Oh, my. Life is a bird!

Patti_lamott Mary Meares first told me on Twitter. "Amazon has paired LIAV with Bird by Bird!" she wrote. In my enfeebled old age, I hate to admit it, but it took me a little while to figure out what LIAV was. Um. Life is a Verb.

GET OUT!

Having convinced myself before that I *am* Anne Lamott and that I just let Anne Lamott pretend to have written Bird by Bird, this pairing (even if accidental) makes me smile, smile, smile.

An excerpt from my earlier delusion:

In the past few years, I’m proud to report that I have written several quite successful books under my pen name, Anne Lamott.

Okay, I lied.

I just wish I had written those books. Sometimes when I read them again and again, I even believe I have written them—like that weird thing that happens when you write a word like “suppose” or “nostril” or “petulant” over and over and over again until it becomes something unknowable, like you’ve made up a whole new word all by your lonesome. Well, it’s sort of like that.

The one I most wish I had written is Bird by Bird. If the truth be told, and I guess now it will be, I carry my beloved hardback copy of Bird by Bird around with my own photograph pasted on the back of it, as if I myself, my little person, this one, had written it. (And it’s an old photo, the kind that when you use it to announce your speech in a conference program, people act puzzled and disappointed when they finally meet you because, truthfully, you no longer look anything like that younger version of yourself, what with the prematurely gray hair and all…)

I read Bird by Bird several times a year, particularly in those moments when I think I should be writing, but am doubtful that I actually can, or when I’m in need of a reminder about what it means to write (not what it means to appear as a delightfully witty, thin, best-selling author on Oprah with good hair and eyebrows and a nifty bohemian chic outfit that you’ve designed and sewn yourself and that starts a fashion stampede, but, rather, what it means to actually sit down every morning and write, remembering Gene Fowler’s somber acknowledgment that “writing is easy. All you do is stare at a blank sheet of paper until drops of blood form on your forehead.”)

In moments of sheer identification with what she’s saying, I guess I do believe I’ve written Bird by Bird, the connection between her words and my thoughts are so close. Like reading Book Three of War and Peace, that part where a soldier looks at the man who is about to execute him and says, “but you can’t do this because you have no idea what my life means to me.” “Yes! That’s exactly it!” you think to yourself. Or reading that essay about having a fear of heights where the writer finally surfaces what your own fear of heights is all about, but which you had never known or articulated for yourself, even through all those years of watching the fourth of July fireworks from the flat-roof-with-no-discernable-edge of your Capitol Hill house: “it’s not a fear of falling, but a fear of flinging yourself off.”

And so, this pairing by Amazon is particularly sweet for me.

Mary also left the first review on Amazon of LIAV (see how quickly we pick up acronyms?). Thanks, Mary, for your very kind words! I’ll send you some fabulous prize when I figure out what that fabulous prize will be! A life-sized ceramic bust of Elvis that I lovingly carried home in Seat 10A in bubble-wrap from Portugal? A 37days mug that I’ll paint at "Fired Up!" for you? Sumpin. (Mary: On Twitter, dm your new mailing address and I’ll surprise you one day soon!)

Hey, don’t forget to email a photo of yourself with LIAV and you, too, might get a little sumpin-sumpin in the mail to surprise you!

Me? I’m off to lunch with Anne Lamott. I’m sure she’ll return my calls now that we are a boxed set.

Smile.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

5 comments to " Oh, my. Life is a bird! "
  • Hee.

    I called the local Barnes and Noble for LIAV, nope, they don’t have it, no such luck here.

  • smallbluebird

    patti…you crack me up…a boxed set…i love it! annie lamott is great, she cracks me up too. i think that term dates me as ancient. my eyes are peeled for the first sighting of LIAV here in sunny Southern California.

  • Anne Lamott is my favorite memoir-writer and also Bird by Bird is my favorite book by an author about writing, so I cheered when I read this. It was just what I needed today, as I’m feeling a bit paralyzed in my work on my memoir-in-progress. I love your blog and also enjoyed the audio! Thanks for sharing.

  • Wait a minute – I thought I was Anne Lamott. After all, we kind of have the same name and any day now we’re going to have the same hairstyle if I can just figure out how to get regular hair to do the dread hair thing and – hell, I’m going to go re-read my tattered Bird by Bird now.

  • jylene

    oh my– patti and anne together at last! what a complementary pair! and what is this ‘when I think I should be writing, but am doubtful that I actually can’ ??? come on woman! how can you have any doubt when you have all the rave reviews in the comments we leave? you are my favorite kind of writer— someone who writes about life as i know it! anne lamott, anna quindlen, barbara kingsolver, patti digh. see how all these authors fit in the same group? best wishes, love and congratulations for you and all this good stuff coming your way.

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