My publisher asked me to identify ten quotes from Swimming with Maya for promotional blurbs. OK, I thought to myself, how hard can that be?

But I delayed, blaming it on the demands of the holidays. Finally, on New Year’s Day, I sat down with a hardback copy of my book and began reading.Maya Book Cover

Swimming with Maya is a crisis memoir that plumbs deeply the intense shock, grief, and anger that followed in the wake of my daughter’s accidental death. What I wrote in those pages about events now twenty-years-old continues to move and amaze me.

I read page after page, tears streaming down my cheeks, putting colored paperclips on passages so raw they take me right back to the afternoon Maya died and I made the decision to donate her organs and tissues to people in need.

The last third of the book is about how I healed my grief. Those stories – how I wrote my way, slowly and haltingly, to acceptance, worked out long buried family patterns in therapy, sought out people who inspired me, including the man who received my daughter’s heart – are the light that draws me as a reader.  Of course, I know how the story turns out.  Yet there are moments I’ve forgotten and reading about them makes the experiences alive and fresh again.

Here’s one from Chapter 3: “Maya’s chest rises and falls. The ventilator hisses, the computers beep, fiber optic cable snakes into her skull. I never knew love could be so big, that it could expand to allow even this. I have a premonition of lifelong grief rolling toward me, but I know that, once again, I am being asked to give my daughter her freedom.”

maya-19-bday-004

That was the moment I realized I had no right, nor any power, to hold my daughter here. I had to let her go. I gave in to her coma and ultimate death because they were hers not mine, a destiny I could never have imagined. That moment of surrender marked me for life.

This was not an easy book to write, nor is it easy to read.

So why read it? Is there something to be learned in these pages that is valuable enough to offset the pain?

I believe we read to experience life vividly. Good writing puts us inside the mind and heart of the writer, creating a world we can inhabit, a safe space to vicariously experience another’s life.

Swimming with Maya is vital testimony about how losses can be healed. It was worth writing.  I hope you find it worth reading. A paperback and eBook version will be available early in February from Dream of Things press at http://dreamofthings.com or you can visit the  Amazon website today at http://www.amazon.com/Swimming-With-Maya-Mothers-Discovery/dp/1931868344 for the hardback version.

5 Comments

  1. Sherrey Meyer

    Moving post, Eleanor. I have Madeline Tasky-Sharples for guiding me to it by sharing it on Facebook. The courage it must have taken to write your story leaves me pondering my own writing. It seems shallow now, but I know we each have our own stories to tell, some more tragic than others. You have my best wishes for success following publication.

  2. krpooler

    Dear Eleanor, This beautiful, heartfelt story leaves me in awe of your courage to share your deep loss as well as your own healing. What mother’s heart wouldn’t be touched by your words? Indeed, just from this post I can see where you do “bring the reader into your mind and heart” I will definitely be including your memoir on my to-be-read list. Thank you so much for sharing from your heart.

    • Eleanor Vincent

      Thank you, Kathy. The updated version of the book comes out early in February from Dream of Things.

  3. bakingnotwriting

    Great post!!!! Moving, compelling, heart-wrenching — and a sales pitch. Who could ask for more? Happy New Year to you and fruitful books sales. 🙂

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