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Gail Armand's avatar

Good morning Rona. We both belong to the kinship of the exacting mothers of the red pen. How I dreaded every school project, wherein she would insert her demanding self. The fault finder. I was uncertain I could manage the smallest of things on my own, when I escaped the house at age 17. At UC Berkeley I felt like an imposter. I had hand carried my transcript over at the last minute, having been pushed into Whitman, where I had threatened to major in skiing.

Recovery from feelings of inadequacy is a slow torment. I still lament lacking the courage to submit work for consideration in a class led by Lillian Hellman. At the end of the quarter, I like you was there at a party given in her honor. She held court in the small room with tales of Dash Hammett. I loved her for having the courage to not marry. When I said goodbye to her at the end of the party, faltering as I explained I had not submitted anything, she did for me what Tillie did for you. She took my hand. She told me never to let my doubts stop me again. “You are a fine writer,” she told me. I wondered only a fraction of a second how she could possibly know, then as you might reach for the brass ring from the merry-go-round, I seized her words and took them into the bottom of that place inside where our own words grow. I had been given nourishment.

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Ann Richardson's avatar

Wow. Yes. I, too, had a very powerful professional mother, but her method wasn't to correct me, but to diminish me directly. I had a super-clever(Asperger's?) older brother and a super clever younger sister (published in the Atlantic magazine in her twenties, but then died in a car crash) and my mother said to me, when I was in my teens, "It's perfectly ok to become a home-maker". So I never knew I was clever until years and years later, despite doing well in school etc etc. In other words, I didn't have a Tillie Olsen in my life. When my mother eventually got Alzheimer's, it's a terrible thing to say, but I felt relieved, I said she was 'de-clawed'. My saving grace was my father, who did believe in me but probably didn't say so enough.

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