Non-Fiction / Memoir
Date Published: April 2, 2018
Publisher: Chatnoir Press
Lena Hubin is a straight-A college senior when she lands in a psych ward. After her release, psychotherapy, illicit drugs, and sex distract her from her chronic anxiety--but none yields lasting relief. Despite teaching abroad, marrying, earning a masters and adopting two children, she remains haunted by anxiety. In her fifties, Lena returns with her family to the U.S., anticipating peace of mind. But when her son struggles with alcoholism, she feels her sanity swirling down the drain like the liquor she would dump--if she could find it. In a quest to help him, the author starts a journey that will change her life for good.
In the Key of Be
- Excerpt 1
Prologue
The entry to the Wisconsin farmhouse of my 1950’s
childhood was small and windowless. My dad’s barn overalls and our coats and
jackets hung from wall hooks to the right and left. A door on the right opened
into the kitchen. An assortment of boots lined the floorboards, where the edges
of the linoleum were ragged: When Mom let Cookie, our black cocker spaniel, in
during thunderstorms, the poor dog gnawed at the floor like a nail biter chews
to the quick.
But anybody flapping through the screen door from
outside couldn’t miss the huge map of the world on the wall straight ahead. My
mother tacked the thing there, above a trunk—she, whose 1940 “normal school” yearbook
proclaimed her goal to teach in Alaska; who, despite three kids and meager
means, would earn a masters degree in education; who forever warbled “Those
far-away places with the strange-sounding names/ are calling, calling me” as
she cooked and washed and gardened.
Mom never went to Alaska. Instead, she settled down
with my dad on a small dairy farm and raised three daughters. Rarely venturing
far from home, she taught in public schools nearby for forty years. The
traveling was left to me. Today, our home office space is plastered with maps
of the countries where my husband and I have lived.
My parents did well by their three daughters,
providing us with pets, piano lessons, the opportunity to go to college, and
the example of a steadfast relationship. The benefits have accompanied me
through the years.
But less favorable elements of my Midwest upbringing
have also traveled with me. My folks’ need to beat back the Depression with
hard work and little play; Mom’s efforts to control and perfect everything,
especially me, her first-born—and thus my fear that I never could do well
enough. These became burdens I hauled along like unwieldy bags whose contents,
when unpacked, attacked me as anxiety. My guts churned; my teeth clenched; my
shoulders sat high and tight. Hypochondria plagued me. My fear of flying
worsened with each flight.
I spent a decade self-medicating with alcohol, drugs,
and sex before jumping off the continent. Eventually, in Africa, I met the man
with whom I would enter a lasting relationship. We lived and worked together in
exotic foreign places; we adopted a son from India, then a daughter from
Madagascar.
Through it all my angst persisted. After twenty years
abroad, settled with my husband and kids in Arizona, I still longed for release
from some vague perennial distress I could not name.
For ten years more I squelched disquietude, until in
2009, a crisis threatened my sanity. Someone suggested a path, and in
desperation, I took it.
About the Author
Lena Hubin has been writing since she was a young kid growing up on a small Wisconsin dairy farm. She has had essays and articles published in ISS Newslinks, The International Educator, Midwest Living, and The Sun. For four years she wrote quarterly book reviews for In Recovery Magazine. She has a masters degree in Creative Writing from California State University, Fresno. Lena writes, plays piano, teaches, and works for social justice in Prescott, Arizona, where she lives with her husband, dog, and cat.
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