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"..THOSE WE LOVE MOST and it grabbed me from the first page.."
—Gayle King,
O, The Oprah Magazine,
September 2012 

 

Lee Woodruff's 'real life" touches 'Those We Love Most'-USA Today, 9/5/12
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Monday
Apr222013

Those We Love Most in Paperback

Spring is busting out all over - and that means the paperback edition of "Those We Love Most" is coming out. Hot off the presses. 

It's a perfect "book club pick" and a discussion guide is included in the back.
 
Scroll down for a list of public appearances and if I'm in your area I'd love to see you and your friends.  You can find out more information about these venues on my Events page and for information on the book you can click here those-we-love-most.

See you soon!  Lee 

 

 

 


Speaking & Signing Events 

 

April 30        Washington DC - In Conversation with Marc Adelman,                                     Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 7pm, www.sixthandi.org

 

May 2           New York City, NY -Colgate Women Alumni Group, 6:30pm
                   www.colgateconnect.org  

 

May 5           Providence, RI -Temple Beth-El, 4pm,
                   www.temple-beth-el.org

 

May 7           Dallas, TX -Dallas Women's Club Reading, 11:00am
                   -St. Michael's Women's Exchange, 1:30pm
                   st-michaels-womans-exchange.com 

  

May 8           Greenwich, CT -Perrot Memorial Library, 7:30pm
                   www.perrotlibrary.org

 

 

May 10         Morristown, NJ -Junior League of Morristown, 11am
                   www.jlmnj.org

 

May 11         Hadley, MA -Johnny Got His Gun, 7:30pm
                   www.olddeerfieldproductions.org

 

May 15         Brookline, MA -Brookline Booksmith, 7pm
                   www.brooklinebooksmith.com

 

May 16         Eatontown, NJ -Brain Injury Alliance, 31st Annual Seminar, 12pm

                   www.bianj.org/annual-seminar 

May 21         Princeton, NJ-Woman Space Barbara Boggs Sigmund Award,                          5:30pm  www.womanspace.org

 

May 22         New York City, NY -Eileen Fisher, Flatiron store at 166 Fifth Ave                      (between 21st and 22nd Streets), 6pm
                   www.eileenfisher.com

 

June 4          New York City, NY -NY Women In Communications Event, 6pm
                   www.nywici.org

 

June 6          Bedford, NY -Bedford Post Inn, 11:30am
                    www.bedfordpostinn.com  

 

June 12        Westport, CT -Wine, Women & Wisdom Event
                   www.connectionspublicrelations.com 

 

                                                                       Like me on Facebook  Follow me on Twitter   Find me on Pinterest  View my profile on LinkedIn 
 
Wednesday
Apr102013

Digging in the Dirt

Most young children compete with their siblings for their parent’s affection. My sisters’ and my rivals, however, were my father’s plants.  He adored lush ferns and bright colors, lipstick red summer geraniums and the bold purple of miniature lobelia.  Our lawn was golf-course green and weed-free (and he was not above employing a few chemicals to keep it that way).  Watering, fertilizing, clipping and weeding were his sports arena, his temple and his escape.



When I ultimately had my own home, yard and children, I discovered that growing things, digging around in the soil, was a balm for me, too. 

 
The plants and trees I nurtured existed in a separate sphere from the sometimes routinized and often chaotic world of mothering four children, now ranging in age from 21 to 13.

 
I am drawn to my summer garden in the dawn, before anyone stirs inside. In springtime, I prepare the beds and start my dahlia bulbs and herbs in pots of kitchen compost soil.  By August, the flowers are a tangle of bright colors.  But in October, as I cut back my dahlia stalks, dig out the tubers and turn over the earth, I am reminded how the seasons of a garden mirror those of our lives. 

 
And so it was natural, 18 years ago, when I lost a baby at 14 weeks that I turned to the land to make sense of my grief.  The pain of losing that child was sharp, unlike anything I had experienced.  I had pictured my baby, imagined him in our family’s silhouette.  There were mornings I didn’t want to lift my head off the pillow, days I forced myself to simply get through, and tend to the needs of my two living children.

 
Grief craves ritual, and that summer, I was determined to plant a tree to memorialize our son, to root him in our land and fix his place.  I felt a primal need to make something thrive after something so precious had perished.

 
Feeling barren and broken, I chose a small but sturdy Japanese maple with deep burgundy pointed leaves. We were a transient family in those days, moving from town to town every few years for my
husband’s job as a journalist.


The place we call our “constant home” is on a lake in  the Adirondacks to which my family has returned for five generations each summer.  It was there, in a simple ceremony of poems and prayers, that we planted the tree under the spread of a giant fir.  As I covered the roots with loamy soil, I felt the barest flicker, a hope that my battered heart might begin to heal.

 
Throughout each summer, passing the tree in my walk between beach and house, it’s impossible not to wonder what our family would have looked like with a different configuration.  We were thrilled with the birth of our twin girls in 2000, but a loss doesn’t get erased by joy, only diluted. That sorrow is buried within now, marked in our trunks like the inner rings of a tree. The maple reminds me that life is indomitable.  We may never get over losing those we love, but we can navigate through it.

 
In 2003, the war in Iraq claimed the life of a friend in a very sudden way.  It was our first close brush with the death of someone my age and it hobbled us.  In the autumn after his funeral, a group of friends planted hundreds of white tulips on the grassy bank near his house for his widow and daughters.  The activity connected us all and joined our grief in one supportive web.  That spring, the riot of color that bloomed filled up some space, it lessened the ache.

 
My children are older now, and I’ve come to that place in life where I’m parenting my parents.  The seesaw has tipped for my sisters and me as we head toward the inescapable fact that we will lose them both.  Yet I cannot quite grasp what it will feel like once they are gone.  When I am unable to hear my mother’s voice on the phone, or loop my arm through my father’s on a walk, I imagine it will throb like a phantom limb.

 

I’ve not yet decided how I will honor my mother, but I know what I will do to memorialize the man who loved to put his hands in the dirt.  I will plant a White Birch, the lavender pink bark etched with whorled black lines in the shape of God’s eyes. We will place it near the shores of the lake he loves, by the dock where he spent his afternoons.  And when I cover the roots of the tree with earth, I will know that a little piece of my father will live on there too. 

 

 

This blog was published in Martha Stewart Living Magazine, April 2013, pg. 170

 

www.leewoodruff.com   facebook.com/leemwoodruff   twitter@LeeMWoodruff 

Monday
Mar182013

Sisters Offer Support On All Occasions

Guest Blog by my sister, Nancy McLoughlin

 

The Hawaiian island of Kauai has a wild native weed that grows on its shores.  Its roots dig 30 feet into the lava soil, intertwining with those of their neighbors to form an unbreakable net, anchoring this groundcover to the earth.  It is hard to tell where one plant begins and the other ends.  Without this ancient weed, harsh tradewinds and storms would have blown away the island soil, flattening the island terrain and making it uninhabitable.

 

My sisters and I are like that weed.  The three of us wrap together into each other’s soil.  We support and sustain the lives of nine children, three husbands and five aging parents between us.  It is often hard to tell where one family breaks off and the other begins.

 

In times of need, we form our own root like net around the ailing.  In times of abundance, we share the spoils of a happy occasion or holiday.  It would be hard to imagine it any other way, yet friends comment upon how unusual it is for siblings to choose to spend vacation time together at the expense of other new opportunities.

 

My oldest sister had the idea to drag the other two of us across the world on a solo-sisters celebration in Hawaii.  She billed it as a gift to ourselves and from ourselves.  I have never been very adventurous, and spending 12 hours on a plane crossing into a new time zone is asking a lot from me.  I weighed the heavy thought of all those collective sneezes and coughs in recycled airline air like one big billowing tornado of disgust.  I like my routine and my health, but I like being with my sisters more, so I forged ahead.

 

After much grousing and last-minute attempt to cancel on my part, we were off.  It was a full day and night of travel.  A youth behind me babbled in Swedish and kicked the back of my seat.  Her father took off his socks and propped his bare foot up on the arm-rest in front of him (next to me).

 

The three of us shared a room at our hotel.  That’s the fun part about being sisters.  The bickering and sarcasm about who should sleep where began almost instantly.  After losing a brief firefight, I relinquished the two queen-size beds and staked my claim on the roll-away cot.  My bed became known as “the Hannibal” due to its likeness to the hand cart that wheeled notorious Dr. Lecter in the “Silence of the Lambs” thriller.  It spent its days standing upright in the corner like an authoritative figure.  The Hannibal had straps and restraints just like the one in the film, and when I slid on my black eye shade for sleep, the image was complete and my sisters howled with laughter.

 

Even with my white noise machine humming, the room was anything but silent.  Lying awake in the Hannibal, I felt a shift in the mantle I had been wearing for all my mothering years.  As I drifted off to sleep, I was less of a wife and a mom.  I transformed back into a full-time sister all over again.



Megan Lucier, Nancy McLoughlin & Lee in Kauai, Hawaii
 

It had been 25 years since my sisters and I had slept in the same room, yet the identity was as comfortable as my own skin.  Until marriage and kids, these sisters were the closest human beings I had ever known.  I could almost hear the beating of their hearts in the room, slowing down and speeding up in sync with my own.  After all these decades, the DNA worked together in a sort of musical harmony once we were together.

 

On the trip, I was reminded that sisters “said” things to each other that no one else could say.  “You really didn’t need to get up at three in the morning and make the last trip to the bathroom,” my Boston sister informed me after the first night. “It wasn’t warranted.  You just need to tell your bladder that it isn’t feeling full, because it didn’t sound at all to me like it was.”  It was nice to know that there was a late-night listening audience.

 

Sisters had contests like the one we shared on a beach walk.

 

“Who do you think wins in the “in-law competition?” stated the oldest introducing a favorite topic of ours.

 

“Well, I think the answer to that has changed over the years,” I added.  “I would have answered one way a few years back, but I think you have put your blinker on and zipped into the left lane, passing us all on that one recently,” I told her.

 

I was referring to her father-in-law’s propensity to lie down in his driveway and “take naps.”  This was such a frequent occurrence that the neighbors had taken to tiptoeing over and sliding a pillow under his head, waiting for him to wake as they phoned the kids to let them know.

 

The athletic component of our trip (matched in enthusiasm by the dining segment of each day) unfolded with an excursion.  Traveling up the mountain of an old sugar plantation, we donned headlamps, rubber gloves and water shoes before inner tubing through five flooded miles of irrigation ditches (which were quite muddy).  It was meant to be informative and fun.

 

Part of the “thrill” was a series of five completely pitch-black caves that we floated through with our headlamps turned off, as directed by the tour guide (ideally so we could bash into the rock ledges and spin dizzily in our tubes in complete and utter blackness).

 

Megan, Lee & Nancy
There was no reason to think that anyone would like wearing the obligatory smelly rubber shoes and gloves that had been on the bodies of strangers prior to mine.  My sisters watched in hysterical giggles as I tried to overcome my revulsion enough to get dressed in the loaner gear.  I spent much of the water tour plastered to my tube in a frozen stillness that was not out of fear for my safety, but horror.

 

I wanted to touch the germ-infested tube in as few contact points as possible.   I would have felt less contaminated perching inside King Kong’s open mouth on one of his molars than on the rubber tube.  I did it without complaint.  My crablike position rocketed me to the head of the pack, placing me farther away from my sisters, who craned their necks to catch a glimpse of my misery and roar with glee.

 

The river trip seemed to go on forever, but the sisters holiday did not.  It was over before I knew it and I was back on the plane next to a mouth breather who alternately snoozed and sipped cocktails for most of the journey.

 

When I look back on the trip, I think about the holiday season.  I am reminded about gifts that have a lasting value as I make my own Christmas list (new knives for the kitchen) and try to fill the needs of a family of Internet shoppers.

 

I know my sisters are the best presents my parents ever gave to me.  After 50 years, I marvel that the three of us could briefly leave our grown-up lives behind and travel to a faraway place to find ourselves together again laughing like little girls on spinning inner tubes.  The trip is over, yet the value of the experience is not.

 

When our mother called to hear about the trip, I could hear the smile at the other end of the telephone.  “You girls have done this all by yourselves,” she answered when I thanked her for having had the good sense to deliver three daughters in three years on purpose.  “There were times I thought I couldn’t last another day when you were all very young and your father traveled all the time for work.  I wished so much that I had a sister to talk to.  I was exhausted, and you three could be wild together.”

 

“Still can be wild together,” I thought as I chuckled about the river tube trip.  Like the weed in Hawaii, strong families and healthy generations grow out of roots that are set down by sisters who have woven themselves intentionally into each other’s lives.

 

Nancy, Lee & Megan
Sisterhood is a gift that keeps on giving, even if there is a weed or two involved.

 

By Nancy McLoughlin

www.leewoodruff.com   facebook.com/leemwoodruff   twitter@LeeMWoodruff 

 

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