Finding My Way by Robin F. Schepper, published by Girl Friday Books is to be released in April 2023. What attracted me to the book is that in the promotional material the author is described as a “White House staffer”. Having been a political staffer myself in a previous life, I was intrigued to find out about her experiences in that role. Especially in the White House!
Schepper’s memoir however primarily deals with her upbringing in 1960s New York. She was born into what could best be described as a fractured family and she attributes the challenges and problems she faced as she grew up to those early years, in particular that she missed out on the happy and harmonious family situation she craved.
The narrative follows her as she finds her way from her inauspicious beginning to the end of the book, where she describes herself as having “landed where [she] wanted to be” – now a happily married middle aged woman with two children she loves and a life that is satisfying and rewarding. As difficult as her early years were, she grows up determined, independent and largely self-motivated. Although she describes her journey as fraught and distressing at times, she manages to attain a commendable level of education, qualifications, skills, professional experience and a career that many would envy.
At the crux of the story is her inability over many years to have the kind of solid, close and loving relationships she wanted. Her mother was unmarried when Schepper was born, and she was never told who her father was. It was the lack of a father’s love that not only frustrated and saddened her but made her resentful of her mother, who refused to publicly acknowledge her single mother status and was consistently obstructive to Schepper's many attempts to find her father.
Adding to the burden of guilty secrets Schepper carried was that her grandmother owned a brothel, which at the time had to be hidden behind the façade of a massage business, where clients were referred to as “patients” and the rooms where the transactions were carried out as “treatment rooms”.
What Schepper describes as “the shame of the truth, and the work of keeping all these secrets hidden from the outer world” combined to make her intensely insecure and uncertain of her own worth. But instead of succumbing, she decided to “create my own worth and show everyone that a bastard child could succeed.” Which she did in no small measure.
Other issues she focuses on are sexual abuse, which was rife then in political circles, as it sadly is today, teenage pregnancy, which despite her concerted efforts to prevent among her schoolmates, she experienced herself and gender inequality, particularly in the church.
It’s always heartening to read a woman’s story of overcoming challenges and developing the strength and self-determination to make something of herself and in this regard Schepper’s story is gratifying reading. Where it falls down is that sometimes it veers into what I call “CV” land, where the author lists their achievements, their career history and important postings. This becomes a bit prosaic and is quite at odds with the deeply personal passages which, in a memoir, are what engage the reader. Notwithstanding that it was most definitely an important posting, I’d have loved to hear more about Schepper’s experiences working in the White House, especially her time with Michelle Obama. I think most readers would love the chance to get an “insider” view of this episode in her career and of Michelle Obama.
Thank you to Girl Friday books for providing me with an advance review copy of the book.