i'm curious how the process of writing this while your mamma's slipping into this world, while you're also really trying to make conscious choices about how do i want to raise my daughter in the world that we're living in? You've got a daughter now, too. I wonder if that was to sort of lay constantly on your mind, and maybe still is constantly on your mind. And yes, part of what i learned is that we can let go, and that doesn't mean failure. And we can let go. So, you know, my mother is now in an assisted living facility where i wish i could go back and tell myself this, but she is happier there
Simultaneously parenting her daughter while caring for a mom who was vanishing into dementia, Maya Shanbhag Lang, found herself reexamining nearly every part of her life, and reimagining how she wanted to tell her own story to her daughter. May's writing has been featured in The Washington Post, In Style, The Millions, and The Rumpus, among others. Her book, The Sixteenth of June was long-listed for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, was an Audie Award Finalist for Best Audio Book. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. A passionate teacher, she loves working with aspiring writers. Her new memoir is What We Carry. (https://amzn.to/3fqyo2Q)
You can find Maya Shanbhag Lang at:
Website : http://www.mayalang.com/
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/mayaslang/
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