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Lisa Solod

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At 50, Finally Telling the Truth

Posted: 10/25/11 10:46 AM ET

I was into my 30s before I began to tell the truth. I hadn't exactly been lying in the three previous decades; but what I had been doing was, at best, dissembling, and at worst, well, let's say I was avoiding the truth. And all the while I had no real idea I was doing it.

I come from a family of liars. We didn't know or tell the truth about my mother's illness, which still to this day has never been properly diagnosed but must have been some form of bipolar disease; we didn't talk about her drinking either. We didn't discuss why my father was so willing to allow his three daughters to be raised by a woman who could, on many days, barely get out of bed. We didn't know about or talk about the strains of melancholia, of outright madness, that ran through both sides of the family. My grandmother had "dementia," not something real and more terrible: Alzheimer's, the disease that would also capture my mother. We did not discuss my middle sister's peculiar personality, or the way my little sister adopted my father's "don't worry, be happy" mantra, all the while the family crashed and burned around her.

We talked about art and books and the theater. Politics and religion were even on the table. Not sex, of course; no one talked about sex. And certainly not emotion. Emotion was completely taboo. We were simply to pretend not to notice my mother's unforgiving behavior, my father's distance. For years and years any attempt I made to bring up the past was squashed. I was considered high strung, emotional, for even asking about emotional issues. I persevered, in a way. Until, in therapy soon after the birth of my first child, I finally began really telling it like it was. I began to unravel the huge ball of lies that my family had so artfully and so consciously woven over the years.

But it wasn't until I turned 50 that I finally learned how to really tell the truth.

I thought about all of this recently as I listened to author Rosemary Daniell read from her latest essay. This is a woman who was telling the truth long before it was fashionable. Fatal Flowers, Daniell's first memoir, published in 1981, rocked my world. Wow, women not only had sex, they could write about it. And they could write about madness and womanhood and relationships and pain with gut wrenching honesty. Yet, it would be another twenty years before I even began to attempt that journey myself, and it wasn't until I published Desire: Women Write About Wanting, in my fifty-first year, that I let myself really speak out loud the truths of my life. I had long been a writer, of both fiction and nonfiction, but it was clear that my fiction had disguised the truths I wrote about, in order to make them more palatable. In my nonfiction, I began to actually put myself on the page: with no disguises.

Some of the truths I have begun to write about have gotten me into trouble. In a conversation with Rosemary, I mentioned that writing about my relationship with my father, a few months before his death, had set my sisters against me and begun the long forced march toward our current estrangement. She cocked an eyebrow and looked at me. "Truth doesn't make a good relationship bad," she said, "but it might reveal the depth of a bad relationship."

I felt a little stunned. For twenty years my sisters and I had been trying hard to forge a close and loving relationship with each other, partly against our weird and heartbreaking upbringing, partly just because. But perhaps Rosemary was right. In telling the truth, my truth about the difficulties I had had over the years in making a connection with my father, I had revealed just how fragile the underpinnings of my relationship with my sisters had been all along. A few trips back to my original therapist after my father's death and the estrangement had revealed a similar truth, but I had obviously been reluctant to accept it. He told me that clearly I had always been the one in the family who tried to insist that the emperor really was naked, even as, over the years, I had begun to doubt the veracity of that fact myself.

Yet I do not regret learning to tell the truth. While I don't think that every truth we have need be spilled on a page, I am a writer. And part of my truth-telling is writing about it. But part of my truth-telling also lies in the comfort of (very) late middle age. Now, halfway into my fifties, I have had to both tell and accept some brutal truths about myself and others. With the wrinkles and the failings of my body has also come the liberation of transparency. Telling the truth, like any act of courage, is a risk. But it is a risk that I am more than glad to take. We get very little time on this earth and to waste it either telling lies or believing in them is a terrible shame.

The past half dozen years have seen the publication of my first book and the dissolution of two marriages, one of more than twenty years. It was only because I finally understood how much of the truth that I was hiding that I was able to let my first relationship end, and, oddly enough, to accept the wondrous, if brief, marriage to my second husband. During those same six years, my son got into terrible trouble, my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's and my father succumbed to his very long and hugely debilitating illness. My son got back on this feet, my daughter has now gone to college and I have relocated to live by the ocean, a long held desire. It has been a grueling, growing, tumultuous half decade, but had I not learned to tell the truth, had I not learned how important honesty was in all fronts, I never would have made it out alive. Not unscathed, of course, but alive. And I retain the hope, always, that by telling the truth, real truths will be revealed. That transparency is to the good of all of us.

 

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I was into my 30s before I began to tell the truth. I hadn't exactly been lying in the three previous decades; but what I had been doing was, at best, dissembling, and at worst, well, let's say I was ...
I was into my 30s before I began to tell the truth. I hadn't exactly been lying in the three previous decades; but what I had been doing was, at best, dissembling, and at worst, well, let's say I was ...
 
 
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ASFerris
author, screenwriter, editor and champion of all &
02:36 PM on 10/27/2011
BRAVO BRAVO BRAVO! i too wrote a book - a memoir - MARRYING GEORGE CLOONEY (Seal press) - the intersection of menopause (mine) and dementia (my mom's) and within that, my relationship with my brother completely dissolved - completely estranged. (a long time coming!) he called me a liar, and worse. and while i was devastated at first - i came to realize, "I never really liked him either." that extraordinary experience led me straight into another book, THE SHAME PROM (co-edited with hollye dexter) and boy oh boy is that liberating.
gorgeous post lisa, just gorgeous! thank you for your truth, your heart, your soul.
it comforts!
10:15 PM on 10/25/2011
Telling the truth is easier. You don't have to keep track of what you told each person. Instead you answer honestly and thoughtfully. Mind you, you don't have to say everything. Rather, what you say should be true. But silence is golden.
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Joseph Scott
Goat in the Thicket -- UR 2600 b.c.
05:47 PM on 10/25/2011
The greatest gift you can give to another human being is your presence.....and in that presence, your reality.
Not something made up, but something real.
The way I have to laugh, sometimes, ruefully, at the men seeking smoother-skinned trophy wives in a belated attempt to escape their own decline and mortality....what sort of truth can live in such a place where the desperate drive to overcome human limitations is the overriding impulse? I can only imagine, altho truth doesn't exactly have a single address, but locates where it will, I suppose...so it's only that I just don't get the younger woman thing. It just seems embarrassing to me.

Give me a woman with a body, a real body, lived in and alive, and a face, a real face, with eyes both sorrowing and brave. That's where the depth is. That's where I want to go.

Into the reality that is mine and hers alone.
And that is just a mind blower, it seems to me.

I can relate so much to the need for honesty, and how it took the fifty years to finally be standing in a food line at some grocery, both my parents gone, and with a sudden, strange sense of elation, I realized "I am the adult now," no need to keep the truths hidden away with a key, to keep people safe from their own reflections, including my own.
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Lisa Solod Warren
08:38 PM on 10/25/2011
Thank you. A very thoughtful comment.
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Joseph Scott
Goat in the Thicket -- UR 2600 b.c.
06:44 PM on 10/26/2011
You're welcome.
I was really affected by the article, and its take on the fifties as an age of clarity.
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dmsdzinr
Progression wit a twist of sarcasm.
02:46 PM on 10/26/2011
Very Nicely Stated! faved
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Joseph Scott
Goat in the Thicket -- UR 2600 b.c.
03:53 PM on 10/26/2011
Thank you.....appreciated.

fav'
d back at ya!
have a good day...
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nitwitsRus
my udder username is...
05:40 PM on 10/25/2011
Kr@p!
KNEW i've bin postin' on the WRONG web pages!
04:34 PM on 10/25/2011
I found your post to be very inspiring! I, like too many others, come from a very similar background with an alcoholic father and a mother who refused to accept that there were any problems. Lies after lies after lies! As the 2nd of 9 children (5 boys and 4 girls) and the oldest daughter, I have a lot of memories of the violent nights when dad came home intoxicated and mom didn't like it so she would yell at him and he would slap, punch, hit, and push her around. I can't even count the nights I awakened in a terror to the sound of her screams. Interestingly, my brothers are all alcoholics and treat their wives the same way!. I have tried in the past to discuss why I have a strained relationship with my father and my brothers but they are 7-10 years younger and do not share the same memories and thus think I'm making it all up. I have thought many times about writing about that childhood and how it has made me the person I am today. I always feared putting the truth in writing because of the potential repercussions but at the age of 57, I don't have those same fears. It is still somewhat paralyzing to think about how others might react but I ache for the freedom from lies. Thank you so much for empowering me to take the risk.
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Lisa Solod Warren
08:39 PM on 10/25/2011
It is hard. Our memories are our own and it would be lovely if others respected them, but too often the opposite happens.
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John Blumenthal
03:51 PM on 10/25/2011
Interesting post, Lisa. I wrote a similar book, a novel, some years ago in which I told the truth about my father. (Emotion wasn't discussed in our house either and nobody ever used the word "love".) Anyway, my father was in his 80s at the time and I didn't tell him about the book because I was afraid he'd be offended. But then a friend of his heard me being interviewed on the radio and my father asked me for a copy. Get this -- he didn't recognize himself at all and thought the character was totally fictional! Or so he said.
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Lisa Solod Warren
08:39 PM on 10/25/2011
That so very often happens, that real people do not recognize themselves. I wish I knew what it meant!
03:06 PM on 10/25/2011
This is an important post. What we withhold from ourselves is as damaging as what we withhold from others. Being in this glorious time of life affords us the ability to see ourselves and the world with an honesty that is empowering. We've heard countless women say they can't believe how honest and self-revealling we were in our two books. It wasn't an easy process, but the growth we experienced was beyond anything we had expected.
02:36 PM on 10/25/2011
Coming to grips with the truth appears to be potentially paralyzing and then liberating, each in its own time and length of time, should either arrive. Those who come to grips with it appear to be majorly blessed.
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Whogivesafox
How did right go so wrong
01:11 PM on 10/25/2011
I'm having trouble believing any of it.
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Lisa Solod Warren
02:16 PM on 10/25/2011
I have no idea what that silly comment is supposed to mean.
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Whogivesafox
How did right go so wrong
04:24 PM on 10/25/2011
I didn't think you would; but thanks for taking the time to reply to it.
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Lisa Solod Warren
11:41 AM on 10/25/2011
Thank you both for your comments; it is difficult and may possibly result in bad ends, but telling the truth is crucial, I think.
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10:55 AM on 10/25/2011
Reminds me of my own family, and my role in it. I still haven't found the courge to tell the truth because I want to keep the ties I have with my family, no matter how enuous they are.
10:41 AM on 10/25/2011
Wow, Lisa, thank you for sharing this beautiful and honest piece. It so closely mirrors my own upbringing, and at age almost-49 and in the process of leaving a very lonely 16-year marriage, I understand how important it is that I now feel free to tell the truth about all of it. Always a comfort to know that there are those in the world who understand and get it, when we've spent so much of our lives feeling like the aliens in the room.