The young, enthusiastic crew arrived at nine am yesterday, right on time. Within minutes, our house was transformed into a film set, with cords strung along the floor in the living room, bright lights mounted on poles, a camera set up and aimed at a particular spot right next to the fireplace–that would be my spot, precisely marked off with a black square of electrical tape.
It was less than two months ago that my book group encouraged me to make a video. At first I resisted the idea. Too much like blatant self-promotion. And besides, what exactly would we tape? My friend Stephanie gave me a name and a number. “Just call,” she said. “Even if you don’t end up working with this guy, you will like him, and he’ll have some ideas.” If you’ve read Malcolm Gladwell’s book The Tipping Point, you already know about “connectors,” those special people who just seem to know everyone, and who have an extraordinary knack for making friends, remembering acquaintances, and bringing everybody together. That’s Stephanie, a woman with an uncanny ability to expand your vision of what’s possible, and then to put you in touch with exactly the right person to start making things happen in your life. I took the leap, made the call.
Within a week, her friend Chris, a creative director for a smart young company called C3, and I had a deal and a plan: I would write an essay to read in my living room to a group of friends, and he and his team would turn it into a five or six-minute video to distribute online. If we both did our jobs well, we would end up with a short film that would not only get the word-of-mouth going about The Gift of an Ordinary Day, but, even more important, be a means of reaching out and making a connection with other women, and potential readers, in a new way.
For me, making this video meant taking a giant step out of my comfort zone. I wouldn’t have had the courage to take that step without the encouragement of my friends, and the project wouldn’t have happened at all if those very friends hadn’t also been willing to give up their Sunday to come to my house, sip tea, and be my captive, attentive audience for several takes. This is what female friendship is all about. I put the word out weeks ago–date and time. And everybody showed up. My entire book group from Massachusetts drove to New Hampshire, bearing food (and wine for later). My mom came, with her enormous coffee maker and a few loaves of cranberry walnut bread. She brought an old friend, who’s known me since I was five or so. Debbie and Maude and eQuanimiti Joy arrived, and readers instantly recognized them from the pages of the book, glad to meet real characters in the flesh. My sister-in-law and her mother came, as did neighbors from up and down the road, a friend from High Mowing, one of Jack’s friend’s moms. In all, we squeezed 23 women into the living room, and I read aloud to them for forty minutes or so, while the cameras rolled.
Afterwards, the videographer wandered around the house and yard, filming the grass, the sky, the trees, opening cupboards and closets in the kids’ rooms, taking what is known in the film business as “B roll” shots–mood bits that may or may not find their way into the final product. He played his camera across old photos of me and the boys when they were little, old Mother’s Day cards, Henry’s baseball bobble-head collection. “We have enough to be dangerous,” Chris said, as they packed up their gear. Who knows what these hip young men, who dress in black and make a living creating images for brands like Puma and Timberland, will fashion with this raw material–a group of women of a certain age, gathered round on a Sunday morning, to listen to one of their own muse about the swift passage of time and our shifting roles as the children grow up and leave home. I don’t know, but I do feel certain that we’re in good hands.
Till two weeks ago, when he and his business partner Michelle came to hear me read at the Concord Bookshop, Chris had never been to a book reading. “I didn’t even know they existed,” he confessed. Well, till yesterday, I’d never been on film before, either. It is new territory for them and for me, but we are all excited about the possibilities. And we all had a lot of fun getting to know each other, welcoming one another into our respective, very different worlds.
Once the crew and guests had departed, my book group settled in for the rest of the afternoon. We lit a fire in the fireplace, opened the wine, heated up soup, tossed a salad. As we ate our early dinner, we got caught up on one another’s lives and kids, and planned out the rest of our own book-reading year. Books are what brought our group together, ten years ago now, and a love of books is what we have in common. But our lives have become inextricably, and wonderfully, intertwined as well. The stories we tell at “check-in,” about how we’re doing, what we’re struggling with, what we’re celebrating, are as important as any story on the page. And so, month after month and year after year, we dance between literature and life, sharing both, grateful for one another’s good company, insight, and moral support.
In two weeks, my friend Stephanie is moving out of the house where she and her husband raised their two children, into an apartment better suited for her new stage of life as a single empty nester. It’s time, but that doesn’t mean it’s easy. She has a to-do list that’s a mile long, not to mention the emotional upheaval of bringing one huge life chapter to an end and embarking on a new one. She admitted to us that she had decided earlier in the week that there was absolutely no way she could come spend the day in New Hampshire yesterday, given the stresses in her life right now. But then, when she woke up yesterday morning, something hit her: “Wait a minute,” she told herself, “this is the good stuff.” And so, she came. And of course, she was right. A few tears were shed in our group yesterday, many more laughs were laughed, and as everyone put on their coats last night, to head back to Massachusetts, we all reminded Stephanie that all she needs to do is say the word, and any one of us will be there — to help her get the last boxes packed, to drive her stuff from the old place to the new, to do whatever needs doing.
What Stephanie said is exactly right: We owe it to ourselves to show up for the good stuff. And we also owe it to our friends to reach out to them when we need help getting through the hard stuff. It’s all part of life, and it’s all best shared with the people who care about you. Yesterday really was the good stuff. I can’t wait to see what that looks like on film!
Elise says
And you thought Twitter was a big step? Yeeee-IKES! Wow, you were brave!
Judy says
I cant wait to see the film too! And I agree. It is nice to be able to show up for the good stuff. While my house is in a whirlwind of planning, figuring out post high school plans for two of my four kids in the next 18 months, I have been blessed with a humbling task. Almost every day I get to walk next door, sink into a comfy rocking chair, and snuggle my newborn neighbor while her mama takes a shower.
It is a gift to my friend Michelle, who is so new and raw with terror in this new role of mommy, and appreciates the time alone under a hot stream of water. And it is a gift to me, stroking that sweet tiny head that nestles onto my shoulder, leaning back and closing my eyes as I remember what each of my sweet newborns felt like, smelled like.
It is, for a fact, the good stuff. And I am so blessed to have the time to do it.
Good luck with the film and share it as soon as it comes out!
Judy
justonefoot.blogspot.com