Chapter 7, Book # 4

A page taken from my writing journal, 9/17/13

Joe and Rosie are at MGH in Boston, heading into the Wang Building. Joe has been to the ER at MGH while on duty many times, but never in the Wang, never up the elevator. He was referred by his PCP to a neurologist, to a "Movement Specialist." Seems like a lot of fuss over a bad knee. But he's going. He's going for Rosie. She made the appointment.

Here we go into the meat of the story, Lisa. It feels like it took a long freakin time to get here, and there is still a long way to go. Keep going the way you're going. I think the thing that has you worried is fitting Katie in. She's essential. The kids need their experience and voice represented in this book. Huntington's Disease is a family disease. It affects everyone, every generation. But how will I give Katie enough to make her important and yet not a distraction? Her story needs to stand alone, and then it needs to find interplay, connection with her dad's story. How will their journeys intersect and impact each other?

I'm not there yet, so all this worrying is about something that hasn't happened yet. Now you are with Joe, and he is at the neurologist at MGH, and that MUST happen no matter what. So go there with him, Lisa, and find out what happens. Be open, be vulnerable. See it, feel it, moment to moment, and infuse it with real information from your research. Tell the truth.
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Published on September 26, 2013 08:50 Tags: huntington-s-disease, lisa-genova
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message 1: by Lydia (new)

Lydia Laceby Lisa, thank you for posting this! As an author, I'm always fascinated by the processes of other authors! The doubts and fears you show, even as such a respected and well read author, have made me feel a bit more normal. And as a reader, I cannot wait to read this! Huntington's ripped through my best friend's family - I've never jumped higher or screamed louder than the day her tests came back negative - and I'm thrilled you're shining light on such a devastating disease.


message 2: by Judy (new)

Judy Yes, thank you so much for posting a journal entry, Lisa. It never ooccured to me to write about my writing process in my journal. I write about everything else, but not about the struggles with the book I've been trying to write forever. I think this outlet might be the catalyst I need to keep going. It's worth a try! Thank you! Looking forward to #4.


message 3: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Lydia wrote: "Lisa, thank you for posting this! As an author, I'm always fascinated by the processes of other authors! The doubts and fears you show, even as such a respected and well read author, have made me f..."

LOL--Normal is overrated! :) And I'm glad my experience helped you feel less alone.

I'm so sorry HD is rampant in your friend's family. And I can imagine your scream--no bigger relief.

xo


message 4: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Judy wrote: "Yes, thank you so much for posting a journal entry, Lisa. It never ooccured to me to write about my writing process in my journal. I write about everything else, but not about the struggles with th..."

Hi Judy! I just today learned that I can respond to comments here. Soooo, how's your writing going? Did journaling about your writing angst help?

xo


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