The Possibility of Everything

by Jennifer Haupt on January 24, 2010

Hope Edeman’s memoir, “The Possibility of Everything,” is about finding faith in things you can’t see or understand in order to rid her three-year-old daughter of a disruptive imaginary friend. Here’s my conversation with her about faith, parenting, marriage, and possibilities.

Jennifer Haupt: What is your definition of faith, and why is it important piece of being a good parent?

Hope Edelman:
My definition of faith is very simple. It’s the ability to believe in the unseen and in the intuition that there’s more going on here than we can prove at a sensory level. The book is the story of how I learned to trust my intuition. When Maya started acting out and blaming her imaginary friend “Dodo,” my pediatrician and my friends all told me it was a developmental problem she’d grow out of, or that maybe I needed to take her to a psychiatrist. But my intuition told me there was something else going on⎯that I needed to follow a different path.

Hope and Maya now

JH: Taking your daughter to see a shaman in Belize is definitely a different path.

HE: We were already going there on a long overdue family vacation, and my husband Uzi suggested finding a shaman. Our marriage was really in trouble at the time, and in part I felt I had to take Maya because Uzi was so strongly in favor of it. I didn’t want to make things worse between us. That, too, turned out to be intuition. It wasn’t just Maya who needed to heal, but our whole family. Uzi and I were both under a lot of stress and going to Belize was the first chance we’d had to bond as a family in a long time.

JH: Was there a time when you felt you’d lost your faith?

HE: My mom was diagnosed with breast cancer when I was 15. It had already spread by the time it was discovered and she died sixteen months later. I felt that if this kind of suffering could exist⎯both physically for my mother and emotionally for my father and the rest of our family⎯how could there be a benevolent God or higher power looking out for us? My father pretty much collapsed emotionally when my mother died. He was able to go to work and provide food and shelter and clothing, but beyond that I was pretty much left to raise myself. I definitely lost my faith in a higher power then, or in anything more than myself.

JH: I don’t want to give away what happens in the book, but you did wind up being part of Maya’s healing process. Did that have anything to do with rediscovering your faith?

HE: The shaman gave me flowers and herbs to bathe Maya in, and told me to pray into the water. Sitting in the bathroom, it took me a while to think of something. When I did it was first the Lord’s Prayer and then a Hebrew prayer from my childhood. It was the first time that I had prayed in many years, and I felt as if I was calling my mother into the room. As my tears fell into Maya’s bath water, along with the medicinal herbs, it felt very healing for me too.

JH: Since the Belize trip, have you been more open to spirituality the way your husband experiences it?

HE: I’m definitely still the more skeptical partner in our marriage, but I’m much more open now than I was nine years ago. I’ve gone back to Belize to study Mayan healing and become part of the community of people here in the States who’ve taken the same course. Having that knowledge of plants and our relationship to the natural world makes me more grounded as a person because I do have a sense that we’re only able to see part of what’s going on around us.

JH: Has faith in any way strengthened your marriage since that trip to Belize?

HE: Uzi and I came back with a renewed commitment to each other and to the family. That may also be why Maya didn’t need to act out anymore with her imaginary friend. I think our experience could be explained either way: that the Mayan healer rid her of an undesirable spirit or–what a Western psychologist might say–that a child’s behavior improves when the parents resolve their stress. And maybe the two are even connected, just different cultural ways of explaining the same thing.

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{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Tooth White January 24, 2010 at 12:49 pm

Cool blog! Love the theme. Keep up the good work and try to continue to post regularly. Too many people leave massive gaps between their posts which makes readers bored.

MarthaandMe January 24, 2010 at 12:51 pm

I enjoyed this book and am so pleased to read this interview with Hope! Thanks!

Barb January 24, 2010 at 7:29 pm

This was an inspiring post. Thanks for this.

Alexandra January 25, 2010 at 6:04 am

I absolutely LOVED this book and its message: listen to your intuition.

I also agree with Tooth White on more frequent updates. Your blog has a powerful message. I really enjoy reading it.

Sheryl January 25, 2010 at 11:56 am

Learning to trust your intuition is a leap of faith, for sure. But once you do, it can teach you so many things, I think!

Cornelia Becker Seigneur January 28, 2010 at 12:23 am

We have a Sudan friend and he was shot. He is 14. No one should be shot and at 14 he has gone through more pain than most will ever have to in a lifetime. He is losing his faith. We are working on helping him to keep his faith. We are praying he does not become bitter. We are telling him that God saved him for a purpose. The bullet hit his stomach. Keeping the faith is about keeping the hope.

Thanks for shaing the story about Hope. I have always enjoyed her writing and I write about parenting and family life and faith and culture. …I like this faith project…

Best, Cornelia Seigneur
http://www.corneliaseigneur.com

Ulrike, Dubai January 31, 2010 at 5:55 am

Very interesting interview, will keep the book in mind. Thank you.

Meredith Resnick February 2, 2010 at 12:44 pm

I love Hope’s take on so many things. She was recently a guest at my cyberspace and her take on writing is wonderful, too.

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