Posts Tagged ‘arts and leisure’

Drama queen on Facebook

There’s no use going back to yesterday, because I was a different person then.” — Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

JWLadyOfShalottSomebody once said that high school is “the mouse race that prepares you for the rat race,” and I suppose there’s a glimmer of truth in that. Like a pair of cruel shoes, my high school days were among the most painful in my life.

I attended a public high school in the early 1970s. In those days, especially if you lived in a small Midwestern town, conformity was key. So there I was, a flat-chested drama club nerd and closet poet in a school where accomplished jocks and curvy cheerleaders ruled. Social life typically revolved around Friday night football or basketball games — but I had to fake any interest in sports. Trying to fit in, I tried out for the drill team but was chosen as an alternate, which meant I had to make all the practices and learn the routines, but I didn’t get to perform at the games unless another member was ill.

Come to think of it, I felt like an imposter throughout most of high school.

My real definition of “teamwork” was shopping for props and costumes for the school plays. And I adored the drama teacher. Not surprisingly, a lot of kids snickered behind his back, secretly questioning his sexual orientation. I still credit him and my humanities teacher for making high school bearable and interesting.

But the English teacher took a serious dislike to me. Of course, it didn’t help that I sat with chatty classmates and talked too much in literature class. Regardless, this teacher doubted my budding writing skills, and wrongly accused me of plagiarizing a term paper on the subject of medieval chivalry — a subject I loved and read about voraciously. She nearly flunked me out of senior English, which pulled my GPA down a peg or two. Not to mention my pride.

In other words, in high school I received little encouragement for the things I truly loved and excelled in. To their credit, my parents had tried early on to send me to a private school that specialized in the arts. I had been courted and accepted by the arts school, but chickened out at the last minute.

Before I go on, I need to insert here that I met some of my very best friends in junior high and high school. I also began dating Doug, the sweet guy who’d later become my husband (and still is), in my sophomore year. You’d think I would consider those years The Best Ever. But they were not.

Twenty years after graduation, I remained so embittered by my high school experience that I wrote a downer of an essay for the Detroit Free Press Sunday Magazine. The essay chronicled the awful time I had at the high school reunion Doug and I attended in 1992. Unfortunately, the reunion took place a mere three weeks after the sudden death of my beloved father, and I was in no mood to party with anyone.

Reading between the lines now, I realize that the Free Press essay (which is reprinted in my book, Writing Home) really wasn’t about the 20-year reunion. Though I wrote about feeling awkward in a roomful of grown-up classmates, my unease had little to do with them — and everything to do with repressed grief and the ghosts of my own insecurities. More than anything, I think I was trying to explain how sorry I felt for the creative girl inside me who had struggled to emerge in high school.

So it might come as a surprise when I tell you that lately I’ve been reconnecting with former schoolmates on Facebook — and genuinely enjoying it.

facebookIt all began last year when I found Robert, the free-spirited guy who played opposite my lead in the all-school play in 1971. My favorite memory of Robert is the time he and I staged a protest after one of our dress rehearsals got canceled on short notice; we’d been told to move our entourage elsewhere, since the school auditorium was needed for an athletic event. Enraged, Robert and I led a small march (I think there were four of us) to the local school board, ranting all the way about how sick we were of playing second fiddle to the basketball team. On Facebook, I was thrilled and proud to discover that Robert had moved to Chicago, where he became an award-winning journalist and author with several fine books to his credit.

Of course, once you crack open a few pages on Facebook, it’s hard to stop.

Before long, I started hearing from other schoolmates. Earlier this summer, Colleen contacted me to ask why I had stopped writing my column in the local newspaper. I was flattered to learn she’d been reading it for years. When she “friended” me on Facebook, Colleen said she wondered if I would remember her. As she explained it, she’d been “a rebel” in high school, and we didn’t hang with the same crowd. But I did remember. And even though I was a drama nerd, I’d always secretly admired the “rebels.” Unlike the jocks, who were too frigging cool to dress up in costumes, some of the rebels had the guts to try out for the school plays.

From beauty queens to band nerds, my classmates are a fascinating bunch now, and I’m proud of them. Their profiles and family photos reveal that they’ve crafted rich and interesting lives over the past 37 years. One is a psychotherapist; another is a fitness instructor; several work in education, finance, and medicine. Some even share my political opinions, and it’s been fun airing our views in private messages. Others, having been through their own share of medical crises, are at the ready to help with mine. Last week, when I mentioned in my Facebook status that I was struggling to find a neurologist for my mother, several friends sent recommendations — complete with addresses and phone numbers.

All said and done, midlife is a lot more fun than adolescence. It makes us kinder to each other. It sharpens our perspective and thickens our skin — wrinkles and sags be damned.

Like my classmates on Facebook, I’ve endured several crises and turning points, and these have shaped the woman I am. I’ve given birth to an amazing son, come to terms with the loss of my father, and, more recently, watched my only uncle die a slow death from pancreatic cancer. I’ve survived two hip replacement surgeries and learned to walk again. I’ve driven my elderly mother to emergency rooms, and watched my son graduate from college. I’ve happily celebrated nearly 30 years of a nurturing marriage.

But it’s been years since I’ve cared enough to keep score. Grades, trophies, contests, degrees, salaries, and other so-called measures of achievement or popularity no longer mean much to me. Best of all, I’ve finally made peace with my inner drama queen, who now finds expression through writing and the visual arts. I give her free reign now.  – Cindy La Ferle

Painting at top: “The Lady of Shalott,” by John William Waterhouse; The Tate Gallery

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Valentine to France

“The secret of life is enjoying the passage of time.” — James Taylor, American songwriter

Traveling in provincial France and Paris for our 25th anniversary, my husband and I had a rare chance to observe a lifestyle noticeably different from our own.  The best souvenirs we brought back home weren’t the trinkets we’d collected from museum shops, but the sweet lessons we gleaned in French cafés. I’m sharing my “French lessons” in this Thursday’s Midpoint column in The Oakland Press.

Click here for last week’s introductory “Midpoint” column. –

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Thrift shop angel

“In almost every situation, there are ways that we can fly higher, at fuller wingspan.” – Marianne Williamson

For some, “thrifting” is a hobby. For others, it’s the only way to afford clothes or household goods. If you shop at flea markets and thrift shops for designer discards and vintage clothing, you might appreciate this essay from my book, which is featured this week as part of a special holiday series on ReadThe Spirit. –CL

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The giving season

And it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us! – Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol

Our country’s economic recession is making it twice as tough for charitable organizations to do their part. With that in mind, members of my own extended family are making donations to favorite charities and non-profits — the Royal Oak Animal Shelter, The Salvation Army, The Boys and Girls Club of South Oakland, and the American Heart Association — in lieu of exchanging Christmas presents this year. Who needs more stuff, anyway? And what better time to help others in need?

Along the same lines, my friends Anne and Elaine of Wise Women Coffee Chat are sponsoring the most generous contest I’ve heard about this year. They’re asking everyone to nominate their favorite charities or non-profit organizations at http://wisewomencoffeechat.com/2008/12/easy-as-1-2-3-money-for-your-favorite-charity/.

As Elaine explains it, “One charity will be randomly selected to receive an automatic $100 donation and will receive a supplemental donation dependent on the number of comments it receives.”  Anne and Elaine are so excited about the contest that they’re extending the deadline to December 17th.  It only takes a few minutes to visit the site and nominate your favorite charity. (Don’t forget to include a link to the organization’s site).

And please pardon my shameless plug — for another good cause.  I want to remind everyone that I’ll be donating proceeds from the sales of new copies my book, Writing Home, to organizations serving homeless men, women, and children in my community. This has been a holiday tradition of mine since Writing Home was first published. The more books I sell this December, the bigger the check I can write at the end of the year to organizations such as the South Oakland Shelter and the Welcome Inn warming center. I’m deeply grateful for your support. – Cindy La Ferle

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Holiday party manners

“Outcomes rarely turn on grand gestures or the art of the deal — but on whether you’ve sent someone a thank-you note.” – Bernie Brillstein, The Little Stuff Matters Most

The holidays pose a host of social dilemmas, the least of which is choosing the right outfit for your annual office bash. These days it isn’t easy to gauge what’s socially appropriate, especially if you grew up in the era of fast food, casual Fridays, and road rage. Not to worry.  According to the new experts, modern holiday etiquette isn’t as much about using the proper fork or linen napkins as it is about exercising common sense.

“When you value other people, you naturally treat them with consideration and generosity — which is courtesy,” assures Marjabelle Young Stewart, author of Commonsense Etiquette: A Guide to Simple, Gracious Manners for the Twenty-First Century (St. Martin’s Griffin).

For starters, keep in mind that the R.S.V.P on your invitation isn’t optional. Your hosts need to know how many appetizer trays to order or how many beers to chill in the cooler. Never leave anyone guessing. “An invitation of any kind should be accepted or declined as soon as possible,” says Stewart.  If your invitation specifies “Regrets only,” you should respond only if you can’t attend.

Simple hostess gifts are never out of style, Stewart adds. Wine, baked goods, or festive candles are easy options, and will show your host that you value his or her invitation. But before you shop for business associates, check your company’s policy on holiday gifts.

“Two things determine the appropriateness of a business gift: its cost and how personal it is, advises Peggy Post in The Etiquette Advantage in Business (HarperResource). “Consider carefully your relationship to the person to whom you’re giving and what he or she will think appropriate. If you’re unsure, it’s safer to err on the less personal side.”

In other words, wrap the Mr. Potato Head boxer shorts for your brother, not your boss.

Once you arrive, your job as a guest is to help make things enjoyable for everyone. Keep cocktail banter light, and remember: Few people are impressed by name-dropping. And as Stewart advises, try not to hold center stage too long, no matter how interesting you think you sound.

All experts agree it’s rude NOT to send thank-you notes. (“If in doubt, err on the side of sending the note,” Post says.) If you were treated to a meal, a party, or an evening at the theatre – and especially if you opened a gift when the giver wasn’t present – mailing a brief thank-you note is the classy thing to do.

Remember, too, that entertaining people is an act of generosity. If you’re always a guest but never a host, don’t be surprised if party invitations eventually stop arriving.

“If you accept two or three dinner invitations or attend several parties at a person’s home, you should reciprocate – if you would like to continue the social relationship,” advises Linda Hallam in Making a Home: Housekeeping for Real Life (Meredith Books). But you needn’t entertain in the same style, especially if you’re on a budget, she adds. If you can’t entertain at home, treat friends or family to a casual restaurant meal or a movie with treats. In any event, hospitality from the heart is what everyone remembers. – Cindy La Ferle

– This column originally appeared in The Daily Tribune and The Daily Oakland Press

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