The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Side 27

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Side 27
SPRING /SUMMER 1995 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 137 Comack: I think it’s true, as you say, “Women live someone else’s script and see themselves through someone else’s eyes.” You say a diary may help them find them- selves. “You may see a pattern in your life, a path of your soul and maybe a dim out- line of yourself.” You keep a diary. Have you found yourself? Wylie: Shortly after I was widowed and had started to write, someone said to me, “Bettyjane, I think you’ve found yourself.” I said, “I never thought I was lost.” It’s true that a diary does centre you. I quoted Alice Roller in my book, Between the Lines, be- cause there were two women who deliber- ately set in on an inner journey to discover what they were all about and she said, “Af- ter this time analyzing and going into my inner self, nobody is ever going to tell me something about myself that I don’t already know.” I think that’s it — it’s a self-aware- ness. Instead of taking other people’s script, instead of being your parent’s daughter, your husband’s wife and your children’s mother, you have your own script. You are yourself. You’ve established that, although you have those obligations to the people that you love and you are happy to carry them out, you still have a real identity of your own. Comack: Do you have another book in mind? Wylie: I have another book coming out in the fall. I’ve started writing dramatic, po- etic monologues based on some of the dia- rists I couldn’t get out of my mind. I see it as essentially theatrical for people to per- form — and as I’ve been writing them, I’ve been performing them. But Blackmoss Press is going to publish them as a collec- tion of poetry. It will be out in the fall and I will be coming back with that. It's called The Better Half. I’ve just signed a contract to do a new screenplay with a partner and co-writer and I have to finish The Treatment. You always have to try for whatever the next thing is. Comack: You refer to writing diaries as “spinning” or “weaving” but I especially like your comparing them to “crazy quilts, full of bits and pieces, created by happenstance and using whatever was in the rag box.” Betty Jane Wylie’s books are the kind you want to read again and again and to keep and mark up as she does with the diaries she collects. I doubt that any one of her eight grandchildren has any understanding of how many people’s lives have been affected by the profound and informative writings of that dear “amma who lives in the woods. ”

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