Q & A | 10/06/2009 2:00 am
Why Women Should Strive for 'A Life Unfinished': A Conversation With Joan Anderson

Women seek more inner peace and less external chaos in their lives if truth be told. In her bestselling memoirs – A Year by the Sea: Thoughts of an Unfinished Woman and now Second Journey, The: The Road Back to Yourself – author and nationally known speaker Joan Anderson has shared her own story and made her own discoveries as she has also helped her readers to plot their own second course in life in the mid-years. She’s been on Oprah twice, as well as drawing us all in with her conversations on "Good Morning America" and the "Today" show, helping women design a life of their own. In my conversation with Joan Anderson, I found her openness and honesty reflecting my own as we explored the lives that lie ahead for all of us.
JOAN LARSEN: So many of the women on wOw already have read Joan Anderson’s books, finding Joan a warm friend from afar. We can so identify with this "unfinished woman" as she shares her most close-kept feelings and emotions, making us realize we are not so alone in our own soul searching. We feel we know you, Joan, as a woman going through the stages of her own life, just as we are. Today we are very happy to welcome you to wowOwow.
JOAN ANDERSON: Wow! What a nice introduction! Thank you.
| I realized that we too evolve and we are meant to redesign ourselves again and again and again, just like the beach. |
JOAN L: Your first book, A Year by the Sea, obviously touched chords with women as it was a smash hit and on the bestseller list. Nine years later and it is still selling well. Were you surprised at all the acclaim?
JOAN A: Well, it’s amazing. That first book was just such a surprise for me because the publisher didn’t think it would do that well. A Year by the Sea took off and it’s now been printed in 17 languages. It’s just a universal message; it’s a universal message in that book – which is who am I beyond the roles that I play? Am I somebody? Do I start out as somebody? Was I once an individual? What is the raw material that I have that I can use for the rest of my life?
JOAN L: Yes. So many questions do go around in our own heads. And your wonderful term, "an unfinished woman," seems to resound in all of us, I think. So can you start from the beginning and will you tell us what the term "unfinished woman" means to you, and should to us?
JOAN A: We’re never finished until we die. For starters that’s it, and I have a bumper sticker that I give women that says "an unfinished woman." My goal is that everyone in the country, in the world, will all be cheering about being unfinished. St. Augustine had a wonderful quote: "The unexamined life is the wasted life." I so believe that. I’ve always been a "why" person – why this, why that – never taking things at face value. I think that’s why most women, when they read my book or come to me — are seeking some kind of a turn in the road. So "unfinished" is such a wonderful term. The most important word in the first book is, "I’m as unfinished as the shoreline along the beach, meant to transcend myself again and again." Then I realized that my kids are unfinished, my daughters-in-law are unfinished, my husband is unfinished, my friends are unfinished. What a wonderful way to look at people.























15 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Oh Wow I have never heard of Joan Anderson. But I have now - I will go and find her books. At 47 I am feeling like something is missing. Ok - it might be that I didn’t have kids and my partner and I never bothered to get married - but I don’t think so. I feel like that there is something in my life that I’m meant to do that I haven’t done yet. My job isn’t as fulfillng any more and it always causes me more stress than joy.
I will track her books down and see if they hold any truths for me.
Great interview.
This is my lucky day thanks to the two Joan’s ! I remain "unfinished" at 71 and I’am facing breast cancer surgery on Friday, Oct. 16th so I need their encouragement to seek those "adventures" my heart yearns for-those "unlived possibilities" while I can. Thankgoodness I have finally given myself permission after 49 years of marriage to take separate vacations with girfriends and do things I really want to do when my husband doesn’t have any interest in them. I don’t feel guilty either,something my Mother would never think of doing! I can’t wait to read Joan Anderson’s two books and share them with girlfriends and my two daughters and three granddaughters. Keep the great interviews and book reviews coming. Carol Witt
I have to say that this sounds all too much like An Unknown Woman (Alice Koller), her other books, and her life, and experiences.
Wow Lauriate!
What a bunch of sanctamonious prattle! Seems to me, is that you are a frustrated person who upon seeing someone strike out to find and document their truth as they see it, you had to write your comment box- diatribe to show everyone just how wrong she is and that you have all the answers to loves complexities (and there are sooooo many.) So take a risk and write a book yourself then! You seem like quite the armchair intellectual…lol.
I suppose you must be right as it appears from your comments you have partnered with the über proper spouse…made all the right decisions in your life, never judged or second guessed your steps in life either, never having had a falling out or major shake up in a relationship of any kind (friend, relative, and or lover.) It must be so nice to be right all the time!
Sorry…I just couldn’t let you get away with all that! Is it always that simple when you are looking down your nose at someone through the benefit of detachment? For you apparently so.
Lauriate … for the first time - like the woman above me - I read your words and said "WHAT?" And then . . reluctantly, I reconsidered, for Lauriate is perfect. But I don’t think the rest of us live in that dream world. Perhaps we should talk … . do you think????
Joan - no one will ever find me in disagreement with a single word you have just now written on this subject. but this is not the message I got reading the Anderson interview. Your picture here gives me a completely different impression from the one I got reading every single detail of the interview. Anderson’s statements annoyed me because they sounded written in stone, applicable far too generally, as if they would affect all women at that mid-life age, and I know that this is not so.
I become very uncomfortable facing such profound advice, freely offered by a very independent women already suffering from a long period of serious marital discord, who just left everything behind and escaped so she could re-route the paths in her life, which she describes as “unfinished”. Her life was a mess. She ran away from home so she could repair it. That’s not a life “unfinished”.
My response referred to how I have tried to live, and how some, (not all), of my acquaintances live. I did not mean to came across as sanctimonious and preaching.
One may well say that I live in a dream world and I guess it is a dream world to some. But not to me. It’s not a dream, believe me. To me it’s very real.
Anyway Joan, the long and the short of it is that obviously I was impressed and very interested in your interview and I wanted to take the opportunity of responding my feelings about it. Perhaps that was not a wise decision on my part.
I can agree with Lauriate. It shouldn’t be a mandate that all women must take refuge in isolation in order to find themselves. At the same time, I know the times when I did escape a crazy household with five young children proved to be beneficial for us all. Goes to Joan L. and her sense of balance…and the endless variety of personalities on the planet.
But I do appreciate the interview. And Ms. Andersen’s willingness to support the idea that many women may do well to escape, so they shouldn’t fight the urge.
First let me say in support of Ms Anderson’s "retreat’ from life that another amazing woman took a retreat and produced a stunning book about life and womanhood. A Gift from the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh is a timeless work which offers inspiring insight into the stages of a woman’s life. I highly recommend it.
I have recently completed a project of my own, interviewing woman between the ages of 45 -102 from 5 countries. I was seeking the answer to a question, what is woman’s role in society after the biological imperative to reproduce is past, or after menopause?
What I found astounded me. There is too much to tell here but what is relevant to your discussion is that the women I interviewed had nourished their years past 50 with the accumulated wisdom of all that had come before. I began to call these women The Women of the Harvest because of the impact that their personal wisdom harvest had on their life. Many were not conscious of that growth but they had reaped the fruits of a life lived and it had clearly changed their perspective on living and aging and significantly enhanced the quality of their life.
They had done exactly as Joan L recommends, “Wouldn’t it be revealing if there were an actual ritual at the end of each decade that marked a person’s achievements—crises managed, lessons mastered, attitudes and ideals changed—so we weren’t merely aging but rather honoring and affirming life’s journey? "
So yes, let’s stop a moment at whatever age we are and reflect on what we have become. In affirming our own unique life‘s journey we can become rejuvenated and our entire perspective on aging can change. And if we continue this process of reflection as we age we may come to possess a secret power which will radiate outward into the world and illuminate everyone around us…now that is not a bad role to have in society after 50 is it?