Writing Your Story, Looking from Down to Up

I know a spunky, upbeat woman named Katie Banister. She is a woman of achievement, a dynamic speaker, an inspiration. She happens to be disabled, or rather “dis-abled,” as she prefers to call it, driving through life seated in a wheelchair. Many would be disheartened in her situation, giving up on dreams, resigned. But Katie is a fighter. She took the bitter fruit of a terrible accident and created her own recipe for success as well as a life mission. Through her company, Access-4-All, Inc., which includes husband Steve, Katie works to educate and advise businesses about the needs of the disabled community, motivates others dealing with physical setbacks, and speaks to school children to help them better understand and feel comfortable around people with disabilities.

Katie has also channeled her experiences into books: Aunt Katie’s Visit for children, The Personal Care Attendant Guide for those needing to find or become a care-giver, and most recently, A Pocket of Poems which is an guide for looking upward and forward through poetry – there can be comfort and healing in the writing of poems.

October is Disability Month. I dare say many of us have a “dis-ability” in some way, whether a physical problem, anxiety or depression, an addiction, a fear, a simmering anger, a feeling of inadequacy – some roadblock in our lives that prevents us from being all that we might dream of. I look to those like Katie, who dare to look life in the face and make a go of it. Yes, she drifts backwards with the current, but she always finds the strength to go on with a good attitude and a sense of what she CAN do. And she uses that can-do energy and talent to help others with her books, her experience, her life story. Give Katie a call if your school, business or organization is looking for a motivational, inspirational and educational speaker.

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An Experience in Perspectives

Yesterday I was a panelist at a social justice/civil rights forum at my daughter’s school. There were five of us: an African-American man, a Caucasian-American man, a Puerto Rican woman whose family moved to Miami in the middle of her childhood, a young woman with a Muslim father and Christian mother, and me with a Japanese-American viewpoint. We took turns telling about our various upbringings as a lesson about different perspectives as the kids had all read a book pertaining to that theme. Most of us were of “a certain age” so we were also able to speak to what it meant to live without Nickelodeon and computers in an era where kids played outside all the time and where discipline was meted with a ruler or paddle.

The most interesting stories were that of the African-American man who shocked the kids with details of growing up during segregation in the South. That kind of stuff seems so far back in time and yet this man was near my age! The Caucasian panelist added an unsettling story about the prevalence of racism in Alabama where he grew up and the penalties for standing up against it as a white person.

I surprised myself by coming up with my own stories of what it was like to be the only brown child in school, along with my sister. I had thought that since we were lucky enough to have escaped negative judgement (for the most part) that I would have nothing much to say. Instead I was able to speak about the multicultural experience of having parents of different races and how I was introduced to other races in college – rather abruptly as my first roommate was a black girl – and how my sister and I were like puzzles to people…“What ARE you?” … as they tried to piece where we belonged in the cosmos.

Afterwards the teacher moderator thanked us all so sincerely and told us how fascinating and often moving our stories were. I thought she was mostly just speaking to the African-American man. Later, I had to admit I had fallen victim to the common thinking I preach against – that my life story was not that interesting. I had lived it, it was nothing to me. There was no tragedy, no horror, no big event I was a part of. Compared to the African-American man’s life, the rest of us had little impressive to say. And yet, I was listening very carefully to the others, quite interested in their perspectives, too. I had questions I wanted to ask them, but kept quiet because the question time was for the kids to respond and we were running late.

People’s lives are indeed fascinating. It is not necessarily the big events we live through, it is the moments, the history, the era, the experiences we all have that make us unique and yet the same. We each bring our own thoughts, feelings and perspectives to our stories – so much so that those present at a given moment will all walk away with a different experience. People are fascinating…and this means you (and me), too.

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Meet the Authors

I had a great time at The Big Read book festival yesterday: beautiful weather, talented authors, delicious gelato. Susan Meddaugh, of the Martha Speaks and other Martha books, brought a little photo album of her family’s beloved – a cute, very mixed breed girl with gorgeous brown eyes. Told that she was a dalmation-beagle, the vet said she has the barrel chest of a pit-bull. Ms. Meddaugh told us that the idea for Martha Blah Blah and the alphabet soup problem came from her 7-year-old son. Too bad for him, he does not get royalties as his allowance!

Linda Sue Park was quite the honored guest as MADCO dance company created an interpretation of a scene from her latest book, The Archer, which was delightfully performed by the 5th graders of a local school, assisted by the professional dancers. I left with a couple of autographed books, but missing the one I wanted the most: When My Name Was Keoko, about a Korean family’s experiences when the country is invaded by the Japanese during WWII. (Warning: Do not depend on onsite bookseller booths to have all of an author’s books available at an author signing! We missed Arnie the Doughnut by Laurie Keller of Scrambled States of America fame, too.) Ms. Parks shared with me that the Keoko story is based on her own parents’ experiences merged with those of others’ of that time. This is a must-read for me!

I met several kids who wanted to be writers when they grew up. Meeting the authors is quite inspiring because we find they are for the most part “regular” people who get their ideas from real life moments and stories. Hey, maybe we can do that! Keep that writer’s notebook handy! Linda Sue Park provided the most thoughtful comment about writing. Answering an audience question from a young boy about how long it takes to finish a book, she said, “Each book is different. After you finish one, you think you know how to do it, but with the next book you find it is all different.”

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