What we wish were true Reflections on nurturing life and facing death

Tallu Schuyler Quinn

Book - 2022

"Profound essays on nurturing life while facing a terminal diagnosis, from the dedicated humanitarian and young mother whose writings The New York Times called "nothing less than a master class in how to be fully human". "I am holding both my hope and my grief together in the same hands. It is a loose hold, looser than I am accustomed to. My love is so much bigger than me." Nonprofit leader and minister Tallu Schuyler Quinn has spent her adult life working to alleviate hunger, systemic inequality, and food waste, first as a volunteer throughout the United States and abroad, and then as the founder of the Nashville Food Project, where she supported the vibrant community work of local food justice in Middle Tennessee.... That all changed just after her fortieth birthday, when she was diagnosed with stage IV glioblastoma, an aggressive form of terminal brain cancer. In What We Wish Were True, Quinn achingly grapples with the possibility of leaving behind the husband and children she adores, and what it means to live with a terminal diagnosis and still find meaning. "I think about how my purpose may be the same in death as it continues to be in life-surrendering to the hope that our weaknesses can be made strong, that what is broken can be made whole," she writes. Through gorgeous prose, Quinn masterfully weaves together the themes of life and death by integrating spiritually nourishing stories about family, identity, vocational call, beloved community, God's wide welcome, and living with brain cancer. Taken together, these stunning essays are a piercing reminder to cherish each moment, whether heartbreaking or hilarious, and cast loose other concerns. As a mother, a kindred spirit, and a dear friend, Tallu Schuyler Quinn looks into our eyes with well-earned tears in her own and tells us the bittersweet truth: We are all searching for what has already found us-present and boundless love. This love will deliver us and never let us go"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Essays
Published
New York : Convergent, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Tallu Schuyler Quinn (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"Many of the essays in this work originally appeared in slightly different form on Tallu Schuyler Quinn's blog at www.caringbridge.org/visit/talluquinn, in 2020 and 2021."
Physical Description
xiii, 192 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-190).
ISBN
9780593442906
  • The meadow
  • Angels in the architecture
  • Ordained by something else
  • Lemons in the lunchbox
  • The things they carried
  • The gift of a good name
  • Filling up that kind of empty
  • Up here on the shore
  • A sleepy loop
  • Knowing what you want
  • So what
  • Becoming bread
  • Cinnamon soup
  • Leftover spaghetti
  • A little more time
  • The owl and the pussycat
  • Hair
  • Rats
  • The sugar on top
  • Bones
  • Blessings brightly lit
  • Watermark
  • Ordinary rituals
  • A new knot
  • Chickenman
  • Drinking the poison
  • Our thin veneer
  • Table in the wilderness
  • Only half alone
  • Living with a body
  • Someone up close
  • Going back to God
  • That hard way
  • Inside all this heartache
  • May the road rise to meet you
  • The salmon
  • Larkspur
  • Hale, hallowed, holy
  • Normal days
  • A loose hold
  • As if
  • Hugs and kisses for the journey
  • The forest and the clearing
  • Without dreams
  • In you and among you
  • A deep yes
  • Some of what it might be like.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this devastating debut memoir, food justice activist Quinn recounts life with an incurable brain cancer. Quinn was diagnosed in 2020 at age 40 and tells of losing her ability to read and her "iconic" blond hair to cancer, meditating on what it means to die and leave behind her husband and two young children: "I am understanding that facing my own death requires an active release and deep letting go of nearly all I hold dearest." Quinn also reflects on her lifetime of activism, beginning with a missionary trip to alleviate food poverty in Nicaragua and culminating in her founding a nonprofit that prepares and distributes meals in Nashville, Tenn.: "For years, I was wrestling with God and with myself about my purpose and place and role, and here it was before me all the while... to grow, to cook, and most important, to share." The author writes movingly and candidly, and her theological reflections exude a deep pathos with the power to move readers to tears: "God is everywhere, for alone is a myth." This exquisite memento mori will speak to those grieving a loss of any kind. Agent: Margaret Riley King, WME. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lyrical, searching meditation on terminal illness. "Maybe death is not the worst thing?" So a friend asked Quinn, a thought that led her to ponder what might be worse--or better. Diagnosed with glioblastoma, a once-rare but increasingly common form of brain cancer, the author places her illness in the context of 2020, when bad news on the pandemic, the economy, and politics filled the newspapers. "I guess none of us have been living in 'normal' times," she writes, with what proves to be characteristic generosity. Her life (she died in 2022 at age 42) had been one of service: founding food-relief organizations to serve the poor, including the Nashville Food Project; volunteering to aid poor communities in Nicaragua; and, as a one-time seminarian, trying to reconcile a view of theology too broad for any single faith to embrace. Quinn's thoughts as her disease progresses are seldom self-centered, though, as she writes, "I'm not trying to gild the lily here--I hate this cancer." Her concerns are mostly with her family and the grief they will experience, grief that she was forced to navigate as she drew closer to debilitation and death: "It's becoming harder and harder for me to think and write." Even at the end, having given the gift of food for so long--and having carefully distinguished things done for others and done with others--Quinn praises her young daughter for making dinner for her husband and son, noting "how lucky the boys are--and will be--to have her cooking amazing food for them and with them." There are moments of pathos, but far fewer than the author deserves to air. Instead, the narrative becomes a prayer to life, with a conclusion comforting anyone on the path to death--which is to say, all of us--that imagines what she might become in the afterlife. A tragedy whose outcome is foretold and a gentle, uplifting contribution to the literature of death and dying. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The Meadow I am standing in tall grass. It is not soft. The day is overcast, but there is light, and it is slanted and bright in an almost sinister way, like rainbow weather. This meadow is where I have stood many days of my waking life. I know its soil, its roots, its curves, its weeds, its humus, its smell. And since my cancer diagnosis, I have spent nearly every day imagining myself standing here. So many early mornings, I circled the lower acres, forging a worn path with my worries, my questions, and my footsteps. Slipping out of bed quietly so my children didn't wake, dressing in the dark and getting the buttons wrong, desperate for as many minutes to myself as I could steal. I want them back. This meadow is the place of many of my fondest memories, and now it's a place that is helping me surrender to the great beyond--­that boundless dark. One winter here my family tapped eleven sugar maples, yielding fourteen gallons of sweet sap that boiled down to only a single quart of syrup and tasted like the smoky fire upon which we cooked it. I remember our children, Lulah and Thomas, diving into the leaf piles while wearing wire butterfly wings. Lulah's wonky, early cartwheels, and Thomas's watercolor picnics. My husband, Robbie, with Lulah on his lap, waiting at the end of the driveway for me to return home from work, their faces bearing the widest smiles. The soccer ball lodged high up in the tree and how hard we laughed when our enthusiastic friends Heather and Kelsey finally kicked it out. The black walnuts we collected for dye. The hundreds of eggs the chickens gifted us in those years, and the hot breakfasts that followed. Sharing countless meals on the front porch overlooking the meadow. And there has also been suffering here. The sixty pullets who died tragically in a coop fire while we were in Maine--­the young birds charred and their wooden coop too. Our farmer friend Cari's three baby pigs she was raising attacked by coyotes in the open daylight, and countless hens picked off by predators over the years. The deep rivers of rainwater that cleaved our rocky driveway after every storm, and the literal tons of river rock we'd have hauled in to repair it. The massive pile of cleared brush and stumps, and the burns up and down our friend Sally's legs and arms when she lit it. What is time in this meadow? Will it be my final resting place? My forever? I keep visiting this scene in my mind--­this humble place so alive with the memories of my full and happy life. Reflecting on it is helping me learn how to die. My children are there--­young, bright, chubby-­cheeked and glossy-­chinned, smiling, taking in each other and this world we love. Does it love us back? The grass is long. Robbie is making us laugh. No thought of my own death in the background, just the pulsing slow time of family life. With the chickens and their muck and their spilled-­out food. With the tall weeds overgrown and the cardinals preening and showing themselves. I meditate on my own death in these visits to the meadow. What will it feel like to die? Grounding myself in the memories of this place connects me to all the physical love I have encountered in this embodied life. With my eyes closed, I visualize strong tendrils shooting downward from my feet, penetrating the soil, pushing through layers of rock, and becoming roots. The roots stretch themselves through the earth's crust and arrive at the deep and strong core of all I am and have ever been and ever will be. I come back to my breath, looping through my body as a beautiful figure eight. My mind carries me through this journey, and the present moment is full of curiosity about the unknowable past--­a lineage of ancestors I never met and yet whose presence I deeply feel as I face my own death. I am carried by them, they in me, their love in me, their love is me. Over and over again I go back to the smiling faces of my children--­their grunts as they nursed at my chest, their first steps, their delight in the world around them. Our joy so big that nothing--­not even death--­could rob us of what we'd found and somehow formed together. I go back and I go back, and meanwhile my illness marches on, moving me forward, closer to my final days. I tell myself over and over what I have been telling my children--­ Love never ends. Angels in the Architecture I wanted eyeglasses so badly when I was a child. Alas, I was born with excellent eyesight. I bought a pair of fake glasses from a kiosk at the old Fountain Square mall in Nashville in the third grade. One morning before school, I put them on and attempted to slip out the front door without my parents catching a glimpse of me wearing them. But my dad saw me in my fake glasses as I was darting toward the Blantons' minivan for our carpool and asked me about them. I told him I wanted to wear them to school, and he knelt down, put his hands on my shoulders, and said, "Honey, God gave you beautiful eyes and perfect eyesight, and wearing these glasses is like wearing a lie." I expertly squirmed out of his arms as quickly as I could and ran into the backyard, determined to wear the glasses. What ensued was my dad chasing me around the outside of the house to try to get them off my face. Meanwhile the Blantons were just waiting in their van watching this whole scene unfold. Around the time I turned forty, I did pick up some readers at the drugstore because I was having trouble focusing on the computer screen and small text. These symptoms would eventually worsen a few months later, and one day I experienced a full-­on inability to find and follow the cursor on my computer screen as I typed. And I noticed how I was missing whole sections of text at the end of sentences when reading to my children at night. Even connecting to a Zoom call became unusually difficult, and the reading glasses really didn't seem to help with any of this at all. I would eventually come to learn that this loss of vision was caused by an emerging cancer on the left side of my brain--­specifically an area that governs vision and reading comprehension. But prior to these visual changes, my 20/20 vision served me well. I've been thinking lately about how much of my identity has been produced by and based on being a visual person, and my creativity has especially depended on it. For as long as I can remember, I have been doing stuff with my hands--­drawing, stitching, cooking, baking bread, taking photographs--­making in many forms. The use of my hands paired with a strong orientation to aesthetics carried me through art school. And many a knitting project has accompanied me in countless work meetings and at conferences over the last decade. With my gaze down on my lap at the handwork, I was always telling workshop leaders, "I promise I'm listening! This knitting helps me pay attention better!" When I went into the hospital for brain surgery, I brought some embroidery to work on, anticipating a long stay. Recuperating in my post-­op room, I picked it up and started to laugh hysterically with my mom because I couldn't see where to put the needle into the fabric. But I was so used to always bringing along something to do with my hands that I hadn't stopped to think about the fact that my changing eyesight might not support my hobbies anymore. As an undergrad, I studied fiber arts, which included block and screen printing, weaving, sewing, basketry, mixing dyes, and more, each technique in its own way requiring visual decisions, math, and precision. I then became enamored with both papermaking and bookbinding. Making books and boxes requires a lot of measuring and right angles and attention to detail. The exacting nature of the field drew me in. When I was in seminary at Columbia University in New York, I landed a work-­study job in the library conserving very old books. My daily tasks were to take massive old volumes, clean them of all smudges and debris, repair torn pages with paper that matched, and then build archival boxes for them to live in. I had my little station in the archiving studio and listened to NPR on my little pocket radio all day, and the sense of accomplishment I felt using my hands was a great complement to the very heady work of deconstructing my own theological claims in the classroom. Six months into my glioblastoma diagnosis, I discovered that a basic neurological exam always tests hand/eye coordination. So much of the satisfaction of hand/eye work is in seeing it come together, and part of being a visual person has meant I've had the kind of eyes that notice the little things. Before I got sick, if you needed something centered on a wall, or labels neatly affixed to merchandise, or leftover soup decanted into a jar for perfect yield, I was your gal! I noticed people's handwriting and fingernails and personal tics. As a child, I remember riding around in our friend Diane's Ford Taurus wagon and fixating on the way her thumbs moved over the steering wheel as she drove. I can picture my aunt Cathy's fingers poking into enriched dough as she taught me to braid bread when I was young. And even though it's been a few years since I've seen live music, my mind's eye can see our friend Fred's left hand move up and down the neck of a guitar in his seat in the round at the Bluebird Café, while the other hand expertly plays the strings. Excerpted from What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death by Tallu Schuyler Quinn All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.