For those of you who agree with Socrates…

…who said that the unexamined life is not worth living…there is hope if you are a writer and choose to examine your life later rather than sooner. Because the fruits of your labor might just be a memoir like that of Janet Groth, whose book The Receptionist: An Education at the New Yorker chronicles the 21 years she spent as a receptionist at the fabled literary magazine…schmoozing, dating, flirting and getting to know all sorts of people like Calvin Trillin and James Thurber.  But she didn’t become a writer until now.  Why not?  

Women had had no assertiveness training — Oprah had yet to appear.  I didn’t have a good grip on where I was going or who I was. I was less able to envision myself storming the citadel than people who were more confident, she said.

I haven’t read her book but I can certainly relate to her sentiment about what took her so long:

I was carving my own path but it was a very slow trip. I was doing it one course at a time, and of course there was a lot of head work that needed shrinking.

A good souffle takes time to fluff up into a lovely tasty thing.  A garden takes awhile to become neatly and beautiful overgrown.  And a good head shrinking? Well, that can take a few decades, can’t it?

Here’s to Janet Groth.  Better late than never I say!

Have a lovely evening.

GM

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/28/fashion/janet-groth-describes-her-life-at-the-new-yorker.html