A guest post by Angela DeRosa
I became a social worker the day I closed David Copperfield after reading it the summer before turning 12. The propensity was there at an
earlier age but Charles Dickens set my course. Strong sayings, but my viewpoint is constantly reinforced,
and never so much as by Dawn Potter, my long time friend. She and I met over a
piece she read on MPBN for Veterans Day nearly 20 years ago. I found her in the
phone book and called to see if I could visit. We connected over the phone, she pregnant, and me with a 2
year old. I arrived for our first visit with a paper bag full of clean, used
diapers! That
has somehow become a metaphor for our relationship, the world of literature and
intellectualism always balanced by kids, leaky faucets, flat tires and all the
other day-to-day things that make up a life.
Psychologists at the New School for Social Research recently
published a study headed by Emanuele Castana. He told USA Today that literary fiction “forces you as a reader to
contribute your own interpretations, to reconstruct the mind of the character.”
I will go further and say without hesitation that fiction ultimately shows you
the universality of human experience. Whether reading Things Fall
Apart by Chinua Achebe or Pride
and and Prejudice by Jane Austen we can begin to see that our
own feelings, struggles, and indeed, desperations, are the same the world over.
How liberating for the 15 year old weeping over the first lost love, the 20
year old mortified by the rejection of a piece of art, the 30 year old unable
to get pregnant, the old man dying in a hospital bed remembering his days at
the ocean with his wife. How comforting, even if in the moment of suffering the
profound aloneness of the individual can barely be bridged!
This connecting with characters from other times and places
gives us solitary humans the feeling that we are part of something bigger and
that inherently we are not alone in this big wide universe. The ability see
into ourselves becomes easier, as does the dawning of empathy, of forgiveness.
Conventional wisdom exhorts us to change. I say understand: understand who we are,
and use what we have. These bold statements are not
hyperbole. They reflect a lifetime of reading and thinking and understanding
that have grown from those early days when the trials of David Copperfield
became my own.
Angela is a social worker, counselor, reader of novels, and friend extraordinaire who lives with master canoe builder Steve Cayard off the grid in Wellington, Maine.
5 comments:
This made me cry. Wonderful. Thanks for sharing, Dawn.
Lovely post.
Having just listened to Fresh Air's Terry Gross, interviewing blogger "Hyperbole and A Half," broach the subject of Allie Brosh's bouts with suicidal depression, I loved reading your friend Angela's "bold statements" this afternoon with references to New School psychologists' recent research concerning the force field of literary fiction -- a metaphor and a whole.
Anybody else want to write a guest post? This seems to have been a success!
Richard,
A metaphor and a whole will forever more be in my bag of hyperbole. I love it!
Angela
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