This Is Not The Story You Think It Is: book review

March 31, 2010

Title: This Is Not the Story You Think It Is
Author: Laura Munson
ISBN: 978-0399156656
Hardcover: 352 pages
Publisher: Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam (April 1, 2010)
Category: memoir
Review source: publisher
Rating: 3.5/5

But I don’t buy it. The part about him not loving me. As much as it’s devastating to hear, I believe there’s more to the story, I believe he’s in a state of personal crisis. I believe this is about him.

I neither read the New York Times’s Modern Love column, nor believe in love. At age forty, I’ve never really had it and don’t think I’ll ever find it. Laura Munson turned her column into this memoir This Is Not The Story You Think It Is. Her husband of fifteen years [they’ve been together for 20] says to her one day that he no longer loves her and she refuses to believe or accept it.

But here’s the most painful part—the conundrum that shows me my husband’s inner war and challenges my commitment to non-suffering to the core. His final words before he left for the dump were: “I just want a woman who doesn’t have any baggage.”

Here’s where I land and it’s not graceful: my husband, the father of my children, thinks there’s someone out there who is better for him than I am. Somebody who’s gotten this far in life unscathed. That he then, in effect, believes in fairy tales. And fairy-tale princesses. And maybe even fairy-tale princes, too. (Even though he’s terrified by horses.) But this sort of thinking cuts, and I put on the brakes. I even laugh, trying to imagine a human being without “baggage.”

Her therapist tells her: “So let me get this straight. You base your personal happiness on things entirely outside your control.” That one really hits home. You cannot make someone love you or even like you. It’s one of the most difficult concepts to come to terms with but it rings so true. A harsh reality but true. Laura tries to surrender herself to this idea. She holds her tongue often when her husband does something she doesn’t like [staying out all night, going fishing instead of to his son’s game, avoiding family dinners] or something he says. It’s really admirable as it is so challenging to do. She wants to shout, she wants to defend herself and she wants to point out her husband’s issues and the problem with what he has said to her. But she refrains.

Laura gives her husband the space he needs. Though I suppose because they have two children and their finances aren’t in the greatest shape, he never actually moves out of the house and they sometimes still share a bed. I don’t know how much “space” that’s really giving someone. Finding solace riding her horse alone or with friends, spending time with her children and writing, Laura tries to take her mind off her husband’s state of mind and declaration. She even spends a month in Italy [where she spent her junior year of college] with her 12-year-old daughter. She never begs or pleads with her husband. She remains calm.

There’s much to like about This Is Not The Story You Think It Is: how to cope with a difficult time, be patient with a loved one while that person figures things out and also how to take care of oneself when in crisis mode. I found some solace in Laura’s story and I could relate despite not believing I’ll ever find love that isn’t unrequited. One thing I could not relate to is that Laura quite often speaks of this devilish alter-ego called “Sheila.” This little being in her head or on her shoulder, “Sheila” would fight with Laura about her husband’s attitude and treatment of her.

I want him to have time alone. I cherish my own. We’ve always given each other that room in Rilke’s “greatest possible trust.” Still, regardless of his personal crisis, regardless if he’s telling himself he doesn’t love me anymore, is he willing to ruin the years of trust we’ve built?

In reading This Is Not The Story You Think It Is, I often thought of my own situation with an ex-friend. We dated for the first two years and then we were friends for eight. Brian Schofer started dating a woman [after not dating at all since we broke up eight years ago] and cut off all contact with me. All contact. He has stopped answering my emails, texts and phone calls. He cut me off cold after caring about me and spending a lot of time with me for an entire decade. I dated some men but had time for our friendship. He once told me he’d never let me go and never let anything happen to me, but he did.

Laura reads a plethora of self-help books and spiritual guides [and I admit I own more than a few of these books] from the Bhagavad-Gita to The Book of Love by Rumi to Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now and A New Earth to Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself by Melody Beattie. In all her reading, one thing she finds is that “the end of suffering happens with the end of wanting. The end of wanting.” That’s a complicated and really difficult thing. How can you stop wanting? Love, happiness, professional fulfillment, good health, devoted friends. How is that even possible?

Is that what this is about? He’s vilifying me for my lack of career success? What about my other successes? All he has to do is look around to see those in 3-D and Technicolor. All he has to do is look into his children’s eyes. I have created so much that is a success. Plus, when’s the last time he actually read anything I’ve written? Just because the publishing world doesn’t deem my work worthy doesn’t mean it’s not.

In writing This Is Not The Story You Think It Is, Laura reflects on the early days with her husband. She delves into their connection and the caring moments the two have shared. They lived in Boston, then Seattle—where her husband ran a successful brewery– and finally moved to the wide plains of Montana. Laura has written 14 novels and has never had one published. She does manage to publish the occasional article but not nearly often enough. Laura also reflects on the successful marriage of her well-to-do parents. She was a daddy’s girl and feels good about it. And by caring for her own well-being and providing her husband with support in silence and space, Laura and her husband come to an understanding.

Laura Munson tour dates:

New York—April 6—B&N, Upper East Side—7 pm

New Canaan, CT—April 7—New Canaan Library—12 pm

Boston—April 8–Borders, Chestnut Hill—7 pm

Chicago—April 9—B&N, Skokie—7:30 pm

Chicago—April 10—Lake Forest College—10:30 am

San Francisco—April 11—Copperfields, Napa—2 pm

San Francisco—April 12—Book Passage, Ferry Building—1 pm

Seattle—April 13—Third Place Books, Ravenna—7 pm

Denver—April 15–Tattered Cover, LoDo—7:30 pm

Twitter

Web site

This Is Not The Story You Think It Is: A Season of Unlikely Happiness

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Women’s History Month: focus on 1970s [guess I'll only get to the 80s]

March 31, 2010

1970—writer Joyce Carol Oates receives National Book Award for the novel Them.

1970—jockey Diana Crump is the first woman to ride in the Kentucky Derby.

1971—singer Carole King releases Tapestry. More than 10 million copies are sold in the United States.

1971—feminist writers Gloria Steinem and Letty Cottin Pogrebin become two of the founding editors of Ms. magazine.

1972—novelist/ short-story writer Eudora Welty wins Pulitzer Prize for The Optimist’s Daughter.

1972—Congress passes the Equal Rights Amendment [ERA].

1972—Title IX of the Education Amendments added to the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

1974—tennis player Chris Evert wins the French Open and Wimbledon.

1977—actress Meryl Streep appears in her first film, Julia.

1977—Debbi Fields founds Mrs. Fields Cookies, Inc.


Brady/Bundchen watch: at Gisele’s sister Patricia’s wedding in Brazil

March 31, 2010

Just HOW divine is this couple and little Benjamin w/ the vest?:

Pic: Ramey Photo via Boston Globe


Choice Quote: from It Could Be Worse, You Could Be Me by Ariel Leve

March 31, 2010

“Men in particular have gone gadget-crazy. The more a man is obsessed with a gadget, the less attractive he becomes. If I’m interested in someone and he pulls out a BlackBerry, he might as well be pulling out a copy of Dianetics. Part of it is that I feel resentful. That BlackBerry is getting all the attention that should rightly be given to me.

But also, when a man I like has a BlackBerry, this means that access to him is unlimited. He’s able to phone, text and check his e-mails anywhere, and there’s never a reason why he can’t be reached. So with all that at his fingertips, how is it that I still haven’t heard from him?”

It Could Be Worse, You Could Be Me is available April 13, 2010.


Shop Indie Bookstores

buy at Amazon: It Could Be Worse, You Could Be Me

For more: visit Ariel’s website


TV PREVIEW: L&O Criminal Intent with Saffron Burrows/Jeff Goldblum

March 30, 2010

DVD REVIEW: Step-by-Step Belly Dance with Leilainia

March 30, 2010

Title: Step-by-Step Belly Dance with Leilainia
Running time: 57 min.
MPAA: PG
Release date: March 23, 2010
ASIN: B002VJVCO6
Studio: Acacia
Review source: Acorn Media Group

Leilainia—“Feel sensual and powerful and you dance.”

Need to spice up your workout? Want to try something different and a bit saucy? Do you like yoga, Pilates or Core Fusion? Step-by-Step Belly Dance with Leilainia combines all those elements and is a fantastic workout. It works your abs, glutes, calves, upper body and utilizes many of the same principles as Pilates or yoga. Leilainia is an excellent teacher. She’s amazing to follow particularly when moves get complicated by working your arms and lower body at the same time. Good thing I don’t have a mirror on my wall [though if anyone was watching me through the mirror, I’m sure it wasn’t the prettiest sight]. I’m sure my shimmies look silly and I can’t get my arm motions coordinated with my lower body yet. Need more inspiration? Just look at Leilainia’s torso.

Step-by-Step Belly Dance is a lot of fun though and I worked up a decent sweat and know I worked my core and abs. Who wants to do crunches? I definitely don’t and I find other ways to work my abs and belly dancing really mixes things up. This DVD is a wonderful supplement to other workouts you might be doing. It’s a change of pace. I might not be ready EVER to perform my belly dancing at the Middle East nightclub in Cambridge, Mass. but I can do something kinda sexy once in a while.

Leilainia shows you the basics—the hand and arm movements, [snake arms and framing your face, smile, eyes], the hip pops, the shimmies. Then there are three 15 minute sessions: a high-energy routine with lots of hip action, a total-body toning segment which outlines different techniques and frames for belly dancing and the most fun is the flirty grapevine.


MUSIC NEWS: Crooked Still tour dates

March 30, 2010

I first heard Crooked Still on NPR and like the band’s country-pop style. And how can you not dig a band that’s playing three dates in Alaska?

New release Some Strange Country available June 1.

CROOKED STILL SPRING TOUR DATES:

April 14–ATLANTA, GA–Eddie’s Attic
April 15 –SAVANNAH, GA– Lucas Theatre
April 16-17–BROOKSVILLE, FL– Stringbreak Music Fest
April 20–ATHENS, GA–Melting Point
April 21–GREENVILLE, SC–The Handlebar
April 22–ASHEVILLE, NC–The Grey Eagle
April 23 –CHARLOTTE, NC–The Visulite
April 24–SILK HOPE, NC– Shakori Hill Festival
April 25–CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA–The Southern Café
May 5–GRAND RAPIDS, MI–The Wealthy Theatre
May 6– EVANSTON, IL–SPACE
May 7–ANN ARBOR, MI–The Ark
May 8–OBERLIN, OH–Oberlin Spring Folkfest
May 12–PHILADELPHIA, PA–World Café Live
May 13– NEW YORK, NY–92Y Tribeca
May 14–ALEXANDRIA, VA–Birchmere
May 15– SHELBURNE FALLS, MA– Memorial Hall
May 20–ELLSWORTH, ME-The Grand Auditorium
May 21–BROWNFIELD, ME -Stone Mountain Arts Ctr
May 22– CAMBRIDGE, MA – Sanders Theater
May 30–SONORA, CA – Strawberry Music Festival
June 1–SAN DIEGO, CA-AMSD Concerts
June 2–LOS ANGELES, CA- Largo at the Coronet
June 4–SANTA CRUZ, CA – Kuumbwa Jazz Center
June 5– OAKLAND, CA- Bluegrass for the Greenbelt
June 6 — BENBOW, CA- Summer Arts and Music Fest
June 15–ANCHORAGE, AK- Snow Goose Theater
June 16–PALMER, AK-Vagabond Blues
June 18-19 — NOME, AK- Nome Midnight Sun Folk Fest

more information: Crooked Still web site


Women’s History Month: focus on 1960s

March 30, 2010

Joan Baez

1960—folk singer Joan Baez releases her first album.

1960—Harper Lee writes the Pulitzer-prize winning To Kill a Mockingbird.

1960—the first BIRTH CONTROL PILL gets U.S. approval for sale.

1961—Eunice Kennedy Shriver helps establish a presidential committee on mental retardation. She later founds the Special Olympics.

1962—Ship of Fools by novelist/short-story writer Katherine-Anne Porter gets published.

Rita Moreno in West Side Story

1962—Rita Moreno wins an Academy Award for her role as Anita in West Side Story.
She is one of few people to win an Oscar, Tony, Grammy, Emmy and the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

1962—First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy redecorates the White House with period furniture, wallpaper, art and china. She initiates a congressional bill to ensure that White House furnishings become the Smithsonian Institution’s property.

1963—feminist writer Betty Friedan writes The Feminine Mystique.

1963—The French Chef with Julia Child first airs on public television. The next year, Mastering the Art of French Cooking is published.

1963—President Kennedy signs the Equal Pay Act of 1963 [women earned 59 cents to every dollar men earned, today women earn ONLY 77 cents to every dollar men earn].

1964—more than forty neighbors witness the murder of Kitty Genovese in Queens and everyone ignores her cries for help.

1965—choreographer Twyla Tharp begins her career at Hunter College.

1966—television show That Girl premieres starring actress/feminist Marlo Thomas.

men try to take away Katherine Switzer's number during 1967 Boston Marathon

1967—Katherine Switzer secretly enters and successfully completes the Boston Marathon. She entered with the initial “K” to get in.

1968—Slouching Toward Bethelem, a collection of essays by Joan Didion, is published.


MUSIC REVIEW: She and Him, Vol. 2

March 29, 2010

She and Him: Vol. 2 is such a throwback to the doo-wop 50s and 60s—it reminds me of the Brill Building days and the film Grace of My Heart.

Zooey Deschanel, indie film darling/ singer and newlywed to Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard, sings lusciously and boldly on this one. The entire volume is sunny, bubbly and filled with sunshine and happiness. It doesn’t matter what Zooey sings. M. Ward contributes funky riffs and charged percussion to exude even more pop and pizazz.

Vol. 1 is introspective and soft, while Vol. 2 is its complete opposite. That is what makes the collaboration called She and Him so fantastic– the ability to experiment and exhibit so many different styles.

BUY Volume Two


Women’s History Month: focus on Mary McCarthy and Virgina Woolf

March 29, 2010

Mary McCarthy [1912-1989]


–grew up as an orphan in Minnesota
–graduated from Vassar College in 1933
–worked as drama and literary critic
–married to Edmund Wilson, literary critic, from 1938-1946 [like many women's college graduates/feminists she kept her own name]
–married four times


–best known for The Group [1966]– the postgrad experience of a group of Vassar women–and The Birds of America [1970]–Americans abroad, based on McCarthy’s life in Paris in the sixties

Virginia Woolf [1882–1941]

–born in London
–daughter of model Julia Prinsep Stephen and editor, critic and biographer Sir Leslie Stephen
–home schooled by her father
–when Virginia was 13, her mother died which led to Virginia’s nervous breakdowns
–her father died in 1904 and Virginia was institutionalized briefly
– in 1912 she married writer Leonard Woolf
–her novels:

The Voyage Out [1915]
Night and Day [1919]
Jacob’s Room [1922]
Mrs. Dalloway [1925]
To the Lighthouse [1927]
Orlando [1928]
The Waves [1931]
The Years [1937]
Between the Acts [1941]
–Virginia Woolf drowned herself March 28, 1941

my two favorite books by Virgina Woolf:

Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of a man at twice its natural size.
from A Room of One’s Own (1929)


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