Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Book

I never wanted to write a book about myself. I don't think I'm that interesting, I don't think I'm worthy. Perhaps one day when I'll accomplish something extraordinary I'll earn a right to write and publish my memoirs. Don't discount me yet, I'm a body of progress. Yes, I have a story- but so does everybody else. Each of our lives is a fascinating journey. No one's is better than the others. Yet, everyone these days seems to be writing a book. Some people even write books about their experiences with books written by other people. I remember reading about a man who followed every advice from Oprah Winfrey's guide to a better life and then published a volume of his own. Recently I watched a segment about a woman who followed Martha Stewart's tips for a year and then decided it's interesting enough to share it with an audience. Yes, I could write a book about how my parents fought hard, against the communist system to make me better. Or about what it's like to have this disability and be in a wheelchair all day. But then, I have long struggled to have Cerebral Palsy not be the one thing that defines me. If I'm ever worthy of a book, it will be because of what I accomplish, not because of who and what I am. I see a growing trend among people with disabilities to sit down and publish their stories- printed books, e-books, you name it. Everybody is writing something, but just because you have been through something it doesn't mean it needs to end up on coffee tables. I don't think I'm special, I'm just living my life. I don't think I'm unique- I have Cerebral Palsy and I think I'm making the best out of a situation I didn't choose for myself. I think in general people write too much and don't read enough. And then- they don't simply live enough. Live for themselves, rather than looking for a crazy new literature ideas.

Yet, when Andrew Sutton asked me about extracting some of my blogposts for a book  about Conductive Education, my years in Budapest and the aftermath- I agreed. I will not be writing a new book to boost my ego. This will be a collection of my musings on rehabilitation, growing up with Cerebral Palsy and what I remember from my childhood- things I have already written. He sees value in bringing it to a larger audience- while I wouldn't think of  it myself. As I go back and forth on my blog between my childhood and adulthood  and how they're connected, they have selected about a quarter, a third of my writings for the publication through Conductive Education Press in the UK. My posts were never a journal- I jump through time, themes and concepts often within a single text and I'm not sure how they will be able to put it together to have a coherent narrative or a flow. My blog is never simply about one thing or another. Sometimes I write about things that don't go well with anything else. One day it's about my childhood. The other - about something that happened on the street, the statement I'm making, the idea that I got on a walk or the coffee maker that I bought. Yet, through my years of rehabilitation, what it was then, what means now and I have reflected on it I've gained a perspective that perhaps parents of children with Cerebral Palsy can find useful. Because nobody ever thinks about what it's like to be the child. I also thought about to what extent can you separate those aspects of my story from everything else. Would you still have an undistorted picture without all the context that makes me who I am? Will people understand me and can it be a compelling read? The Conductive Education Press will provide only slight editing to the material. I'm a bit curious how one can make it work. Currently at 40 thousand words it's expected to include pictures and other artifacts from my life. It's not a biography. Just a collection of pieces of mind, memories, opinions at the time they were written. Some concepts I've revisited and restated when I wanted to make sure some ideas came across properly. My first proper book. It's expected to come out later this year around the time of the Conductive Education World Congress. James Klausner, my former boss, an old friend has agreed to write a preface. I'd have to write the introduction. All I'm missing now- is a title.My readers who have been with me for the last two years- do you have any suggestions as to what the title should be?

4 comments:

  1. I am looking forward to seeing it published, Ralph.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ralph, I like the name of your blog , it would be good as the title followed by a sub-heading -

    "Lawyer on wheels...
    ...from the desk of R. Strzalkowski, Esq."

    then a sub heading, something that catches your eye from the first pages of the book -
    I picked these two out of this recent posting -

    "Lawyer on wheels...
    ...from the desk of R. Strzalkowski, Esq."

    'My musings on rehabilitation'.
    OR

    "Lawyer on wheels...
    ...from the desk of R. Strzalkowski, Esq."

    'A collection of pieces of mind, memories and opinions'


    I think that this posting is part way to being your introduction to the book!

    Looking forward to seeing it all in book form.

    Best wishes

    Susie

    ReplyDelete
  3. Unfortunately I can not be considered one of your old readers, and the truth is that this is your first blog I read, but as someone who is studying to be a conductor it sounds like a book i would really love to read. I'm sure it will be interesting and useful not only for parents of children with CP but also for professionals and surely conductors.

    All the best,
    ketty, Israel.

    P.S. Sorry, but I have no good suggestion to a title ....Good Luck!

    ReplyDelete