The Ethics of Writing Hard Things in Family Memoir (2024)

On a bright afternoon this past March, I walked to the front of a conference room in downtown Seattle and sighed with disappointment. Our AWP panel, “Motherlode: The Tripwire of Writing Real Family,” had been placed in room 329, large and lovely, except for the view through the giant wall of glass that would be the backdrop to anyone looking at our table of panelists. What they would see behind us: the gaping steel and shredded plastic mouth of a high-rise under construction.

It was unclear to me whether this building was being built up or torn down; what matters is the skeleton was visible, the heavy posts driving through the wall-less span stitching each individual floor together, the ugly orange and brown of metal left open to the elements. White plastic sheets billowed dramatically in the wind, like the slimy shower curtains in my old high school gym, never big enough to afford actual privacy.

There was the blue and white porta potties in the corner, the soon-to-be doors framed out in 2x4s, the thick wads of electric lines and plumbing, a body cleaved open to show its internal workings without the decency or protection of its rigid exoskeleton. As much as they’d tried to shield it, the guts of the building were visible, exposed for everyone in the conference room to see.

It occurred to me that this was what writing a family memoir feels like.

We’d come together that day to talk about just this: issues of exposure and protection, particularly of our children, in our pages. How do we, as mothers and writers, pull the plastic sheet so that it covers enough? And who, more importantly, determines when it is, in fact, enough? The children? The reader? The writer herself?

*

There are a handful of pages in my forthcoming book, The Leaving Season: A Memoir in Essays, that still keep me up at night. I went back and forth with one essay in particular that details an experience with Child Protective Services visiting my home. The event that triggered the visit occurred outside of our house, but CPS still came to our apartment because that is where the children lived. The investigator counted my smoke alarms, looked inside my refrigerator, my cupboards, as it that would magically tell her something integral about my family. Does my store brand-cereal make my children less safe?

There is no male comp category for “mother writers”; they are just writers.

But the essay is not about CPS; the essay is about ethics, and art, and ambition, and the blurred lines between being an artist-parent versus a parent-artist, if there ever can truly be a difference.

For a period, I tried to edit out the CPS details from the essay, but the rest of the story didn’t hold together. For another period, I held the book in my hands without that essay included, but it felt like in many ways I’d written the entire book just so I could have the courage and distance to write that very essay, and not including it felt like a cop-out. One that only I would ever know about, but one I would not ever be able to unknow.

*

Back at the Motherlode panel, with the guts of the building stripped bare behind us for all to see, Sonora Jha talked about the power of playing with gaze, how different it felt to write from a man’s point of view in her novel, The Laughter, as opposed to her own in How to Raise a Feminist Son: A Memoir & Manifesto. She disclosed that after her memoir was published, she experienced fallout from people who chided her for exposing some of the men in her book, such as her ex-husband. This felt completely wrong-headed to her, she shared. “Instead of asking me to change, to keep quiet and protect these men, how about we ask the f*cking world to change?” The room erupted into applause.

Her answer to that question was the book she wrote, which detailed her life as a mother to a boy who she quickly realized would one day become a man. She detailed these other models of men, and their effects, so that her son could know there was another way. By the time she wrote this book, her son was not a child any longer. She was able to share parts with him before publication and he was able to draw boundaries about what how and if he wanted to participate, on the page and off. But he did not ask her not to write her story. Because he understood that, even though he was on the page—in the title, even!—ultimately it was hers alone.

Even that doesn’t feel exactly correct. In nonfiction, the narrator is a version of you, but is not completely you—that would be impossible, even if one tried. The same is true when I write my children on the page. They are changing so quickly; one day, recently, my oldest son was simply taller than me. I understood this must have occurred gradually, centimeter by centimeter, but it still took me by complete surprise. I don’t know the date he stopped being shorter than me; I felt like one day I was looking down into his sweet face, and now, for the rest of my life, I will be looking up. My point of view has shifted. And so has his.

*

On a recent evening this past month, I sat in a church listening to Maggie Smith and Leslie Jamison have a gorgeous discussion about craft to celebrate Smith’s publication of You Could Make This Place Beautiful. The night truly was as perfect as the subsequent NY Times story made it seem, until the audience questions, when a man (perhaps the only man in the entire audience) asked about her decision to deploy her children on the page.

Smith quietly laughed before answering. “Deploying? That makes it sound like I’m sending them to war.” She talked about the inextricability of her parenting and writing. “I spend so much more time parenting than I do writing,” she said. She was always with her children; it would feel disingenuous to not include them. She was trying to cleave as closely to the truth as possible in this book. The children were integral to her experience of the divorce, and so including them helped her get closer to the truth of it all, which was her goal.

She talked about Hidden Mother Photography, the old practice of a mother sitting draped in black and holding still with an infant in their outstretched arms, in effort to erase the presence of the mother from the resulting photo. Instead, you end up with this ghost baby, disembodied and floating, and in most of the examples I could find, the mother’s outline was clearly there anyway, like some poorly executed Halloween costume.

Who, more importantly, determines when it is, in fact, enough? The children? The reader? The writer herself?

This was how I felt when I tried to erase the hardest parts out of my essay, tried to erase the essay out of my book. Its absence left an awkward imprint. I could still see the hidden mother there. Everybody would still be able to see the outline of fear it left behind.

“I don’t want to drape either one of us under a black sheet,” Smith told the man.

*

At the panel that afternoon, Rebecca Woolf, author of All of This: A Memoir, posed this question to the audience. “Did you ever have a diary? And was that diary pink and did it come with a little lock and key?” There were murmurs of solidarity in the audience—yes, most of us had versions of this small book when we were kids. “I only recently came to understand that while I used to think that lock was there for my protection, to protect my secrets, I now understand that the lock was there to protect everyone else,” Woolf said. “These are designed to protect the world from the truths of women.”

Woolf’s memoir tightrope-walks through wanting a divorce, to the diagnosis and swift and difficult death of her husband, to the emotional, physical, and sexual reawakening that follows. I hate writing that word—reawakening—and yet, I can say from experience that this is exactly how it feels. Something was shelved, and then that something was revived. Have you ever watched a freeze-dried porcini re-plump in a shallow dish of water? The process can be unpleasant, unbeautiful, messy and awkward. It was this ungainly mixture—of motherhood and desire—that seemed to evoke distaste in some of her readers when the book came out.

At many of her events, Woolf shared, she would be asked what her children thought about her memoir, about her choices to write so explicitly about the difficult parts of her marriage and the explosion of desire and freedom that came after her husband’s death knowing that they might one day read it. She found this bananas. “They lived it with me,” she said. “It wasn’t a secret.”

She found it offensive, she said, that people presumed she was such a terrible mother that she had not carefully considered all these questions before choosing to write and publish this book, had not cut out pages and pages of material already. For the record, she shared, her teenage daughter chose her as the subject of a school paper this year, which was to write about her hero.

At our best, memoirists hope it is silence we are breaking, and not another person.

Before our panel, we’d met for coffee to prepare, and this was the first topic that was raised: each of the writers on this panel had been asked publicly and relentlessly what their children/ex-husband/family thought about their books. Another of our Motherlode panelists, Joanna Rakoff, author of the memoir My Salinger Year, had just published an essay on Oprah Daily about leaving her first husband, and found this doubly true. “Do we ask these questions of men?,” she said pointedly. There is no male comp category for “mother writers”; they are just writers.

*

In the end, after multiple rounds of revision, I included the CPS essay in my book, with a note to the reader at the end that said: I attempted to write this essay many times without including our experience with Child Protective Services. At first, I thought my reluctance was the result of shame, but it soon became clear that I was not including this part of the story out of fear—fear of disclosure and judgment, of course, but also fear of opening myself and my family to the possibility of that terrifying knock on the door again. I decided to include this experience here for exactly that reason—so many of the incredibly brave and brilliant parents I spoke to in researching this essay have been cowed by a system designed to make us think it is our families that are broken when, in fact, it is the system itself that requires repair.

I wrote these words before the Motherlode panel, but I recognized the same sentiment in Rebecca’s locked pink diary, in Maggie’s pushing against the shroud, in Joanna’s core question, and in Sonora’s plea: let’s use our words as the shield instead of silence.

*

The view behind us that day did not disrupt the panel; indeed, in all the photos I have from that day, the construction is not even noticeable because of the angle of the photographers. The point of view excised the monster behind us.

I thought about this panel again last week while sitting in the back of a dim auditorium and listening to the poet Phillis Levin speak about her work as a poet. I’d been staring at the shocking pink of a blossoming dogwood tree just outside the one wide window in the room, thinking how out of place it looked against the staid academic browns and yellows inside, when she said, “Being a poet is violence in the same way spring is a violence; the violence of creation.”

The reminder that the creation—of a building, of a bud bursting forth, of a memoir—requires the breaking of something. It is safe inside—inside this auditorium, inside that conference room. At our best, memoirists hope it is silence we are breaking, and not another person. At our worst, we create anyway, knowing it will.

*

Our final panelist, Jane Wong, was not a mother herself, but wrote about her mother. She opened the hour by pulling out her mother’s dictionary and reading aloud some notes her mother had scrawled inside the cover as she was learning English. Jane built poetry from the words, and her love for her mother sang out into the audience.

When I later read Jane Wong’s memoir, Meet Me in Atlantic City, it occurred to me that my children might one day write their own memoir. Even though it feels to me like they don’t remember much of their childhood, I understand that the difference is that they don’t remember my version of their childhood. The parts I deemed the important scenes, that I observed from my perch as the central narrator. But I already know how quickly that POV can flip; one day you are looking down into the sweet face, and the next, and every day after, you are not.

My younger son was asked recently to write a travel narrative for school. The assignment required 10 pages and his teacher called me concerned after he handed in his first draft because he’d written to page nine and was still in the airport. But that’s the thing: it turns out, to him, the airport was the destination. What would have been one paragraph in my essay—because I’ve been in dozens of airports and have stopped seeing them at this point—was the entire story to him because it had been his first. He wrote details about packing, about the smell of the cab we took to the airport, about the magic of his blow-up neck pillow, even about the polka dots on the luggage straps I’d struggled to tie around his little suitcase; I’d forgotten about all these things until I read his pages.

And I found myself in his story, an undescribed character herding everybody along. My name was just Mom. I was not the center of the story, but I was there, because I am always there. And I recognized myself, even unnamed.

I don’t know if, when my children are older, they will recognize themselves in my pages, if they ever choose to read them. But I hope they know that although this is my story, this is not the only story. And that I look forward to them going out into the world and making their own.

____________________________

The Ethics of Writing Hard Things in Family Memoir (1)

Kelly McMasters’s memoir, The Leaving Season, is available now.

divorceKelly McMastersLeslie JamisonMaggie SmithmemoirmotherhoodRebecca WoolfSonora JhaThe Leaving Season: A Memoir in Essayswriting


Kelly McMasters

Kelly McMasters is the author of The Leaving Season and Welcome to Shirley, an Orion Book Award finalist, and coeditor of the anthologies Wanting: Women Writing About Desire and This Is the Place: Women Writing About Home, a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice. Her essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times, the Atlantic, the Washington Post Magazine, and the Paris Review Daily. A former bookshop owner, she teaches at Hofstra University and lives in New York.

The Ethics of Writing Hard Things in Family Memoir (2024)

FAQs

Can someone sue you for writing about them in your memoir? ›

Yet we can make some educated guesses as to who they're referring to, which means changing names isn't a fool-proof shield you can rely on. If someone is in fact easily identified in your memoir, they can still sue successfully for libel or invasion of privacy even if you've changed their name and a few details.

What are the rules for writing a memoir? ›

How To Start A Memoir
  1. Beginning A Story At The End. ...
  2. Write the Opening Last. ...
  3. Make Your First Paragraph The Best. ...
  4. Make Them Laugh From The Beginning. ...
  5. Establish A Personal Relationship With Your Reader From The Start. ...
  6. Be Honest To The Readers. ...
  7. Make It Relevant. ...
  8. Think As A Fiction Writer Does.

How do you write a painful memoir? ›

Here's how to go about writing those painful memories.
  1. Alternate dark and light. Writing down hurtful memories can be cathartic, but it's important to go easy on yourself. ...
  2. Share your secrets slowly. Putting secrets out there will help you grow. ...
  3. Talk back to self-criticism. ...
  4. Consider all perspectives.
May 14, 2022

Why would writing a memoir be rewarding and difficult? ›

Memoir is difficult, yes, but it's just as transformational, perhaps for exactly the same reasons it is so difficult. It's personal. It's universal. The universe is made up of stories – and it takes a huge amount of work to examine your own, and write them out, objectively.

What should you not do in a memoir? ›

7 Common Mistakes in First-Time Memoir
  • Confusing Memoir with Autobiography. Writing a memoir is not the same as writing an autobiography. ...
  • Telling a Story Already Told. ...
  • Shoehorning Several Books into One. ...
  • Confusing Memoir with Journaling. ...
  • Overdoing the Family History. ...
  • Chronology Mismanagement. ...
  • Writing Libel.
Sep 17, 2019

Do you need permission to write about someone in a memoir? ›

For example when the person's estate has an existing legal foothold on the use of their name and likeness. However, if the subject isn't a public figure – be it alive or deceased – you likely will need to obtain consent from them (or their family) prior to writing about them.

How do you write a memoir without being sued? ›

How Not to Get Sued for Your Memoir
  1. Change names and identifying details. ...
  2. Show the people you're writing about what you've written. ...
  3. Write what happened and edit out what needs to be removed later. ...
  4. Get clear about what you stand to lose. ...
  5. Get your manuscript professionally vetted.

Why you should write a memoir even if nobody will read it? ›

Preserve your memories

Most people who approach me about writing their memoirs do so because they want to preserve their memories, knowledge, and life experiences so their friends, family, colleagues, and communities can always have a piece of them when everything is said and done.

Can you write a memoir about someone else's life? ›

Writing another person's memoir can be called writing biography rather than memoir. You are, after all, not the subject.

How do you end a personal memoir? ›

End your memoir by telling your readers what you learned from this experience. (2) Write a memoir in which you explore your relationship with another member of your family. Choose an event or series of events that could illustrate that relationship and explore its tensions.

How to write a trauma memoir? ›

6 Tips To Help You Write About Trauma In Your Memoir
  1. One: Trauma is a response, not an identity. ...
  2. Two: Make yourself an active agent in the story. ...
  3. Three: Distinguish between catharsis and resolution. ...
  4. Four: It's okay to leave some things out. ...
  5. Five: Timing is everything. ...
  6. Six: Don't force a happy ending.

What makes a powerful memoir? ›

Readers want to know more about you through your memoir, and vivid details make it so much easier for them to remember who you are and what you believe in. A powerful memoir conveys honesty and integrity. This is because readers will sense your true essence when you write your genuine feelings on paper.

How do you know if a memoir is good? ›

A good memoir will have an inherent purpose, a valuable takeaway message or a blueprint to help someone improve an aspect of their lives. Surprisingly, many successful memoirs are written by everyday people and not celebrities.

Can a memoir be written about someone else? ›

What is a Good Memoir Topic? Here is some shocking news: When writing memoir about someone else, your topic is not the person. Your topic is a large, universal theme that will make others want to read about that other person in the context of that theme in your piece or in the book you write.

Can you sue someone for writing about your life? ›

Yes. However, it is a balancing between the filmmaker's or author's First Amendment Freedom of Speech and the subject's individual rights. Everyone has the right to not have their reputation defamed. And everyone has a right to privacy – the right to not have your personal matters intruded upon.

Can you write a biography about someone without their permission? ›

Q: Do I need permission to write about somebody, living or dead? A: Permission is technically not required if the biography subject is/was a public figure, unless their estate has created a kind of legal fortress. There are rare cases in which permission must be obtained before sharing any likeness or representation.

Can you be sued for writing an unauthorized biography? ›

Unauthorized biographies of people who are not deemed public figures may be considered violations of the right to privacy and subject to legal action.

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