A Tribute to my mother, one year later

Sweater, n.: garment worn by child when its mother is feeling chilly.
– Ambrose Bierce, American journalist, from The Devil’s Dictionary

My mother in the Philippines, circa 1950s.

My mother in the Philippines, circa 1950s.

At the age of 85, surrounded by her three daughters, my mother took her last breath in the early morning of January 3rd, 2012. We are journeying to our hometown this weekend to celebrate her one-year anniversary with our relatives.When I think of my mother’s life, I think about the decisions she made and the decisions made for her through the years. After World War II, as a teacher in a mountain province, she fell in love with a Filipino soldier who was enlisted in the U.S. Army. He wanted to marry her, but her strict parents demanded that she choose between them or him. She chose her parents because, she explained, they loved her and she loved them. It was as simple as that, she told me when I was home from college on winter break, in a years-removed, matter-of-fact tone of voice. My mother, the oldest daughter, in a family of seven siblings (two others had died during the war as a result of malnutrition), continued to help support her younger brothers and sisters through school.

My parents' wedding in the Philippines, May 11, 1957.

My parents’ wedding in the Philippines, May 11, 1957.

By the time my father’s cousin – a co-teacher of my mother’s at the school where they both taught – matchmade my parents, she was nearly 32 years old. The local priest had to convince my grandfather, my lolo, who was a layman at his church, to let his daughter go. My father, who was 19 years older than my mother, had been in the States with his cousins since the 1920s. After a short courtship, which my mother described as an exchange of photos and letters, they got married in the Philippines and he returned to Los Angeles. She followed him months later on a ship. My parents lived in a house that my father and his brother bought in Los Angeles. My mother not only took care of her three daughters, born within four years, but also kept house for my father and her brother-in-law and his wife, who all three worked outside of the home. My mother did not want to raise us in an urban environment, especially during the time of civil unrest in Los Angeles, and longed for a home of her own. Some of my father’s relatives had settled in Terra Bella, which my father likened to a camp (New York was the city, Los Angeles was the country, my father reportedly told his cousins). Nevertheless, in 1965, we moved to the small Central Valley town, two-and-a-half hours away, and my parents bought a gray-brick house for $7,000, paying it in full. By 1968, my mother had a ranch-style house built next door on our lot, and paid that house off within five years.

A family outing in Long Beach, CA, summer 1962.

A family outing in Long Beach, CA, summer 1962.

My mother didn’t work while in Los Angeles. In Terra Bella, however, she eschewed becoming a teacher, unlike a couple of Filipino townmates who did go back to school and secured teaching positions at our local elementary school. My mother felt that she couldn’t take the time off to get her credentials. She needed to work right away. And so she spent three seasons at the packing house, which required her to be on her feet for 12 hours a day, sizing or packing oranges and other citrus fruit. In the wintertime, at the height of the season, she would be at work at 6 in the morning, come home for dinner, and then return to the packing house. In the summers, she picked table grapes in the nearby farms. I remember how she would wake us up early in the mornings to ensure that we had a good breakfast, and then leave the house while it was still dark outside. I remember watching one of our relatives rub tiger balm on her swollen fingers and the long steaming baths she took when she came home in the summertime, leaving a pile of dusty clothes that smelled of dirt and sweat outside the bathroom. I don’t recall when she retired. But she packed oranges and picked grapes somewhere in the range of 30 years.

Graduation day at UC Davis, June 1985.

Graduation day at UC Davis, June 1985.

School was very important to both my parents. My father only had a second-grade education. Of course, only A’s were acceptable grades. We would attend and graduate from college and our degrees would provide us with solid careers. When I was a senior in high school, my mother helped me fill out financial-aid documents. She had to disclose her yearly salary in one of the forms, and when I looked at what she’d written I was stunned. Wasn’t she missing another digit, I asked. I still remember how she leaned towards me, her eyeglasses perched at the edge of her nose, her hands anchored on the kitchen table. “No,” she said, smiling. She had made sure that we were never for want of anything. Not food or shelter, clothes or non-necessities.It made me think of the time I was into sewing – back in the day when girls took home economics in elementary school. It was summertime. I had waited for my mother to come home from work because I wanted to go into town and buy some fabric to make a blouse. She came home too tired to eat lunch and in want of a nap. She berated me, telling me I always sewed a garment that I would either never wear or discard soon afterwards. In truth, it was rare that I liked something I had made, though I enjoyed sewing itself. I went to my room, lay prostrate on my bed, and cried. Soon afterwards, she came into my room and curtly announced that we would go to Montgomery Wards and look for fabric.

Celebrating her 85th birthday with her grandchildren, Folsom, CA, June 25, 2011.

Celebrating her 85th birthday with her grandchildren, Folsom, CA, June 25, 2011.

This past year, I have gravitated towards listening to music from the 1970s and 1980s – thanks to Pandora radio. While I have always had a weakness for music from those decades (and go through the motions of apologizing for my bad taste in music to friends), as I listen to the songs now, it brings me back to a time when you never ever doubted that your parents would always be there to protect you. They would always be this age, full of vitality even when they were weary of their lives.

I have found that when you discover your parents’ history – and this oftentimes only happens when you are an adult, and for me this happened when I was in college, after taking many Asian American Studies classes – you understand the root of their actions and decisions – good and bad, hurtful and big-hearted. And in that understanding, you receive the power of forgiveness, the weight of sacrifices, and most importantly, the burden and comfort of unconditional love with open arms.

Flowers for my mother's memorial service, January 9, 2012.

Flowers for my mother’s memorial service, January 9, 2012.

The Wonder that holiday traditions bring

In all things of nature, there is something of the marvelous.
– Aristotle

The magnificent redwoods at Muir Woods.

The magnificent redwoods at Muir Woods.

This holiday season caught me ill-prepared, which is becoming the norm for me the last several years. Time seems to spin faster and faster as I get older. The weekend before Christmas, I found myself running around town, getting the bulk of family presents. Our holiday e-greeting letter, once the first greeting card that all of my friends received for the season, has not been sent – yet. We have shifted from right after Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day.

Early winter rains make the creek come alive in Muir Woods.

Early winter rains make the creek come alive in Muir Woods.

A lot of holiday traditions got squeezed this year. We watched the movie It’s a Wonderful Life on Christmas Eve while we wrapped presents. Instead of choosing each family member’s Christmas donation early in the season, we ended up deciding which organization – environmental, local food banks and homeless shelters, national and global human rights, and other miscellaneous nonprofits – we wanted to contribute to over our New Year’s Eve dinner. The kids always choose to save endangered or vulnerable animals. This year it was the pygmy elephant from Asia for my son and the Przewalski’s horse from Mongolia for my daughter from the World Wildlife Fund. David likes to support local organizations, and this year it was the Bay Area Rescue Mission, while I split my support between the Jesuit Volunteer Corps and the Community of Writers at Squaw Valley. The kids had been on my case about getting the donations out, so it was nice – if rushed – to follow through.

We were late this morning getting out to Muir Woods in Marin County on New Year’s Day, and ended up sharing the national monument trails with a lot of people. My daughter didn’t want to go this time and found reason to complain about myriad things such as the sharp object in her boot pricking her foot and being cold – even though we told our kids to dress warmly because it was a chilly and windy morning.

A coho salmon in the creek at Muir Woods.

A coho salmon in the creek at Muir Woods.

We were greeted by a swooping turkey vulture that shared the crisp air and moss- and fern-festooned trees with a pair of shiny blackbirds. And then something wonderful happened. We came upon a quiet and somewhat deserted part of the trail near the creek. We were on the lookout for coho salmon, which we read had been spotted spawning downstream. All the years we’ve been to Muir Woods on New Year’s morning, we have never seen the elusive fish, which die within days of spawning, because previous seasons had not been wet enough. The ranger at the visitor’s center told us they had counted approximately 16 of them. And we saw one of them, as still as the clear pool of water where it was resting.

It was a nice beginning to the New Year. Now for our traditional pot roast for New Year’s Day dinner.

New Year's Day outfit: Neutral layers for embellishments, sequins, and other shiny things.

New Year’s Day outfit: Neutral layers for embellishments, sequins, and other shiny things.

Neutral layers give sparkly embellishments a more casual vibe.

Neutral layers give sparkly embellishments a more casual vibe.

 

Redefining supermom

“Mama exhorted her children at every opportunity to ‘jump at the sun.’ We might not land on the sun, but at least we would get off the ground.”
– Zora Neale Hurston, folklorist and writer, from Dust Tracks on a Road

I was 38 when I became a mom for the first time and then gave birth to my daughter when I was two months shy of my 41st birthday. One thing I’ve learned – in a nod to the wonderment of motherhood, parenthood: You can never stop learning parenting lessons, no matter what your age, if your heart and mind are open to them.

Supermom wears sparkly tights, an ombre velveteen shift, and ruffled booties.

Supermom wears sparkly tights, an ombre velveteen shift, and ruffled booties.

When David and I found out I was pregnant with our son, we made plans for me to continue working until his birth and then allow me to work on my novel, but morning sickness was taking its toll and my job as a business development writer for a health insurance carrier was neither enjoyable nor fulfilling. I quit in my third trimester. I had been writing articles on the side for a good friend from graduate school and was expecting to rely on increasing freelance assignments to replace my regular paychecks, which we needed. By not commuting or having an office job with set hours, we reasoned, I could stay at home and work around my son’s schedule.

It wasn’t easy. The experience of being a first-time mother was amazing, magical, confusing, exhausting and a whirlwind. Speaking for myself only, I could not imagine dropping him off in the mornings and picking him up in the afternoons, and I cherished being with him during the day. At the same time, however, it was stressful to conduct phone interviews, hoping he wouldn’t wake up, as he stirred in the motorized swing on the other side of the bedroom, my makeshift office. Once, I even nursed him during an interview. Surely a combination of sleep deprivation and the determination to multi-task whenever I could resulted in this jaw-dropping lapse of judgment. I remember halfway into the interview when the interviewee, thankfully a woman, asked me if I was nursing. She recognized the sound and marveled that I could do these two things at once. I vowed never to put myself in an embarrassing situation again, though she and I had a good laugh over it and she told me I shouldn’t apologize at all. That’s what women – mothers – had to do to make things work. It didn’t stop me from finding other ways to multi-task.

In the fog of early motherhood, I remember feeling disconnected from the rest of the world. I missed talking with adults face to face. There came a time when I could no longer handle the many assignments and take care of him full-time, and my mother was no longer able to stay for a week each month to watch him while I worked. I reluctantly agreed to David’s suggestion that we find a nearby family daycare so I could be more productive and not be up all hours of the night to make up for the work that I couldn’t get done during the day. I felt guilty and angry with myself – an early admission that I failed as supermom. I couldn’t take care of him full-time and help contribute financially. At first, and at the same time, it was difficult to be alone in the house and to admit that I could be so productive in this new situation.

Supermom gets her energy from crystal - reclaimed vintage chandelier parts strung on brass chains from End of Century (NYC).

Supermom gets her energy from crystal – reclaimed vintage chandelier parts strung on brass chains from End of Century (NYC).

But give supermom an inch and she’ll take a foot. I was going to make up for this shortcoming. Being highly organized, I made sure that everything was done before David came home from his long day at the office. The laundry was folded, ironed and put away. Dinner was on the table and the kitchen cleaned up. The house was always neat and clean (we had two dogs who shed a lot, so I vacuumed every day). I will admit that I even ironed the bed sheets. Groceries and other errands were done during the day. Bills were paid and filed. Weekends were supposed to be cleared so we could have family time. The only problem was that while the house was in shipshape order, I was still working round the clock and I was even more exhausted and sleep deprived.

The opportunity to go back to an office job came when my freelance editorial work for a magazine that covered people, technology and capital turned into a full-time position. I was thrilled to join the adult world, really enjoyed the work itself and overcame my guilt of having a set workday away from home. I negotiated to be able to come in early and leave early, so I could pick up my son at a reasonable hour in the afternoon. I still remember clock watching and the mad dash of pushing the stroller three blocks to the family daycare and then running to the BART station to catch my train into San Francisco. Few of my colleagues were married, and I endured a few snide comments when I left for the day because many of them stayed past dinnertime, when our editor brought takeout to the employee lunchroom. Never mind that after I put my son to bed and the house was in order, I parked myself in front of the computer to write my feature-length articles late into the night.

By the time my daughter arrived in December 2002, my work situation had worsened, mostly due to my boss’s irrational behavior, low morale and the high-tech industry bubble bursting. Overcome with morning sickness, increasing workload, politics and new management due to the bank taking over the company, I quit ahead of my due date. Again, the goal was to get back to my novel, return to freelance work full-time and stay with my daughter while she was an infant. When my son turned two, he transitioned to a preschool and when my daughter was six months old – much younger than I had thought she’d be for her first transition, I put her in my son’s old family daycare to be able to get more work done.

Supermom ready for action in blue faux fur.

Supermom ready for action in blue faux fur.

As the kids got older and into elementary school, the workday got shorter because the school day was shorter than the preschool and family daycare hours. When my son was in second grade, he drew a picture and wrote a few sentences about his family, which was displayed at the school’s Open House. He wrote: “This is my family. My mom works wen [sic] I am at school… My dad workes [sic] the whole day.” I remembered feeling somewhat cheated. I worked all the time, but it seemed I was a victim of my own success. I could set the dinner menu for the week in 20 minutes and go to the dry cleaners and two grocery stores in less than an hour and a half. By dinnertime, the kids had completed and I had corrected their homework and I had given or supervised their baths. I rocked them in bed, and then began my second shift of work. Nothing was out-of-order in the house. Except for me.

Gradually, I let go of things. The wrinkles in the clean bed sheets don’t bother me as much as they used to. I relented and let David do the weekly menus and get the groceries. I ignore the dust bunnies made of our dog Rex’s fur. The kids rake the leaves, pick up the dog poop, empty out the dishwasher, clean the bathrooms, dust, strip their own beds and so on. (Yes, it helps when the kids are older and take up chores!)

But the biggest thing I did was redefine what it means to be a supermom. There’s nothing wrong with being a supermom, but I wanted to personalize the qualifications to suit me. Last year, I asked my daughter if she wanted to be a writer because she has quite an imagination and loves to write and make up stories. She flatly said no. She didn’t want to be a writer because she said I worked too much, I was up late and I was always tired (read: cranky). That was my wake-up call.

Abloom with resin and satin and tulle roses.

Abloom with resin and satin and tulle roses.

While I value being able to work my schedule so I can walk them to school in the mornings, pick them up after school, be at home with them when they get sick (last winter they both came down with pneumonia on separate occasions and were sick for two weeks each), chauffeur them to their various sporting and other extracurricular activities, and most importantly, make home-cooked meals and have dinner together as a family, I don’t want either my son or my daughter to think that this is the norm for moms or that moms who opt for this lifestyle have to give up who they are. To be sure, all moms make different sacrifices for the family life they choose or that are chosen for them. But in making sacrifices, we can’t let go of what gives us, as women and persons, life.

So when I took a week of vacation this past April to work on the revision of my novel, I talked with my son and daughter about sticking with something despite the barriers, finding a passion and nurturing it, and doing something that truly makes you happy. They saw how happy, how buoyant and energetic, I was. This past June, when my son graduated from sixth grade, we had a long discussion about motivation and perseverance. I told him that fear of failing had kept me from buckling down and finishing the novel but that I was guaranteed to fail if I didn’t try. Wide-eyed, he asked me, “So you mean if you hadn’t been afraid, you would have finished the novel already?” I nodded, and then he nodded slowly and walked away in silence. It remains to be seen when he’ll fully appreciate that nugget of wisdom. But I’m hoping that the notion of a fearless mom has new meaning for my kids.

Tunic - not cape - and leggings.

Tunic – not cape – and leggings.

Also helping me to meet my goal of becoming who I want to be is writing this blog. I’m discovering that my blog has created another valuable by-product, in addition to providing exercise for my writer’s muscles and sharing the challenges and beauty of this time of my life with a bigger community. My posts reflect many of the things I want to tell or share with my kids and, thanks to the Internet and technology, my words and photos are accessible and permanent, relatively speaking. It is, I’ll admit, a form of multi-tasking.

My definition of a supermom has evolved to this: One who loves her children unconditionally, supports them and is always there for them in whatever capacity she can, and pursues her hopes and dreams so that they see and know that the pursuit makes her a whole and happy mom and person. Under those conditions can she love and support fully. These traits are not mutually exclusive. They are also not the traits of anyone else’s but mine.

More importantly, no ironing bed sheets required.

Grayling earrings from Jenny K (El Cerrito, CA) and 3D ring from MOMA (NYC). (The ring, however, is not made of Kryptonite.)

Grayling earrings from Jenny K (El Cerrito, CA) and 3D ring from MOMA (NYC). (The ring, however, is not made of Kryptonite.)

 

Christmas past and present

Christmas Day is in our grasp, so long as we have hands to clasp.
Christmas Day will always be just as long as we have we.
Welcome Christmas while we stand, heart to heart, and hand in hand.

– Theodor Seuss Geisel, American writer, poet and cartoonist,
from The Grinch Who Stole Christmas

My mother and father in our living room, Terra Bella, CA, Christmas 1982.

My mother and father in our living room, Terra Bella, CA, Christmas 1982.

Christmas is my favorite holiday. When we watch A Charlie Brown Christmas or How the Grinch Stole Christmas with our kids, it reminds me of the tradition of watching them as a kid. Of course, back then we had to wait impatiently for the night it aired on television and endure commercials, but no Christmas season was complete without having seen the two animated shows. Now our kids watch them several times in a season, and we have added the Polar Express to our Christmas viewing repertoire, complete with hot chocolate and popcorn.

In high school, I was in choir so we always sang Christmas songs for the annual winter concert. When I was in college, Christmas was a time to get together with all my high school friends to compare college experiences. It’s a Wonderful Life became a staple for me going into adulthood. I still get teary-eyed when, in the last scene, Mary Bailey’s eyes glisten with pure joy as she watches her husband George realize how rich and blessed he is with the many friendships he has made throughout a life of giving.

Since then, Christmas has become the holiday associated with loss. On Christmas Eve 1995, as I drove my parents from their home in Terra Bella to my sister’s family’s home in Folsom, near Sacramento, my 88-year-old father’s heart and kidneys began to shut down. Of course, my mother and I didn’t know that at the time. It was a tense four and a half hour-drive. After we arrived, we took him to the hospital.

My parents' last Christmas together in Folsom, 1994.

My parents’ last Christmas together in Folsom, 1994.

We spent Christmas Day going back and forth from Folsom to the hospital in Sacramento. It wasn’t really Christmas. That’s what I thought to myself when we drove back to Folsom that evening to take a break, staring at the blinking and streaking outdoor Christmas lights from the car window. Not long after we had returned to my sister’s house, my brother-in-law, who was still at the hospital, called to tell us we needed to come back. We didn’t make it to the hospital in time. The presents were left unopened that year.

As the years passed, I didn’t associate my father’s death with Christmas. The mind would not allow that to happen. After all, it didn’t seem like Christmas; therefore, it did not happen at Christmastime.

Last Thanksgiving, my 85-year-old mother was stricken with pneumonia and was in the ICU for two weeks with a coma. When she awoke, she was transferred to an acute-care facility that dealt with patients with ventilators. Last Christmas, my sisters and I took turns watching over her. She had her first setback on Christmas Eve, as we were preparing for midnight mass. When we asked her if she was done fighting, she nodded.

Dumbly, and numbly, we waited for her body to comply with her wishes. It wasn’t until after my oldest sister returned to her home in San Antonio, and a week had passed that on New Year’s Eve my middle sister and I realized my mother could not do it on her own. We were at her side during her last hours. She did not “slip quietly to the other side,” as the veteran nurse had assured us that she would, but she was not alone when she took her last breath.

Christmas and New Year’s Eve would never be the same again, I remembered thinking, as we drove in silence back to my sister’s house in the early morning hour.

A wintery scene from one of our lighted Christmas in the City streets.

A wintery scene from one of our lighted Christmas in the City streets.

It’s true that the holidays will never be the same, and I admit that I approached this holiday season with panicked moments full of fear and uneasiness. However, whereas last year I returned from the long Thanksgiving weekend and found that my husband and kids had completely decorated the house to welcome me home, I was able to decorate the house with them this season. We put up the seven displays of our lighted Christmas in the City buildings throughout the house. The final and traditional touch was the kids’ “letting it snow” over the city buildings and streets with fine plastic bits of snow. We decorated our seven-foot tree with treasured ornaments, many with memories associated with them, and instead of spending our evenings in the family room we moved our activities to the living room, as we always do at this time of year, so we could enjoy the fire in the fireplace, the smell of the pungent tree and the lighted Christmas villages. We’ve had a few friends over for Christmas cheer and enjoyed listening to Christmas music. It’s a Wonderful Life is on my list of things to do before New Year’s Day.

I survived the sadness of not being greeted by my mother at the front door when we first arrived at my sister’s house or seeing her bedroom now home to a new treadmill and a relocated futon couch. We are enjoying a respite from the rain and frantic last-minute Christmas shopping. This morning we are preparing to visit my mother’s niche, where her ashes are laid to rest. My 10-year-old daughter is excited to deliver the Christmas card she made for her lola.

I am navigating these new traditions. It is a part of life – learning how to embrace loss and honor our loved ones by celebrating the present.

Welcome, Christmas. Celebrate the holidays, be it Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, or other honored day.

Welcome, Christmas. Celebrate the holidays, be it Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, or other honored day.

Celebrate in style with hints of gold.

Celebrate in style with hints of gold.

 

Fifteen years later: On becoming a writer

Celebrating with glimmering gold.

Celebrating with glimmering gold.

The highest reward for a person’s toil is not what they get for it, but what they become by it.
– John Ruskin, British art critic

In 1997, when I began researching and then writing my first novel, I could not have imagined that in 2012 I would still be working on the umpteenth draft. If I had known how much time would pass, I might have given up. Thomas Edison was credited as saying, “Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.”

The thing is: I did give up.

The first draft was 1,000 pages. It was easier to write when my husband and I didn’t have children and my job was not demanding. My son came, I changed jobs a few times, job demands grew, and sleep deprivation was my companion in the middle of the night when I sat in front of the computer screen, writing articles instead of fiction. I finished another draft when I went into labor with my daughter. In 2006, I was finally done and sent the trimmed-down (at 650 pages) manuscript off to literary agents, only to get rejected by 60 of them. One writer friend exclaimed, “I didn’t even know there were 60 different agents to be rejected by.” The manuscript was too long and there was no market for a novel about Filipino immigrant farmworkers, labor unions and grape strikes, I was told. And I believed them. I also believed that a more talented writer would have made the novel more compelling. I understood that I was not good enough to have made it work against any and all odds.

So I gave up. I put the manuscript away. I stopped reading fiction and book reviews. I didn’t go into bookstores anymore. I did other worthy and necessary things in my life. I had some inkling that I would come back to the writing, maybe to the novel. Every now and then, through the years, my two high school best friends would ask me when I was going to resurrect Fausto, my main character, and his story.

For anyone who has known the passion of creating, who has experienced the ecstasy of getting the emotion or moment right with the precise words in the only order that makes exquisite sense, who has stopped whatever ordinary activity she is doing because she has solved a niggling and bottlenecking problem with a character’s motivations or actions, the desire to create is never abandoned. Somewhere deep inside me, I knew that.

When we are ready on the inside, it may still take time for that desire to radiate outward and make us aware of its awakening. Sometimes it takes an event in our lives that turns the key or opens the window, and the desire is unleashed and demanding to be nurtured and given the tools to create anew. I took a week of vacation in April to start the next major revision of the novel, and my happiness was palpable. I did not want to lose it again. Getting stuck on a word or a sentence was a gift, not something to agonize over or dread as a tedious task. Carving out time to reintroduce myself to my characters was a gift.

Gold accessories on gold brocade - my own vintage early 90s tassel earrings and M.E. Moore reclaimed vintage bracelet and necklace.

Gold accessories on gold brocade – my own vintage early 90s tassel earrings and M.E. Moore reclaimed vintage bracelet and necklace.

In May I submitted the manuscript to a local independent book publisher’s annual contest. I had high hopes, but my novel wasn’t chosen. I was disappointed to be sure, but undaunted. Last month, I heard from my undergraduate professor who, along with his partner, is an independent book publisher. I asked him to consider my manuscript, and while he didn’t accept it, he told me that he and his partner “enjoyed it and admired the sometimes quite lyrical prose” and that they “liked the rendering of the setting, at once exotic and universal.” This time I was ecstatic. He was one of the best creative writing professors I’ve ever had, and he gave me the gift of his time and his advice for the next and hopefully last revision. His response – the outside world’s response, so to speak – validated what I’d been feeling inside: I’m getting there, I’m on the right track.

In September I sent the manuscript to the Poets & Writers’ California Writers Exchange contest. Last week, I received an e-mail announcing the winning poet and fiction writer. I honestly did not expect to win, but there was an itch of disappointment. Yesterday, however, I received a letter, letting me know that I was one of 15 finalists whose manuscripts, out of a total of 609 fiction manuscripts, were sent to the fiction judge for his final selection. I was quietly happy. I felt a warmth growing inside of me.

Fifteen years later, this is what I know: In 2006, the novel was too long and I was not a skilled enough writer to make Fausto’s story resonate. I am a much better writer now and the novel is almost there. All these years of toil have made it thus.

A love of mixing textures again - thrifted embroidered purse, faux fur, Frye leather booties, textured tights, and bold jewelry by M.E. Moore.

A love of mixing textures again – thrifted embroidered purse, faux fur, Frye leather booties, textured tights, and bold jewelry by M.E. Moore.

Welcome to The Dress at 50

A new dress doesn’t get you anywhere;
It’s the life you’re living in the dress,
And the sort of life you had lived before,
And what you will do it in later.
– Diana Vreeland, fashion columnist and editor

When I turned 49 in February 2011, my family and I had recently lost our beloved 12-year-old dog Bailey and I began to think about and fear turning 50. I asked myself what it was about reaching this milestone birthday that made me apprehensive. The answer was simple: I had not accomplished what I had imagined for myself when I was in my idealistic 20s. In my fifth decade, I was sure that I would be on my fifth successful novel and my kids would be high school age. I had mapped out my life when I was a senior in high school – go to college, join the Peace Corps, go to a creative writing program and then the usual get a job, get married and have children.

Life has a way of twisting and turning, especially for people who have their lives mapped out quite early. A marriage, a divorce, another marriage, two children, two dogs and a handful of jobs later, I found myself in 2011 wanting to live fully and creatively. The novel that I had started in 1997 – which went through several major revisions, several hundreds of pages, kind and careful eyes of good friends – languished in 2006 when many literary agents said it was too long and not marketable. Creatively speaking, I sat down by the roadside and never got up. But I did not sleepwalk through life. I threw myself into raising my two children, volunteered at their schools – started an enrichment program and helped to raise funds, among other duties – and honed my editing and writing skills in the healthcare information technology industry.

Something was missing, and though I knew it, I needed to wait until I was ready to get up from the roadside. When 50 crept closer, I felt it was time. In 2011 I began to work on the novel again and thought of a lifestyle blog that celebrated creativity in every facet of my life. There were roadblocks along the way, but I slowly made progress. And then a few months before I turned 50, my 85-year-old mother was stricken with pneumonia and on New Year’s Eve we made the painful decision to take her off the ventilator.

I had always imagined handing my first published novel to my father, who appreciated my writing ability and was proud of my college degrees because his education in the Philippines stopped in the second grade, but he passed away in 1995. I began my novel in 1997 as an homage to his and his cousins’ immigrant lives in America. I had hoped to be able to hand this novel in published form to my mother. Instead, her passing lit a fire in me to finally finish my novel and to get that blog up.

The Dress at 50 seeks to embrace Diana Vreeland’s quote. Live fully and creatively. Make the world a better place. Feel good about yourself. Celebrate creation. It’s everywhere – in the way you choose to dress, make your house your home, spend time with your family and friends. It’s how you live your life.

So, here is my interpretation of living the creative life at 50. Every day I hope to share what inspires me.

Monochromatic dressing incorporating different textures and celebrating the color of winter

Wintery adornments, featuring earrings by Carmela Rose and Sundance rings and necklace

Blending different textures and materials in a neutral palette