The Arts Council asked Beth Ann Fennelly to create a community project. The goal of Across the Table is to demonstrate the power of art to build community. During the dinner Beth Ann will be sharing readings from her micro-memoir, The Irish Goodbye, and inviting attendees to write their own micro-memoir.
If you are unable to attend we invite you to share in the readings and submit your micro-memoir.
The Micro-Memoir as a Route to Self-illumination
What happens when we slow down and reflect on our life, shaping the shaggy mass of it into an arc of experience? What happens when we return to an event that shaped us and make it come alive by selecting details and using sensory images? We gain clarity on our emotions. We tend to think that understanding how we’re feeling is completely natural and intuitive, but I believe it’s actually hard work to understand how we feel and why. That hard work can be done through the art of memoir, in which we look back at our lives and see patterns, trace what experiences and people made us who we are today.
Why do we need memoir? Because good memoir never falsifies, never beautifies, never casts the writer as the unconditional hero. We need memoir because we need the truth, which is in precious short supply in modern life.
What I mean is this: we are so used to packaging ourselves as better than we are, cropping and filtering and Photoshopping our weaknesses. This instinct carries over into our lives, in which we’ve internalized the idea that it’s shameful to experience ugly emotions like envy or vanity or spite. We’re human, however, so we do experience these emotions, but because we never see them reflected back at us, we assume we’re alone. Now on top of whatever bad emotion we’re already experiencing, we feel lonely, too.
We read memoir to feel less alone. The truth is that no protagonist is blameless. I write micro-memoir to perceive my own messy humanity where it lurks in the interstices. When I’m thinking about an event or recalling a memory, if the emotional truth is hard to discern because of multiple conflicting, simultaneous emotions, or if the emotional truth is willfully ignored because it’s shameful--that’s where I want to pause, press in, like pressing on a bruise.
It's commonly understood that we can revise our writing. Less commonly understood is that we can revise our thinking. We can return to events from our past armed with a genuine curiosity and a refusal to accept received wisdom or apply artificial intelligence or the filter that captures us in the best light. We can learn what these events have to tell us. We can educate our emotional intelligence. And there’s nothing artificial about that.
Social prescribing is a process through which a person moves into flourishing health through non-medical activities, often community-based. I believe in the power of memoir writing to increase our emotional intelligence and our empathy, to help us see better—and only when we see better can we think better, and only when we think better can we improve the world. Yes, to the age-old question, yes, the doctor is in. When writing memoir, the doctor is in you.
What follows is some excerpts from my book, The Irish Goodbye: Micro-Memoirs (W. W. Norton, 2/24), and a few prompts to get you started!
GENERATE
Set the timer on your phone for 10 minutes. Write for 10 minutes on each of the prompts below. Write fast, without re-reading. After you’ve completed all 3 ten-minute free writes, read them through and choose with one in which you are the most engaged. Revise to do more “showing” through sensory details, less telling the reader how to feel. Hone until your piece is polished and 750 words or fewer.