougher. Med
school interviews taught me that I couldn't say I wanted to be a doctor.
What kind of doctor? What specialty? Academic or community?
Nowadays, the thing that
brings me the most anxiety is my writing. Will it sell? Does anyone care?
Aaargh!
This is especially hard
on a platform like Kickstarter, where a) If you don't fund, you lose every
penny, and b) Each cent is posted publicly. Humiliation (or gloating) complete.
I'm doing
something especially adventurous this time, too, with Cthulhu's Duo . I'm remixing H.P. Lovecraft in a
medical thriller called Killing Me Sloth-LY, and offering a companion book of
art and poems. So this could all be an expensive failure.
Some may question my
morality too, since Lovecraft was considered racist even a century ago.
But my husband said,
"It's hard to do something new without doing something risky."
For myself, it gives me
great pleasure to set Cthulhu head to head against Dr. Hope Sze, a strong woman
of colour who is not straight and who is firmly grounded in science as well as
learning about the supernatural.
"H.P. Lovecraft is
rolling in his grave right now," said our daughter.
Roll, H.P. Roll.
I have grown more
confident over time. This is something my 11 y.o. self would enjoy. No wonder my
friends joke about their dirty thirties and their F.U. forties and fifties.
I'm reading Romancing
the Genre blog posts with interest. We need more older and honest role models!
Here are some more pearls I've collected recently.
"I am the opposite of an overnight success. I am in my 80s and, for most part, I have been a slow-moving, long-term failure." Annie Korzen
I'm 41. I have gray hairs and lines and scars because I have lived a life of joy, sorrow, pleasure, pain, early mornings, late nights, days on end without leaving the woods and days on end without leaving my couch. My skin has felt every kind of weather and my heart has known every emotion. I wear my life right out in sight and I am fucking proud of it.
Embrace your face, loves. It's
imperfect and it's perfectly yours.
@Littleyellowbike
If you can, please
follow my campaign and the leap into unknown worlds with me (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/melissayi/weird?ref=8nqjsx).
The earth needs bolder
woman! And men and non-binary people!
Xoxox
Melissa
5 comments:
Oops, the picture of my younger man didn't post. But it is on Facebook if anyone wants to see: https://www.facebook.com/MelissaYiYuanInnes/
Thanks for having me!
Great post, Melissa! Your Kickstarter project sounds awesome, and I especially agree with that last line. :-)
Love your quotes! Good luck with the Kickstarter project! I hope it is beyond successful for you!
Awesome post!!! great quotes, and we Do need more bold people!
Opening oneself to be a writer is scary. You / we are fragile. Every sale gives one hope and confidence, only to be dashed by low sales or a bad review. But aging helps us put all in perspective. Because as you quoted - who the F&$K cares - and if someone chooses to be mean, it probably is someone you will never meet. The best part about being a romance author, is all the support an author gets from other writers. The best part about aging, is finally learning to more easily forgive and forget.
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