The following is a one-act play I wrote as an Independent Study my senior year at the University of Detroit Mercy. The play was selected to appear in an anthology for incoming freshman but the long-running project was shelved abruptly, my play never saw print, and now I’m sharing it with you.

I plan to post a bit here and there and welcome and encourage feedback.

Complicity
(A one-act play)

The curtain goes up. A little girl, six-years-old, is sitting stage left, spotlighted. The rest
of the stage is dimly lit. Except for the child, only shadows can be seen. She is humming a
child-like tune, having a tea party with her doll and stuffed animals. A figure enters stage
right and walks across the stage, stopping just short of the circle of light. The figure
remains in the shadows. The little girl looks up, stops humming, and smiles. The tune she
was humming continues to play in the background.

Male Voice
Whatcha doing there, my sweet little princess?

Little Girl
Teddy wanted a tea party. (She giggles, holding up her teddy bear.)
Want some, too? (She offers a tea cup to the figure.)

Male Voice
I already had my tea today, princess. (He kneels, extending one hand into the spotlight.)
Why don’t you come with me and let me teach you a new game? (Slight pause.) A secret
game?

Little Girl
Is it fun?

Male Voice
It’s lots of fun, princess.

The little girl puts down her doll and reaches out to take the man’s hand and stands.

Little Girl
I like secrets.

Male Voice
So do I, princess…so do I.

The little girl steps into the shadows with the man. The spotlight slams off as they exit
stage left and the music stops mid-tune. A front stage light is simultaneously turned on
stage right, illuminating a young woman sitting in a chair facing the audience, her purse
on the floor beside her. The rest of the stage is empty. Her hands are clenched together in
her lap and she looks uncomfortable.

Lilly
So…what am I supposed to talk about?

Doctor
Whatever you would like to talk about, Lilly.

The voice is that of a female with the ability to sooth and comfort by merely speaking.

Lilly
Umm…I really don’t know, Doctor. I’ve never been to a therapist before. (She laughs
nervously.)

Doctor
Well then tell me what brought you here.

Lilly
Well…that’s the strange part, Doctor. I really don’t know.

*****

 

Originally posted at Bad Mommy Blogger

Let’s get right to the point: I have a serious potty mouth. It might be genetic.
My mother cushhhh2rses like a sailor. Always has.
And no matter what any child experts will say about setting a good example, me and my four sisters grew up with a very good understanding of what we could and could not say.
“Darn it!” Yeah, that was okay.
“Damn it?” No…not even an option.
So when Buttercup was born, the Hubby and I did are best to start watching our language- like we were supossed to.
He did great.
Me? Not so much.
I was letting “Mother-fuckers” and “shits” and “God Damn Its” slip like they were going out of style when in the privacy of my own home. Out in public I have always been the picture of motherhood. (There goes that image right now, eh?)
It doesn’t help that at 19-months, Buttercup is extremely verbal for her age. She said her first word at four months (Momma) and her first sentence at ten (What’s that?)! And, since I can’t exactly record her first F-bomb for posterity in her baby book, I figured I’d be in good company here.
She sleeps with me most nights, and not too long ago decided to wake me up earlier than usual. As I set her on the floor and proceeded to stretch and groan, I sighed out a sleepy “Ohhhh fuck!”
I was too tired to realize what I had just said until I saw her mirror my stretch, down to the closed eyes and barely audible “Oh fuck!” baby-voiced sigh.
“Oh no, baby!” I quickly said, “Mommy said “luck!”
“Oh fuck,” was my wide-eyed and innocent reply.
So what was I supposed to do? Whatever the appropriate response was (like not swearing in front of her to begin with) I just laughed. Loudly. Badly. And then she joined in.
The funniest part of the whole thing is that for about two weeks after, Buttercup would stretch and sigh out an “oh fuck” to let me know she was tired. I did my best to behave and ignore it, and eventually she stopped. (This provided me with great relief because I am sure this would not have gone over well during a visit at my mother-in-law’s house.)
My friend Sara has an 11-week old baby and as innocent as she looks, she’s got a pretty raunchy mouth, too. Sara keeps asking me when she has to stop swearing and I give her the “appropriate answer” and the “real life answer.”

Appropriate: “In order to provide the best example for Brynn, you need to do your best to curb the bad language now.”
Real Life: Yeah….about that. I’ve got one hell of a story for you.”

 

So maybe my last post read like an entry in Sylvia Plath’s journal before she stuck her head in that oven*. I’m hormonal, dealing with a crabby-as-hell-teething-toddler, and pretty sure I’m going to be pissed off when I get on that Weight Watcher’s scale on tonight. (If I convince myself I didn’t work out this week in order to gain weight for material for my memoir, I might feel better. So let’s just go with “I did it on purpose!” Shall we?)

I had a great time taking Buttercup** to the park last night and watching her have the time of her little life as she went down the slide again and again, but then she went to bed and my night just went to pot.

So I tried writing and got nowhere. I tried reading about writing and got intimidated. And then I tweeted about being intimidated and went to bed with a reason to smile.

@aspiringmama: My ass feels fat, I’m not in the mood to write, and am now doubting the “quality” of my blog posts before I post them. Hormones suck.

@aspiringmama: I hate self-doubt. It’s not good for my muse.

@margieswanson: don’t second guess your blogs! I like them! Looking forward to more!

@aspiringmama: oh thanks! I needed that. self doubt is ruling my night!

@margieswanson: You inspired me to get my butt in gear and get my own set up. That’s were I was for the last hour! Keep writing…

@aspiringmama: you are my hero tonight. thanks.

@margieswanson: no problem…we have to stick together if we are to succeed in getting our stuff out into the world…right?

And this, my friends, is what it’s all about for us writers. We are the most egotistical (I am the best writer E.V.E.R!) and self-doubting (right???) creatures in this world.We are all going to wonder if we have what it takes just as often as we are riding high on the coattails of our own dreams of what will be.

And if we are lucky, we will have connected with other writers who are on the same bumpy ride, willing to slap us out of our bitch-fests and pity-parties  (Get it together, man!) and get us back on track.

Thanks @margieswanson. I think I love you.
;)

______________________________

* What? Too much?

**I’ll let ya know when I figure out what to call my daughter on here. I’m sooo not doing the first name thing.

 

I think I was happier when I was just trying to write my memoir and blindly and naively believed the fact that I don’t totally blow chunks as a writer would be enough to get it published before I’m dead, allowing my grand kids get to reap the benefits of my hard work.

It was kind of nice, you know, to not be so caught up in The Process that my creativity was free enough to just chug along. No stress. No performance anxiety. No self-defeating thoughts stunting the very process I just got going not too long ago.

But I’m no idiot. I knew there was more to the game. If it was just “Writer writes book. Interested and enthusiastic agent falls into writer’s lap. Interested and enthusiastic agent gets writer six-figure book deal. And they all lived happily ever after…” well, then, the process of getting published wouldn’t have turned into its own little niche for those of us without a clue, now would it?

So why exactly am I freaking out? Because I’m only 10k into the memoir and already wondering if it is worth continuing. I’m confident in my writing, but scared shitless of the unknown beyond that. What if I only have what
it takes to write, but not the rest of the know-how expected of today’s authors? It’s like a tree falling in the forest. Did it make a sound if no one else was there to hear it? (Read: If I spend ungodly amounts of time pouring my heart into this project and it never gets published, was it worth the effort?)

Maybe I should have just let myself believe in Santa for a little while longer before flipping the damned reality switch, but I’ve already gone and done it. In between loads of laundry, taking care of The Toddler, and trying to work out so I actually HAVE material about losing weight for my memoir, I added “research proposals, queries, agents, and publishing houses” to my list.

And that’s when I pretty much fucked myself, right then and there.

There’s just too much. There’s not enough. And I don’t know which way is up anymore.

In the past week alone, I have spent hours on Amazon searching through hundreds of titles about how to do this, that, and the other, with every one offering the promise knowledge I don’t currently possess. Well, that’s just fan-fucking-tastic. Because the six I ordered—on topics like writing exercises, how to write autobiographies, and how to feel inadequate because I don’t already know how to do any of these things—are now sitting on my desk and I’m now out 60 bucks and wondering why the hell I’m bothering. (I haven’t read them yet. But I’ll let ya know when I do!)

I am a writer. Always have been. What I want is to be a published author. I’m just wishing I didn’t need to find the Wizard and tap my ruby red slippers to figure out how to get from here to there.

What’s my platform? How do I write a solid query? Whom do I query? What if my query sucks? And don’t even get me started on the proposal! Just thinking about all of that is making me want to grab a pint of Ben & Jerry’s and eat. Lots.

(Note to self: Make sure to chronicle mini binge for memoir should it actually occur. It might make for good reading.)

Here’s a tip from me to you: Write your Great American Novel first before you piss on your own parade. Self-doubt and creativity do not a good pair make.

 

It’s gonna be a no-go on this ghosting project. The client is dead-set on a “partnership,” which pretty much translates into him thinking he can find a writer who will dedicate three solid months to produce a proposal and full manuscript with only a promised 30 percent split of the expected royalties (for the book and movie he  says will happen) as payment.

Sorry, dude. I might be kicking myself later if Brad Pitt leads an all-star cast in the blockbuster, but I have a mortgage that ain’t gonna get paid on a promise.

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