That Girl, This Life
Weekly posts that focus on identity, family, and life’s quirky moments.
When I was a teenager growing up with my twin sister in the suburbs of Chicago, afternoons often revolved around watching television. One of our favorite shows was That Girl, starring Marlo Thomas as Ann Marie, a young actress making her own way in New York City. I didn’t realize at the time how groundbreaking the program was—the first sitcom centered on a single woman whose story wasn’t defined by marriage or motherhood. Ann Marie was ambitious, independent, and wore her courage and charm like a favorite hat. For two small-town girls, she made the world seem full of delicious possibility.
Decades later, while researching my adoption, I discovered that “Ann Marie” was also the name my birth mother had given me before my twin sister and I were adopted. That discovery felt like a cosmic coincidence, a thread connecting a childhood heroine to my own beginnings—a reminder that our stories often circle back to us in unexpected ways.
So in 2017, when I was setting up my author website and in need of a blog title, That Girl, resurfaced immediately. But I wasn’t merely that girl anymore—the one trying to set herself apart from her twin, find her place in a family of six, and make sense of a closed adoption. I had become this woman: a mother, widow, grandmother, and author still asking life’s essential questions: Who am I? Where did I come from? What does it mean to belong? What was life asking of me, and what should I give back in return?
That Girl, This Life felt like the perfect bridge between the dreamer I once was and the woman I am today. That Girl evokes the daring and curiosity of youth; This Life conveys presence, a grounding in the here and now. Together they capture the essence of my work: how the roles I inhabit intersect with the world around me and how I derive meaning from the ordinary threads of living.
Here, I share stories about family, friendship, loss, resilience, and the quirky, tender moments that give life its character. Some pieces began as journal entries and early morning reflections, others grew out of observations, everyday moments, and travel adventures. All are part of an ongoing conversation between my past and present selves—between that girl who imagined a life full of promise and this woman who is living it, one story at a time.
Welcome to That Girl This Life. I’m glad you’re here.
An Interview with Rosemary Keevil Author of The Art of Losing It: A Memoir of Grief and Addiction
When life hands you one difficult event after another, how do you handle it? I interviewed an author who “lost it”, recovered, and wrote about The Art of Losing It!
My Writing Space Keeps Shrinking
Even when your writing circumstances are in constant flux, it’s important to keep writing.
In Search of Grateful
Lessons learned from a children’s book. Just look around to find something for which to be grateful!
We Can Never Know
Stuff happens despite our efforts to thwart Murphy’s Law. But doesn’t it seem that in 2020, Murphy has seized full control?
November is National Adoption Awareness Month…
Increasing awareness about the number of kids in foster care still waiting to be adopted is a major goal of National Adoption Awareness Month.
An Interview with DORI JONES YANG
What would it be like to be a female journalist running an overseas bureau in the 1980s? Join me for this fascinating interview with Dori Jones Yang.
Can babies be placed for adoption without a father’s consent?
REVISED post on Birth Father’s Consent to Adoption
How DNA Influenced My Manuscript Submittal
How my DNA influenced my manuscript submittal.
INTERVIEW with Barbara Linn Probst- Author of QUEEN OF THE OWLS
Attention Georgia O’Keefe fan’s, here’s a fascinating novel to pick up. Today’s post is in an interview with author, Barbara Linn Probst.
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