Me, my mom and other internal editors
I’m sorry to write that my mother, Susan Jean Devonshire, 81, died peacefully last month. I’m not sure what the first blog after her death is supposed to be. I don’t feel a rumination on death coming on, and I don’t think this next 1500 words will wrap up my feelings about my mother, childhood, adulthood, mortality, or anything else. Maybe those blogs will come, and when they do it’ll be okay. But there’s a lot going on in my head, and I have to write something, and it ought to be somehow related to the primary theme of this blog, which as far as I can tell is the struggle to stay creative despite the demands of midlife. So, let’s think about editors.
Editors? I wasn’t expecting that until I typed it. But follow me. There are many kinds of editors, in comics, in writing in general, and perhaps in life. Once you’ve worked with good ones, and I have (looking at you, Claire Napier and Matt Idelson), it changes your writing process. When I’m writing a first draft I’m sneaking around, writing just for me, seeing what I can get away with. But all the while I’m wondering what the editor will think—will they dig it or rap my knuckles for clunky lines, undeveloped characters, faulty logic. When I’m early on in a scene I try not to let that internalized editor in the sky see my page and rattle me. But as I get deeper into the writing the editor is there, eyes over my shoulder, offering reality checks. All the while I’m fearing their judgement, longing for their approval. Seems familiar…
Sounds a lot like my relationship with…you guessed it: my mother.
Is there a better definition of a mother than your internal editor? Life editor, maybe? The whole goal of a mother is to implant wisdom, logic, reasoning and judgement into your malleable little infant cortex and hope that it works well enough to keep you alive when you’re out of her arms’ reach. My whole life, I’ve had her present in my mind as a reference. Most of the time I’ve made decisions I think she would have approved, while sometimes I’ve tried the Crazy Ivan, turning 180 degrees from her advice. Sometimes those moves have worked, sometimes not. But the Mother Editor has always been there, a usually benign, sometimes malignant presence influencing my thoughts large and small.
And she’s gone.
So now what?