Last week I got a phonecall on my cell phone (wuh?) from a very nice professor at BYU to tell me that I have been accepted into BYU's MFA program for fall semester. Once I had thanked him and hung up the phone, here is what I did not do:
1. Shriek with joy.
2. Call my friends.
3. Update my facebook status.
4. Go online and check out what I'm supposed to be doing
now.
5. Go out for cake at The Chocolate to celebrate.
6. Feel excited.
Why, oh, why? Why after all this was I cheated did I
cheat myself out of a well-deserved celebration moment?
Well, I have some ideas about that, after a few days of
pondering and self-psychoanalysis. Here's a list of random possibilities:
1. I'm still licking my wounds from the original rejection.
2. I was licking my wounds that day from another rejection
(this one from the children's writers side of my life).
3. I didn't feel it as a solid success since I knew they
didn't want me before.
4. I had been hoping I had improved myself enough to be
accepted to the U as well, and wanted to wait until I heard from them before I
let myself be sure I was even going to the Y.
5. Suddenly the reality of it (the work! the money!) sunk
in. I realized I had gotten awfully good at being lazy, at having my days
stretch out ahead of me with not much of great obligation to do.
6. If I'm going to go to school in the fall, I should
probably actually get around to doing all those projects I had thought I'd do
"someday, when nothing else is going on" but had been ignoring, like
updating the scrapbooks (uggggh) and painting the bathroom.
7. Insecurity: what if I'm not good enough? What if I get
there and can't hack it?
8. What happens after I go to school? Always in my life I've
held this in my heart: "Someday I'll go back for a master's." What
will happen to me when I don't have that to look forward to anymore? The future
stretches out ahead of me, bleak, with nothing to look forward to . . .
Well, anyway. I see now how I denied myself something good.
And today (after a good long talk with a friend who understands, despite the
fact that she ISN'T HERE TO TAKE ME OUT FOR CAKE) I am trying to revise my
outlook. Here's my response to each of those things:
1. Dang it, it was
their loss that they rejected me before. And maybe it was all about timing—remember
what happened that year (a big illness and then TREK) that would have created
such a mess if I had been in school.
2. Rejection is part
of this career. Get used to it.
3. They probably did want me before. They were probably
kicking themselves over and over again for letting me get away. (Yeah. Just
tell yourself that.) But anyway, they at least wanted me enough to put me on the
waiting list, knowing chances were good that I'd come . . .
4. I know that the aesthetic at the U is not the same as
mine. I had been hoping that I could get in there and learn from it anyway, but
the fact is that I really don't like much of what I read in Quarterly West. I might have been
miserable there. (Yes, I was rejected by them a few days after I heard from the
Y.) Besides all that, BYU's program is probably just as good as the U's and
just as rigorous—it's just younger. And, don't worry, I'm going to be pushed
plenty by the writers there. There's enough diversity there to challenge me,
for sure. (Still, I know that it works against me, career-wise, to have my MFA
from the same school as my BA. Oh well. Nothing I can do about that, if I can't
afford to attend a low-residency school. Let it go.)
5. I have to admit that when I've been in intense poetry
workshops, I have LOVED the work, and my busy life. There's always that physical
hesitation when I know I have to sit down and produce something for class, but
once I get moving I relish the work. I am happiest when I am working hard at
something I love.
6. I still have five months to do those dumb projects. And
maybe now that there's a reward and a reason for hurrying, they'll be more enjoyable,
too.
7. They accepted me because my test scores, grades, and
portfolio show that I am fully capable both of doing the work and of
benefitting from what they have to teach me. I am a fantastic addition to this
incoming class.
8. I'll be a different person then. I'll have learned and
grown in ways I can't know now. New things will appear on the horizon—new goals
and challenges. In the meantime, I will have had A BLAST.
So there you go. I've talked myself into being excited. And,
dang it, I AM going to have a blast. I love BYU and can't wait to be on campus
again. I love poetry, and I love pushing myself. I'm always happiest when I'm
in school. This is going to be FANTASTIC for me.
Now, if I could just get me some cake . . .
11 comments:
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Congratulations.
Give 'em heck!
(and Congrats!).
I'd say--they must have hired someone qualified who understood what a talented writer you are. Know you'll do great things!
Oh how I wish I could get that cake with you.
Congrats, my friend. You're going to love it, and they're going to love you. So happy!
Congrats, Darlene! That's great news!
so, so proud of you.
Dar, SO so happy you;'re going to be doing this!! A great thing for you, especially after a few years of sickness and frustration. Hope to see you again sometime soon, but will truly miss you until then- Heather B
Well, gee, Darlene. If I were going to the board meeting tomorrow night, I'd bring you some cake (and you wouldn't have to share it with the rest of the board -- you could leave it in the car -- unless you wanted to).
Maybe I can get you some later.
Congratulations! I'm so happy for you. Glad you decided to celebrate :)
Yay Darlene!
Kathryn
What is a MFA program? Whatever it is, it sounds exciting. Congratulations. You'll do awesome!
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