Authors: A. Manette Ansay
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Sixteen years have
passed since I gave up the piano, since one door shut and a window opened, since I entered the life I am living today. It's a good life, made up of the people I love, the novels I've written and those I plan to write, the students I've taught who have come and gone, the places in the world I have seen and the places I long to go. In four more years, at forty, I will have been disabled for half my life, but although “probable multiple sclerosis” continues to appear on my medical charts, I still do not have a definitive diagnosis. Recently, I've started treatment at an integrative medical center; my physician there believes I'm
struggling with an autoimmune disorder brought on by childhood inoculations. Who can say? I have altered my diet, as instructed. I have acupuncture treatments twice a week. I've weaned myself off my latest anti-inflammatory prescription; instead, I swallow fistfuls of nutritional supplements and Chinese herbs.
Is it helping? friends and family want to know.
I tell them that I think so. I tell them that I have to wait and see.
There was a time in my life when I would have said this kind of uncertainty was unbearable. When I believed I could not live without a prognosis, a reliable map by which I might plan out my future. When I believed that an explanation was nothing less than my due. When I fully expected a closure as final, as satisfying, as the end of a Beethoven symphony.
I was formed by a place where the roads met at right angles, a landscape in which cause and effect were visible for miles. I was raised to believe that every question had its single, uniform answer, and that answer was God's will. But the human body, like the life it leads, is ultimately a mystery, and to live my life without restraint, to keep moving forward instead of looking back, I have had to let go of that need to understand
why
what has happened has happened and, indeed, is happening still. In some ways, my health has gotten worse in recent years. My vision blurs when my
eyes get tired, and this means I have had to learn a whole new way of writing, arranging ideas in my head, doing the bulk of my work off the page. I've given up movies and watching TV; I read very little; I no longer drive.
On the other hand, the inflammation in my arms and legs has stabilized since my early twenties. As a result, I'm in far less pain. I can write with a pen if I take frequent breaks. I use a scooter instead of a wheelchair, and months will pass in which I'm able to use it for distances only. I can stroll into a restaurant if somebody pulls the car up to the door. I can pace a few laps in a swimming pool, provided I don't do it every day. But I've learned not to take such luxuries for granted. Without warning, I can have flareups, bad spells that can last weeks, even months. During those times, night pain keeps me from sleeping, and I move through the day as if in a cloud, relying on the scooter for everything I do. Motion and light leave my head aching; I write in ten-minute snatches, the font size set at sixteen. These are the times I need stiff wrist supports to type, to handle silverware, to hold a telephone receiver to my ear. These are the times I wake up in the morning and wrap my ankles and elbows and knees before hauling myself out of bed. These are the times when it's hard not to dwell on the larger issue at hand: what if I don't snap out of it this time? What is going to happen next?
Yet, in one way or another, this is everybody's question,
and one of life's few consistent blessings is that we cannot know the future. At any moment, all that we claim as our own might be instantly swept away. But perhaps it's this precarious balance that drives us to value what we have, to cling to the world as we do. And isn't it all we do not know that constitutes possibility?
I think of the ancient mapmakers charting the flat reaches of the world.
Here there be dragons
, they wrote along the edges of the known continents, warning ships away from the uncharted waters beyond. No doubt there could be dragons, and worse, out in the mist. But one might just as easily sketch an island of flowers, rainbows, and flying fish, wonders that have yet to be imagined.
This, then, is the map of my own making. This is the story I am learning to live.
I would like to thank the MacDowell Colony, where a chunk of this book was written. Heartfelt thanks to Oprah Winfrey and her book club for what has amounted to an incredible arts grant at a time when I needed it most.
Family members appear in
Limbo
under their own names, because they have lived this with me, and I wanted them beside me on the page. However, the names of acquaintances, teachers, and people with whom I've lost touch have been changed.
This is, to the best of my ability, a book of nonfiction. However, this does not mean that someone else might not remember or interpret things differently. Every experience consists of many stories and many points of view. This one happens to be mine.
A. MANETTE ANSAY grew up in rural Wisconsin, one of sixty-seven cousins and more than two hundred second cousins in a large extended Catholic farming family. At thirty-six, she is the author of four highly acclaimed novels, including
Midnight Champagne
, a National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist;
Vinegar Hill
, an Oprah Book Club Selection; as well as
Sister, River Angel
, and a collection of short stories,
Read This and Tell Me What It Says
. Her awards include the Nelson Algren Prize, the Great Lakes Book Award, and a National Endowment for the Arts grant. She is at work on another novel.
Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.
“In this gorgeous memoir Ansayâ¦beautifully illuminates selected details of her Catholic childhood, her struggles with religious faith, and her growing realization that her illness is a permanent one.”
â
Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
“Beautifully writtenâ¦. Remarkableâ¦. Searing.”
â
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
“
Limbo
should be required reading for people whose lives have come ungluedâ¦. Entertainingâ¦. Beautifully developed and liberating.”
â
St. Petersburg Times
“[Ansay] explores uncharted territoryâ¦. In re-creating her own story, she returns to a theme that has given depth to her most memorable charactersâ¦. Remarkable.”
â
The Tennessean
Vinegar Hill
Read This and Tell Me What It Says
Sister
River Angel
Midnight Champagne
Cover design by Eric Fuentecilla
Cover photograph © Photonica
This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
LIMBO
. Copyright © 2001 by A. Manette Ansay. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
EPub © Edition JUNE 2006 ISBN: 9780061860362
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