Reality Writes

Words from an aspiring young writer

Working List, for Fall 2009 admission June 15, 2008

Filed under: MFA Prep, Poetry — realitywrites @ 8:56 pm
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Top Choices at the moment:

  • UNC Greensboro (duh)
  • NC State University (Raleigh)
  • University of Texas at Austin, Michener Center (dream BIG!)
  • University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
  • University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
  • University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
  • University of Arizona, Tucson

Potential reruns:

  • University of Indiana, Bloomington
  • University of Montana, Missoula

Other runners-up

  • Colorado State University
  • Vanderbilt University (Nashville)
  • University of Wisconsin, Madison
  • Arizona State University

DISCUSS!

 

Announcements May 9, 2008

Filed under: MFA Prep, Poetry, Writing and Life — realitywrites @ 5:47 pm

First off, I have new real estate on the internet, and I will blogging primarily here now: http://emilyabenton.com

 

 

Yes, that’s my real name, and I’m sorry for keeping it hidden for the most part here. And I know it’s a real pain in the rear to edit your Blogroll or RSS feeds once more, but please, if you will, add that address to it. I’ve already added most of your links there. However, you don’t have to erase Reality Writes, as I may be back here from time to time (especially next fall…see below). But the other blog will now be my main locale. It’s slightly different, although a more cohesive version of my self(selves), I think.

 

I’ve spent the majority of Reality Writes talking about my MFA application experience, and I’m thankful to have had that outlet. Some of you may be relieved to find that my new blog will not include any of that. But for those who have been following, here’s my other major announcement:

 

I’m not going to school this fall.

 

I heard from the director at UNCG on Monday and he said they won’t have any openings for me to move up from the waiting list. They will, however, help me defer my application to next year so I can avoid resending paperwork and fees and already be, theoretically, at the top of the stack. The director also kindly offered to help me pick a list of other schools to apply to that will better match my portfolio and are more likely to give me funding.

 

I know some of you are scratching your heads as to why I have not taken one of my other acceptances, because they certainly were good ones – great ones, even. But I learned through gut instinct and long, hard (ow! It hurts!) thinking that they were not the right places for me. Some of the factors leading up to that decision include the lack of funding and an overall feeling that I would be too distracted or too isolated in the communities hosting these programs. On the other hand, when I visited UNCG, I felt overwhelmingly comfortable around the people I met there (for reasons of similarity and also diversity), with the low-pressure lifestyle of Greensboro, and also with what the funding situation would have been for me had I gotten off the waitlist. Had I not visited Greensboro, I could have very well ended up taking another offer and probably done OK in a program, although I think it would have been really hard for me to get by financially – or at least without a heavy burden and lots of stress – and I also don’t think I would have fully “fit in” with those programs. That isn’t to diss anyone at these schools – they certainly were welcoming and I’m grateful to everyone who gave me a glimpse into their MFA experience. It was only by comparison of those programs with UNCG’s that I gained a lot of perspective about what my needs were for an MFA – some things I couldn’t have known from merely filling out applications and researching websites, although I do think I put more time into that than most people.

 

I’ve run into many friends lately – the ones who’ve heard me decline offers to hang out because I was working on applications, or have heard my voice shakey with the excitement of the possibly studying with X writer at X school – and when I tell them my news, they tilt their heads and ask, “Are you OK?”

 

It’s a perfectly valid question to ask considering how passionate I’ve been about every step of this process, and how much I felt was at stake when I put those fat envelopes in the mail. But my answer is Yes, I’m OK. I don’t feel defeated. Maybe I would feel that way had I not been accepted anywhere. But considering the places that did accept me, I feel a little empowered. I know now that I am good enough to do this. I know that I can be competitive with my art, even though I’m young and not as experienced as many other writers out there. I know I have more choice in the process.

 

And although I’m not going to school this year, I’m left in a good place. I don’t hate my job; it gives me enough cushion to get by and not have a miserable life full of worry. (In other words, it’s not like I’m being kicked out of a dorm room without a clue what to do. I’ve been on my own for a few years now, and I’ve got this independence thing down.) I’ve also in the past month or so met some writers who are giving me the feedback and exchange I’ve needed. I can now workshop with them and warm up those muscles that were getting pretty tense and out of shape a year ago. I also lost my professional freelance blog, which at first was a slap in the face because I wasn’t expecting it to end so early, but I now see it as a “blessing in disguise,” to quote my mother. It’s the kick in the head I needed, and it’s freed up a lot of time in my schedule to work on poetry or other forms of writing. I’m going to focus now on spreading my byline wider, while also pushing myself to write poems I was saving for the MFA experience. (I know, that was a completely stupid way to approach my writing. But I was letting fear, recognition, and other commitments get the best of me.)

 

So, at this point, I will be applying for MFA programs again in the fall, but I’m going to take my time getting back to the paperwork. I spent way too much of last year obsessing over the details before the clock was even ticking to turn stuff in. Not to mention, I already have half of the work done, right? :) I may re-apply to a few schools, but there will be a lot of new players in this year. I’m certainly not going to settle for just applying to UNCG. I’m going to throw my net wider, but I also may not apply to as many places. I won’t have fallback schools. This round will be more of a poker game, rather than throwing paper at the wind.

 

So yeah, I’ll be coming back here to write about the whole MFA process again, because – and this is really important – I can’t talk about it on my other website. That means you can’t talk about it there either, and I’ll delete any comments that bring it up. The reason is that my boss and other coworkers may read that blog since it’s easier to find (by name) and I’m promoting it more, and I don’t want them to get the idea that I’m on my way out and fire me for it. And as far as I know, I could end up not going to school next year either, or dropping the whole plan to live a “normal” life without a graduate degree. So I don’t want to raise any red flags. Capiche?

 

But thank you for reading this incredibly self-indulgent blog post – and all of Reality Writes – and for reading my new website if you so choose to subject yourself to more me. I could try to leggo my ego and chill for a bit, but that wouldn’t be Reality, would it?

 

questions March 13, 2008

Do you ever find someone who writes/paints/looks/(enter your art form here) like you – but you’ve never heard of them? (or you haven’t studied their work?) Or even had someone say, have you studied so-and-so because you sound a lot like them? Does it weird you out? I’ve had this happen A LOT in the past year.

Maybe I’ve been living under a rock for too long, and I’ve never had my hands in just one discipline long enough to cover all the bases. I started writing poetry only a few years ago, and even after I started writing it took me a while to realize, HEY you should READ MORE POETRY. (duh!) So now that I read more (continuously catching up), I’m finding which camp I’m in (but let’s not get too segregated) and then finding people who either have strong similarities in subject matter or strong similarities in style to the way I’ve been writing. Yet it’s all new to me.

I believe that we all have a subconscious where things get dumped in and at some point it all comes together like Fright Night and that’s how we make wonderful casseroles. But don’t you have to already have the food in your fridge for this to happen? What if you never picked up celery at the grocery store but someone eats your casserole and swears that it has celery in it? This analogy is falling apart so I’ll just put it this way… 

I can’t figure out if this is a good thing – that my instincts are putting me in the same boat as other people (respected, talented, accomplished people,) and that maybe we’re all onto something – or that this is a bad thing, as in I shouldn’t be in this boat, or that people will think that I purposely tried to copy these people even though I’ve never heard of them before, or that it’s all been said and done and GET OUT. And then I’m like, OK, should I start taking in what they are doing and learn from it? or should I stay as far away from it as I can so I can continue to follow my natural discourse? Or should I study them until I can make myself different? I don’t know. I’m even too embarrassed to name names. And I should say that I rarely try to write like anyone, and usually my favorite writers have a very different style or context than my own. I just write, and try to follow universal or instinctual rules of thumb about craft, and come out with what I’ve got.

 

ok, for real. a draft. not an exercise. March 1, 2008

Filed under: Poetry — realitywrites @ 10:01 pm
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well, not so much a draft, as something I’ve pretty much accepted as finished. But I don’t want to just assume it’s finished if there’s something blarringly off about it, which is hard to know when you don’t have a lot of people to give you feedback to your work other than “accepted” or “rejected.” I guess this is why I need to call my neighbor and officially join her writing group.

Also, I should note that this is the path a lot of my poems have taken lately. I think more than half of my portolio I sent to schools has the God theme. He keeps sneaking in there.

Disappearing sometime Sunday…

*gone*

 

Published February 19, 2008

Filed under: Poetry, Published — realitywrites @ 3:14 pm
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After all that high art discussion in my last post (pfft!), I’m proud to present my first poem available in an online publication!

My poem “Cankerworms” is in the newly updated issue of storySouth.

And while you’re there, also check out six poems by and an interview with my former writing teacher and mentor, Cathy Smith Bowers.

Lots of other good stuff – poetry, fiction, and nonfiction - in there, too! 

 

remember the Twilight Zone where the guy buys a love potion? February 14, 2008

Filed under: Poetry, Uncategorized — realitywrites @ 3:20 pm
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Floating February 8, 2008

Filed under: Poetry, Reading List — realitywrites @ 10:04 pm
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I have really been enjoying the break from the excess of paperwork I’ve endured over the past few months. I haven’t fleshed out any poems, but I’ve mostly been freewriting and making word association lists for some poem ideas I’ve been sitting on for a while. In fact, I have a pretty large mental list of poems I want to write and this is a rare and good thing. I keep returning to “A Poet’s Companion” and “Michelangelo’s Seizure” and can’t get past them. I read and reread and reread because it’s so good and it’s like waking up that little poet inside me that knows these things but forgets them when she becomes intimidated by the big scary poetry world. But anyway, I’m almost ready to jump in.  That first dive is always the scariest when you’re making art. Diving in and coming out of the water. I am much better at dwelling, sitting on the edge and floating inside the pool.

And all this water talk reminds me how much I want to go here again before I potentially move states/lose all income. Floating in mineral pools inside a cave (I don’t even care if parts of it are manmade) all day is quite possibly one of the most divine experiences one can receive or give to oneself. (You really forget about the few hundred dollars it takes for you to get in there and wallow around in pools and steam all day and have old Austrians or young, clean-shaven mountain men rub your back into a warm mush…Somehow I feel that I’m not describing this properly but hopefully you get the point.)

 

and the next poet of america is.. February 8, 2008

Filed under: Poetry — realitywrites @ 4:27 pm
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this link is for Scott February 6, 2008

Poet David Lehman was recently included on the NY Times Paper Cuts blog’s Living With Music feature. And he’s got a great tribute to Frank Sinatra’s music there, which he calls the “Young Blue Eyes” playlist.

Aside: I ordered the “Best American Erotic Poems” anthology Lehman edited way back in October when someone kindly dropped off the Winter/Spring book catalogues on my desk at work. I cannot wait to see the look the product dept. lady will give me when she hands me my employee discounted book order next month.

 

I need a cracker February 4, 2008

Filed under: Poetry — realitywrites @ 9:20 pm
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I’m loving this poem on Verse Daily:

“There Just No Telling” by Jennifer L. Knox

(An hour left of work and I’m finally awake.)