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"..THOSE WE LOVE MOST and it grabbed me from the first page.."
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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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Entries in Perfectly Imperfect (10)

Wednesday
Apr142010

Book Tour Baby

I originally wrote this piece as an essay -- and it has sat on my computer for months now-- since "Perfectly Imperfect-- A Life in Progress" first came out. So on the eve of heading out to tour and speak for the paperback--I'm going to share the essay in installments. If you've ever been on the road for a period of time or wondered what it's like to promote a book or movie (bigger budgets, better hotels and hotter girls, probably)-- you might get a chuckle out of this piece. I'll post it in three segments-- or more. And it's fitting that I am headed to Kansas City on Sunday. So here goes. Think of me for the next three weeks-- ok?: BOOK TOUR One eye opens. I’m in a hotel room but I can’t remember exactly where. It’s dark outside and l can see a long bright strip of light from the line where the curtains don’t quite close. The phone rings. It’s electronically, vaguely human. “This is your wake up call…” “Thank you,” I mumble and fumble the receiver back on the cradle. It dawns on me that I am talking to a machine. Kansas City. It comes back to me. I’m on a book tour; a weekly Batton death march of self-promotion, morning shows and phone interviews, of driving between TV stations and rising before dawn, of room service, bad coffee and airport security. But there is a part of me that loves this because I want to sell books. I’m living on my blackberry and wearing sensible shoes in between gigs. I’ve finally become a published author at a time when no one in America reads anymore. Unless its online or about vampires. We’ve all gone to the dark side of 24-hour cable TV and solitaire on the computer, twitter, Gameboy and Grand Theft Auto. The naked, sameness of the Doubletree Hotel with the plastic cellophaned cups in the bathroom is the glamorous, seamy underside of a book tour. And I’ve asked for this. I’ve said “bring it on.” I’ll do whatever it takes to sell my book. Well, almost. If writing is a solitary experience, the act of sitting in front of a computer screen and creating, then marketing the results in today’s media-fractured world is the exact opposite; a hooker selling her wares in the windows of Amsterdam’s red light district. Even on a good night, it feels a little bit like walking into a PTO board meeting buck-naked. It’s day two of Kansas City, the first stop on my tour. I feel comfortable and welcomed here. All of the latent mid-western parts of me wake up in this town. I was born on the East Coast, but I was surely mid-western in another life. I have a romance about the plains and the prairies and the open part of it all. The sky takes on its own characteristics in between the two coasts. Kansas City’s wide, easy roads, the old shopping district, the fountains and the affability relax me. I also like the way you toggle back and forth between Kansas and Missouri in this town, like a game, hop-scotching between states without really knowing it. We are headed to the next appointment of the day, a large fundraising luncheon for a local hospital where I will be the keynote speaker. I have just signed 1,000 copies of my book in one sitting at the store and I’m feeling pretty accomplished. I’m feeling like a real author. Riding in the car with my hosts from Rainy Day Books, Vivienne and Roger, I’m like an annoying kid in the backseat, trying to guess which state we are in. “This must be Kansas now, right?” I ask. “No, actually, we are still in Missouri,” says Roger politely in his calm, even voice. “Kansas is right over there,” he points to the other side of the road. He and Vivienne run one of the most influential independent bookstores in the country and they deal with all kinds of folks, from celebs with entourages to lunatics, to I imagine boisterous drunks and captains of industry. Think about the kinds of folks who write memoirs alone. There are some pretty messed up lives out there. I’m white bread compared to some. Sitting in the car in my little suit and heels, guessing which state we are in at any given time, I feel more like a white-gloved child headed to Sunday School. I am a modern, clean-cut version of Melissa Gilbert in Little House on the Prairie. We pull up to the side of the beautiful, contemporary art museum, and I notice a big sticker on the glass door, the kind you apply so that birds don’t commit suicide. There is a graphic of a handgun with a big red line through it. I will continue to see this at municipal buildings, radio stations, and the University’s NPR station during my visit here. I knew Kansas City had once been a scrappy frontier town, but did people still tote weapons to places like the grocery store or breast cancer fundraisers? Maybe this was a much more interesting city than I had originally imagined. Was it possible that at any time, even in an art museum, you might get caught in a gunfight? Columns of stylishly beautiful blonde ladies with perfect manicures and enviable suits were filing into the museum. How many of them, I wondered, packed some kind of heat in their Coach bags? The makings of a little thrill ran up my spine. Kansas City was shaping up to be what I call a Donny and Marie Osmond kind of town-- a little bit country and a little bit Rock n Roll. By the time I have signed books, met some of the hospital staff and society volunteers, eaten my chicken breast dressed up with wilting lettuce and sipped my iced tea, it is time for me to speak. I am freezing in the over-air conditioned ballroom. Why don’t I ever learn to wear pants? Shivering, I rise to wobble on my heels up the raised platform steps. I realize that I have been so engaged in conversation I have broken the cardinal rule of a woman who has gone through childbirth. Always go to the bathroom before you speak. For the next 40 minutes I will cross and uncross my legs daintily as I talk, wondering, for the sake of future appearances, if Depends would create visible panty lines under my tight fitting skirt. Just getting to this point, the ability to leave your family and life for three or four weeks, is something of a small miracle with four kids, two of them still in elementary school. It would be one thing if I were sleeping in and getting hotel massages, but a book tour is highly scheduled. Morning shows have you up before dawn and slashed TV budgets mean no professional makeup artists to do your face. This is how, on the rare times I do get up enough nerve to watch my own media appearances, I end up looking like a cross between Tammy Faye Baker and a grizzled Casper the Ghost next to the Starbucks-addicted hosts who have been professionally applying pancake makeup for years. But there is also a part of me, perhaps of every parent, that can’t wait to go away, even for a night, to dodge the calls of “Mooooom,” the lunch-making and homework answering routine, the very mind-numbing sameness of unloading the dishwasher for the trillionth time. Even if I rise before dawn, frankly I only have ME to worry about. And before I even leave for Kansas City, this is the part I look forward to. That is until I am confronted with the prison guard tactics and loud instructive screams of our nation’s airport security screeners. Airline travel was bad enough before September 11th but now it has reduced us all to participants in a reality show obstacle course. The only thing missing is a colo-rectal exam. Just walking in the terminal raises my pulse a few beats in the wrong direction. There are constant alerts blaring over the loudspeaker system about the security threat level being at orange, which connotes ambivalence to me. It’s a safe thermal halfway point between red and yellow. The fact that the needle seems always stuck on orange affirms my belief that we have absolutely no idea what is going on beyond out own borders. This makes me feel less safe. Over and over we are warned not to accept suspicious packages from anyone, to the point where I feel sheepish asking the guy next to me to watch my bag so that I don’t have to drag it into the bathroom. I smile wider than is comfortable in an effort to show fellow travelers that with my relaxed face and Easy Spirit shoes I am NOT a terrorist. Bathrooms figure largely in my life on the road, me of the tiny bladder. Before I even dare brave the security line, I head for the women’s toilet. I spend a lot of time in these bathrooms since I hate to travel wearing anything restrictive or crotch-cutting. I routinely find myself after a day of book-talking, rolling my suitcase into the stall and then changing in to some form of a sweatpant, with an expandable waistband that will allow me to let out my stomach when eating the packages of Twizzlers and pretzels that will constitute dinner. Once again I brace myself to play toilet roulette as I face the challenge of the automatic flush toilet. You know these toilets. They are in movie theaters, stadiums and public bathrooms across America. Just getting a body part near the toilet sensor sets it off with a frothing fury that might suck a backpack or even a small child into the void. Off the seat I go, whoosh, it flushes violently. I move carefully over to the suitcase to unzip it. Silence. I have fooled it and then, no, a slip up, too fast, my back side skitters near the sensor—whoosh. An arm flails out as I pull the sweater over my head – vavoooom-whoooosh…. the toilet is possessed. Weren’t these kinds of toilets designed to save water and eliminate over flushing? I begin to move like a cat burglar, trying to see if I can maneuver around the tiny stall with my pants down and carefully pull out my change of clothes, but the toilet goes off again. I am certain that the growing line of airport travelers outside the stall who hear these repeated flushes will assume that I have, in the words of my son – “laid some pipe” so mammoth in girth that even these industrial strength toilets cannot suck it down. I am sweating but determined. It dawns on me that I have been talking to the toilet under my breath, getting increasingly louder. “Holy crap” I say as it flushes again and realize perhaps that was not the most appropriate noun to have used. I become increasingly nervous, picturing people in the line shaking their heads in disgust as they imagine me wrestling with my own excrement. A conga line of ankles and shoes is forming below the stall and I hop on one foot to get the last pant leg in. The toilet, miraculously, remains quiet but then, unexpectedly, as I open the door, it goes off in a delayed thundering geyser blast that somehow splashes on my wrist. With no less than seven flushes I am out the stall, eyes averted, head down, rolling my bag toward the next obstacle course challenge, the automatic sink faucet. For some reason, the sink presents the opposite problem from the toilets. I can never seem to get the water to run. I gently wave my hand by the sensor. At least I think it’s where the sensor is. Some of these are disguised like closed circuit camera. Nothing. I wave faster. Not a drop. I begin to move to the next faucet, putting my whole body into it now. The folks in the bathroom think I’m experiencing some sort of limb spasm. Still no water. An older, barrel-chested woman with giant rhinestone studded glasses takes pity on me. “Here, let me try that,” she says and with one wave the water begins to stream out. “Thanks,” I mutter sheepishly. “These faucets don’t like me.” I realize she has probably seen me in the stall, heard the flushes, figures it was a big job, e-coli related, that definitely requires soap and water. I’m already two parts fatigued and one part humiliated and I have not even gotten to the gate. Halfway to security, a younger business woman dressed impeccably in a pale gray suit puts a gentle hand on my shoulder and points down at my feet. “Just wanted to let you know you have toilet paper stuck to your shoe.” I smile weakly and glance down. Sure enough, I’ve been trailing a little mini-streamer.

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Wednesday
Apr072010

On The Road

So my book, Perfectly Imperfect, is out in paperback. Release the confetti. I’m on the road, doing my author thing. I’ve patched together a series of speaking gigs and I packed my bag, my cooler of food, my metal water bottles and headed out on the open road. The point is to sell books. If I sell enough books then maybe someone will want me to write another one. People think travel is glamorous. And here I am in a hotel room outside of Baltimore, Maryland. There has been some kind of a fire in the area’s water station. For seven miles around, there is no water. No water to drink, to shower, to cook and to air condition the room. It hit 90 degrees here today. I smell. I’m sticky. And I’m hungry but I’m too tired to move. People think travel is glamorous. Until they do it enough. Right now I miss my kids horribly. I miss my bed. I’m sick of what’s on the hotel TV; sick of Kate Gosselin and her whining about missing her kids while she works. Does she think she is the only mother who has ever had to work for a living? Here come the tears again on the ET interview. Spare me. But tomorrow I will be a new woman, that is if there is water available for a shower. In between the travel and the delayed flights and the fatigue, lies the good part. It’s the tasty meat filling. What energizes me is talking to people. It’s relating a story or an experience. I like feeling alive when I talk and share what I know. Something I have learned might just help someone else, or ease their own journey. Sometimes there is a moment when I wonder if I will be able to tell it one more time and then I look out at the crowd, at the faces of the people seated there, and it all flows out of me. Tomorrow I’ll be home. I’ll make a birthday dinner for my twins--- steak, peas and mashed potatoes. I’ll walk the dogs and hug my husband. Maybe more, if he is lucky. I’ll lay my head on my own pillow and let out a deep breath. Sure—I’ll be back on the road next week. And that brief time back in the bosom of my family will recharge my batteries. And I’ll go out and do it again. So I hope I get to see you on the road. And I promise I will have showered.

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Sunday
Apr262009

On the Road Again

So here I am.  Today is the first day of the three week road show for the new book.  I am excited. However, I'm not supposed to admit that I can't wait to go.  Authors are supposed to moan and bemoan the travails of being on the road and the bad coffee and cramped plane seats and long delays and stiff hotel sheets and the concerns about getting some illness from shaking all those hands. But I actually love the meeting people part in the book signings and the Q & A.  The whole last  chapter of "Perfectly Imperfect" grew out of all of the stories that people shared with me on the road for "In an Instant."   The chance to connect with folks all along the road is almost like the battery charger I use for my cell phone.  it energizes me.  I draw something from it. My dirty little secret is that I tend to get lots of writing done on the road.  The entire "Perfectly Imperfect- A Life in Progress" rough draft was written on planes and hotel rooms and trains during the book tour for the paperback version of the first book. I know that seems counter-intuitive.  But all of you mothers out there will know and understand how little one can actually accomplish at home in the way of personal reflection.  Parts of this new book were written between microwaving oatmeal for breakfast and looking for soccer cleats.  And in this way I have mastered the art of ADD writing. So the thought of  heading to an airport today-- despite missing my family -- is actually a quiet relief.  I will have only myself to think about for five days-- until I return home on Friday to a pile of mail and permission slips, phone calls to return and emails to grind through.  I'll try to post some of my doings on Twitter-- Lord, I am trying to embrace this new technology as they tell me this is the wave of the future.  But I don't think I'll be blogging here this week. But i always love ot hear form you-- even if I don't get back to you right away.   And for that-- I hope you will excuse me.  Right now- there are two dahlia tubers to plant and the sun is out.  The dogs are walked and I have to figure out how to squeeze a week's worth of clothes into one carry on.  The last time I checked my suitcase, the airline broke my supposedly indestructible Tumi bag.  The handle became stuck halfway up  and so I dragged my bag through security and around the airport and hotels as if I were bent like the Hobbit.   No more checked luggage.  Who cares if I look the same in Kansas City as I do in Chicago and then Detroit?  I promise to wear clean undies.

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