Alison Hodgson

Expert on the etiquette of perilous times.

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Book Review

March 15, 2012 by Alison Hodgson Leave a Comment

photo: Sandi Gunnett

I reviewed “The Fire of the Word: Meeting God on Holy Ground” on The Englewood Review.

It was one of the books that has been a stepping stone in mourning the fire.

Check out my review here.

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Breathe 2012

January 21, 2012 by Alison Hodgson 1 Comment

I’ve mentioned before that I’m a member of a writer’s group called The Guild.  Long time readers know that we host an annual writer’s conference called Breathe.  My friend, Andrew, blogged about planning for next year’s conference and I liked how he compared it to writing in general.

Here’s the link to Andrew’s post.

 

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What We Don’t Say

January 6, 2012 by Alison Hodgson 2 Comments

I am inviting you into a big conversation.  I want to talk about how we support each other, and how we fail.  It’s embarrassing, because we are all, or have been at one time (or fifty) stupid people with good intentions.


I will be telling you several of my own cringe inducing stories including my ridiculous responses to others’ heartbreaks and, sadly, I was trying so hard to do and say the right thing.


It’s a big conversation.  And I really want it to be a conversation, if any of you are willing.  Through a series of difficult experiences I have been given a strange education in how to be supportive in various hard times but I am not an expert and we’re talking about people so it’s going to be subjective anyway.


Yesterday I said, in most cases, nothing needs to be said in the face of suffering.  I intended to say more and decided to save it for another time, so I realize now I did say something I didn’t intend, by not saying it fully.  A friend commented:


All of us can use encouragement at one time or another. If it’s someone you don’t know intimately, it’s hard to know how to give encouragement so that it won’t be taken amiss. We struggled with infertility for a number of years. Lots of friends and family meant well…but their words to us didn’t always mean what they hoped it would. They tried because they knew we were struggling. I would have been disappointed had they not even tried to encourage us.


Jeremy is so gracious, “…their words didn’t always mean what they hoped…”  


I can imagine.  


And he makes an important point.  A friend of mine was devastated when a close, close friend said NOTHING after the death of my friend’s father.  She kept waiting and it really became a big thing for her that her friend said NOTHING.


So there are errors of omission and commission.  


And I really hesitate to say errors, because that just sets up the whole performance aspect and I want to deactivate that bomb.  And yet that desire is really at the heart of it.


So I want to talk about intentions.  I am being charitable when I say “good intentions” since my assertion is that, many times, our intentions aren’t good enough.  Mine too, which is where the humiliating stories come in and you can see what I thought my intentions were, the actions I took and what I know now.  Blech.


Ultimately it isn’t about what we say or even what we do.  It’s how we are.  


When my father died, one of my sister’s school friends dropped off a meal for our family.   When I came to the door, he handed me the food and we briefly spoke.  I don’t remember what he said or what he brought us.    I can’t tell you if he actually articulated, “I am so sorry for your loss” but everything about him did.  And I’ve never forgotten that.

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First Christmas

December 22, 2011 by Alison Hodgson 3 Comments

One of the good things about having someone burn down your house is that it gives one an appreciation for home.  This is our first Christmas back in the new house.  
Thanks to my friend Jane who, a couple days after the fire, asked my sister and brother-in-law to climb in the rafters of the wreckage to look for our ornaments.  (I don’t recommend this unless, like us, you have relatives who are equal parts dare devil and mountain goat.) Astonishingly the Rubbermaid totes, tucked in the eaves of the side of the attic that remained, survived.  They were melted a bit and suffused with smoke but we were able to salvage a few of our Christmas things including all of the kids’ “Baby’s First Christmas” ornaments.
Christopher
Lydia

And Eden in the little tree at the bottom.

Every year we do a candy advent calendar for the kids.  Of course we lost ours in the fire and I didn’t manage to replace it last year.  When I hadn’t found one by Thanksgiving this year, Eden started cracking the whip.  The paper one to the right is the one she and Paul found the evening of November 30th.  I picked up this cute little gingerbread house a few weeks ago at Kohl’s that has room for her older brother and sister to have a little treat too and she gets to double dip.
You would never know we lost almost all our decorations a year ago.  Some things did survive and I did go into major replacement before last Christmas, and then my mom, who makes Martha Stewart 
look like a slacker, downsized and now it’s as if Christmas threw up in my living room.  It’s a little hard to see from this picture but there’s a flash mob in front of the creche.  The other bookcase is equally burdened with miniature houses and trees that I just set there after Eden emptied all our Christmas boxes onto the floor the day we got the tree. I’m going to pack up everything on these shelves and reassess next year.

Sorting through my mom’s things, I can across a bag of mirrored spheres.  I don’t usually have plates of bowls of decorative things on the table, but miniature disco balls need to be displayed.  They catch the light and reflect it all over the ceiling.

It’s a simple delight.

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The Guild Reads

December 19, 2011 by Alison Hodgson 1 Comment

I am the grateful member of a writer’s group called “The Guild”.  The founding members named it with tongues in cheeks as a rif on traditional Ladies’ guilds which practice the more domestic arts.

We meet monthly and try to have at least one retreat annually (We’re overdue, Ladies!).  In December we have a little party called the “Christmas Tea” despite the fact that it’s always in the evening and tea is never served.
Who hosts shifts from year to year, but what remains unchanging is good food and great books.  We always have potluck and a gift exchange that is entirely, and appropriately, books.  We draw numbers and choose in order, with the next Guilder having the option to steal or choose another.  As we gather before the pile of wrapped books it’s the closest I ever get to that feeling I had as a child on Christmas morning.  I almost always find myself clapping involuntarily.
Every year I carefully choose the book I give.  It’s a point of pride that I introduced the group to Dodie Smith’s (the writer of “One Hundred and One Dalmations”) “I Capture the Castle”.  Another year I gave the Penguin Classic edition of Elizabeth Gaskell’s “Cranford”  another year I found a hardcover of the first American edition of “I Capture the Castle” and gave that.  
This year I am hosting.  The party is tomorrow night and I can’t wait.  I thought I had everything ready to go, nothing requiring a last minute trip to the store, when it occurred to me that I haven’t yet bought or even decided on my book.
!!!
I’ve flatlined and need some help.

Normally, I would look on my own shelves for inspiration, but my personal library has been adversely affected by arson.

What’s a great book you would recommend?

* Image borrowed from Jana Riess’ post on holiday books which I am going to re-peruse for some ideas.

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