Author Archives: jtagliere

Thank You for the Music

Even though I still haven’t heard anything yet re grad school, and thus still have my old pal Magilla on my chest (this morning, he’s playing a leisurely game of solitaire ), today’s post is not actually about grad school admissions: Today’s post is about gratitude.

Yes, gratitude.

Last night, I went to go see a production of Mamma Mia! with my daughter and woke up this morning to one of the show’s songs playing in my head, “Thank You for the Music.” (This was a welcome change from the energetic drum solo from “Sing, Sing, Sing” which Magilla has lately been thumping out on  my chest. But I digress.)

As I went about the business of getting ready for my day, the song  played continuously in my mind. I borrowed the CD from my daughter and popped it in on the way to class, belting out the lyrics at the top of my lungs (and probably frightening drivers around me): “Thank you for the music, the songs I’m singing, thanks for all the joy they’re bringing; Who could live without it? I ask in all honesty, what would life be? Without a song or a dance, what are we?” Ahh, music. Is there anything better?

The show’s music, based as it is, on the songs of ABBA, holds particular significance for me. ABBA was, you might say, the soundtrack of my childhood. My mother was an enormous fan of ABBA, playing their music almost continuously. I remember so many times bouncing around the living room with her and my sisters, laughing as we all sang along to “Waterloo”  and dancing with her to “I do, I do, I do, I do, I do.”

I watched her with a keener eye as I grew older and she, more often, sang along to those songs by herself. I wondered what long-ago starry night she was remembering as she listened to “Fernando”, experiencing those first thunderous realizations that my mother had actually been a whole and entire human being before me, with dreams and memories and a life that had not included even the thought of me. My imaginings often tended to the wild and dramatic–probably something I inherited from her.

Other times, there was no mystery as to what was going through her mind as she listened to a particular song. After her father died, I would often come upon her, standing silently in the living room, listening to the song “Chiquitita”: “You’re enchained by your own sorrow; In your eyes, there is no hope for tomorrow.” I remember on one such occasion wrapping my arms around her and holding her tightly as we swayed slowly to the music, feeling that song forever being imprinted in my heart as a permanent accompaniment to grief.  

She was not the only one who turned to that song for solace. To this day, almost fourteen years since my mother died, I still play that song, and find my own solace in its message of hope and perseverance: “You’ll be dancing once again, and the pain will end; you will have no time for grieving.”

Every single one of those songs, recreated and reworked for last night’s performance, called to mind a precious memory of music shared with my mother. But this morning, I have added new memories, of sharing that music with my daughter. She squeezed my hand during “I Have A Dream” (“If you see the wonder of a fairy tale; you can take the future, even if you fail.”) We laughed and clapped at “Does Your Mother Know”. I am frightened by how she relishes the character of Tanya, the “Man Eater”. I think about the teen years to come with a barely repressed shudder and wonder what my mother thought when we listened to that same song so many years ago. Perhaps it’s better that I don’t know.

It is “Slipping Through My Fingers”, however, that undoes me every time, these days, and last night’s performance was no exception, especially when my daughter wrapped her hand in mine and laid her head on my shoulder. It was all I could do not to embarrass her and sob openly from the equal parts of love and pain that song calls forth, now that I am watching my own daughter growing up and slipping out of my life and into her own a little bit more each day.

Being filled up like that, through music, is something that happens to me quite often; music has always had a profound ability to move me physically. I remember as a child, listening to one of my mother’s friends sing “O Holy Night” on Christmas Eve and having goosebumps spring up and down my arms. Mom asked if I was cold. When I told her I wasn’t, that it was just that the music was so beautiful, she whispered in my ear that that was a gift, being able to be moved so by music.

Every time I find myself weeping from the beauty of Handel or joyfully belting out an ABBA song, I think of my mother’s words,  about what a gift the love of music is, and I realize how lucky I am. “I’ve been so lucky, I am the girl with golden hair; I want to sing it out to everybody: what a joy, what a life, what a chance.”

So today, I am saying thank you.

Thank you to my mother (and my father, a gifted pianist and organist in his own right) for instilling in me the love of music, and for sharing it with me all my life. Thank you to my hubby, for the tickets last night, which allowed me to spend a soaring, magical night sharing special music with our daughter.

Thank you to my daughter, for being the next generation of girls in our family to dance, and sing, to laugh, and to cry to the music.

And to music makers everywhere, thank you for the music. “Without a song or a dance, what are we? Thank you for the music, for giving it to me.”

Maybe, if I put on a little Brahms, I can even get Magilla to take a nap.

Ignoring the Gorilla

I’m trying. I’m really trying. I know that I should stop obsessing about the acceptance/rejection letter that I almost certainly will receive sometime this week from grad school (Come on, already! You said “mid-March”! Isn’t the 8th close enough?)

I know I’m obsessing. I woke up this morning, and the first thing that popped into my head was the fact that today was March 8th; the second was that it’s now Monday, and a mail delivery day (Wait a minute–is it? Is there some obscure postal holiday I don’t know about? What if there isn’t mail delivery today? I better go check the calendar. And while I’m at it, let me run outside in my pajamas to check that the numbers on my house and mailbox are still readable from the street–wouldn’t want any mistakes on this delivery!)

Sigh. This thing is sitting on my chest like the proverbial 500-pound gorilla. I want to stop thinking about it, but I can’t. After I talked myself back into bed this morning, I lay in bed thinking about the blog entry I wrote last year when I was not accepted, and thinking about what adjustments I would make this year. You see, that’s why this gorilla is so heavy–he carries the weight of a past rejection in his giant, thundering carcass, making it impossible for me to breathe in any hope whatsoever, so this morning, after watching a glittering evening of breathless, teary-eyed acceptance speeches from the Oscars, I lay in bed composing my rejection blog–again.

The waiting goes on. I know it’s almost over, and for better or for worse, the gorilla will be departing sometime soon (I hope–what if mid-March really means late March? Early April? or Gasp! while I’m on vacation and the mail’s on hold? Would they give my spot away?)

Oh, God, Magilla, would you stop bouncing, please? I think I’m going to throw up.

 

Here We Go Again

Yes! I finally completed the last bits of my manuscript revision, and I have to say, I am so much happier with the final product. So here I go again, pounding the virtual pavement to try to find agents and publishers who like it as much as I do.

I will now settle back into the familiar grind of researching agents and publishers, tailoring queries and proposals and synopses and sample chapters to their every whim, putting together book packages, and waiting, waiting, waiting. (Tom Petty was so right.)

Yes, it is so satisfying to be able to move on to the next steps. But the best thing about finishing this revision–which, although it was sorely needed, was a real grind–is that now I will actually be able to step out of Revision Land and return to the place I really love: Creation Land.

I’ve been sitting on five chapters of my next manuscript for months now, and between my homework for my classes, the revision, and other freelance projects that came up along the way, I haven’t written a single new word for it. Not one! Horrible, I know. I think my daughter (who has graciously volunteered to be my guinea pig–I mean First Reader) has given up on ever seeing another chapter.

But I have spring in my veins now, and that always gives me such a tremendous boost–I feel like I’ve been launched out of a cannon (which is why I was able to wrap that revision up yesterday).  Today, I will dust off that new manuscript file, give it a little bit of a polish and shine, and start building the rest of it, one squeaky page at a time.

Remember my last post about windows and doors? Found one…

Doors and Windows…

As I’ve been waiting to hear about grad school the last couple agonizing weeks, I’ve been thinking a lot about opportunities and how and when they present themselves. I borrowed the title for this post from that old proverb “Whenever God closes a door, he usually opens a window somewhere else.”

I still haven’t heard anything yet, though given that there is no mail delivery on Sundays, my paranoia has been able to rest for a day. But that doesn’t mean I haven’t been watching the calendar closely. I mean, tomorrow’s March 1st, already! Shouldn’t I have heard something by now? I keep wondering what that means, manipulating various scenarios in my head to drive myself even crazier: “They said mid-March, but last year it was late February. I bet you find out early if you’ve been rejected right away–I bet your letter will come Monday.” Or, “Of course you haven’t heard anything yet–they want to let the Chosen Ones know first, so the fact that your letter hasn’t come yet is just proof that you didn’t get in. You’ll probably find out on March 15–those bastards read Shakespeare, after all.”

Sigh. I could go on, and I did, obsessing for days. But then I watched a story about Evan Lysacek that aired right before he skated his gold-medal-winning routine. All the commentators had been talking about his rigorous preparation for that night, how he had done every possible thing he could have, and that no matter what happened, he knew that he had left no stone unturned in his quest for gold. That story played over and over in my head for the next day or two–I just couldn’t get over how calm Lysacek had looked with so much pressure riding on his shoulders. He was calm because he knew he had done everything he could to succeed.

I decided that that was precisely how I needed to look at this whole grad school thing. I did everything I could this time around–I left no stone unturned in my quest for admittance into the program. Whatever comes in that letter, acceptance or rejection, I know that I did my best, so it’s time for me to stop obsessing and start thinking about doors and windows.

I went to a great Writers Festival this weekend, which showed me many, many open windows and which reminded me that I already know how to climb through them. I just have to learn to recognize them when I see them, which is how I have vowed to view whatever comes next–someone may show me a closed door in the next few days, but I will find the open window–I’m going to get there, one way or the other.

Proof of that came today, when I opened up my e-mail and found a request from an agent I’d queried–she wants a full reading of my manuscript. Yay! Not the first time that’s happened, but it’s been a while, and it’s always nice to be asked.

Will this be the open window? Who knows? But I’m certainly not interested in wondering any more about doors closing on me…I’ve driven myself crazy enough with that.

But I will keep you posted. Thanks for coming along with me.

Ouch–Now I’m Really Worried…

Well, still no news–at least, none that would bring me (or those of you who are following my blog) any sort of relief. The mailbox continues to be empty, save for unwanted catalogs and sadistic ads for lawn services–Do these people ever look out the window?! I know it’s sunny today and the amount of daylight is increasing, even here in the Arctic tundra, but Phil’s prediction of 6 weeks of winter for the rest of the country would be a ridiculously early spring here. I know, grouse, grouse, grouse, grumble, grumble, grumble.

Nope–nothing in my mailbox, nothing in my inbox, and nothing on my voicemail. I continue to be hopeful that no news is good news regarding my grad school application, but as the song goes, “L’espoir est un plat bien trop vite consomme.” (Roughly translated: “Hope is a dish that is too quickly consumed.”) I need the mental equivalent of MyAlli, I’m beginning to think–something that will fill me up in place of the dish I’m really craving…

I do have one tiny tidbit of news to share, although it’s not the kind of tidbit that I might find remotely helpful in trying to remain sanguine about my chances. Desperate for any kind of a sign, I visited the university’s Web site yesterday morning, and found that (hooray!) there was an update on the Admissions section that our applications are now under review.

That was the good news: the bad news, also contained within the update, was that although there is one more position available this year than there was last year (up to 13 from 12), the number of applicants (as I predicted) has also increased, up to 433.  Ugh.

Those of you who read my posts about my Math travails vis a vis taking the GRE this spring know that I don’t know how to use those numbers to figure out my official odds [Damn it, Jim, I’m a writer, not a bookie!], but even I can see they mean that the competition this year is, indeed, stiffer.

So the countdown continues, with me even more pathetically obsessed about it than I was before I checked their Web site. [Note to self: Stop doing that!]

As I wait, I will continue to work on the homework for my classes (which, by the way, I’m pretty sure I’ve decided I hate–This type of work is not for me at all, though I will continue to plug away at it so that I can be prepared to do something other than write if I have to). I will continue to hack away at my manuscript, offering it to readers and editors and publishers and agents to see if something pops with that while I’m waiting for news.

Stay tuned–it may be a bumpy ride.