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Erin's in her thirties, married and in graduate school in the Pacific Northwest. Her first child, a girl child, arrived after many hours of contractions and massive pain in early November 2005. Slowly, more of the archived entries will be added (they go up through Oct. 2004), you may be waiting until summer 2006 for this to happen. So if you like to see what she's pondered or blathered about in the past you can look forward to those...some day.


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Monday, May 29, 2006

What happened to May?!  Both my husband and I turned another year older. My baby is now over 6 months old and I can hardly believe it. I’m nearly done as a graduate teaching assistant. Next year I get to write and study (only one or two writing theory classes) in luxury (time-wise)... well, except I’ll hopefully have a part-time job. That doesn’t sound like much luxury, trading in a part-time teaching job for a part-time unknown as of yet job, but the teaching gig was much more than part-time—a mistake I won’t make again (of course I won’t be applying for another teaching assistantship again, so that solves that).

After a first year or so of happiness in the Northwest, we are seeing the cracks in the veneer, so to speak. It isn’t as bad as it was down south with all of the rude and angry people, but there is some of that here too. Of course, I am curious if the way we (hubby and I) view these things is actually a reflection of our own angst and moods. We are a bit less happy with this place and the people as we first were, so of course they all seem less friendly than before. Perspective is perspectivey that way.

My students this quarter are absolutely fabulous compared to a time before that will hopefully soon be forgotten. Although they are probably just a rather typical class. Perspective again.

I’m holding back my excitement for my thesis which is barely begun and still mostly just floating dust particles in the ether of my mind. I feel very much as if I’ll call down the mother of all jinxes if I talk about it too much. So, I’ll simply say I’m excited, but trying not to be too excited (this is a much better state of mind than what I felt a few months ago, aka dread).

Now I get to watch June flitter away and wonder where it all went… then July…

Once a month is rather pathetic for blogging, but I may remain pathetic for awhile. We’ll see.

Posted by Erin at 11:07 AM.
Filed under: PersonalWritingFictionAcademicsRantsBlogging
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Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Last week, I began teaching creative writing to middle school kids as part of an afterschool program. After the first day I felt as if I was in over my head. It wasn’t as if I had any expectations and then got blown out of the water; I had very little in the way of expectations, yet their energy was so much more than I’ve experienced in a long, long while that it threw me (out of the water, perhaps?). I think the last time I was around tweens and young teens was when I was one. So, a few *coughtwentycough* years or so.

This week I was much more prepared. I didn’t run out of writing activities. In fact, I over-planned which was predictable for me (I seem to usually have too much planned for many of the classes I teach...just in case). In fact we only got about halfway through my lesson/activity on the short story, so I have next week’s class all ready to go.

Anyway, back to the students. They talk. They talk a lot. Did I talk that much at that age? If there was a “talking” event at the Olympics, kids this age would be winning all of the medals. They are great. I find myself listening to them and forgetting momentarily that we’ve strayed from the writing stuff. Luckily, it isn’t a normal class, but an afterschool “club” of sorts, so we’re more free to go at our own pace. Did I mention that they’re great?

On a different subject: My daughter likes the chorus of “Who Let the Dogs Out?” She breaks into giggles and laughter when I sing it. I find myself singing the strangest snippets of songs to her since I don’t know many (okay, hardly any) nursery rhymes or lullabies.

Posted by Erin at 09:16 AM.
Filed under: PersonalWritingAcademicsWork
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Friday, May 13, 2005

I’ve been working with some high school students, teaching them creative writing. They’ve written poems, a short story, and now they are working on some non-fiction. The exercise I’ve adopted from a colleague has them writing about their greatest fear and their happiest or most meaningful moment. I’ve adapted it somewhat so that they must include elements of a narrative. They are working more on it today, and I wanted to give them an example of how their real life can be told and still be story-like. So I wrote about a fear I have and I’m sharing it below (I’ve written about this on my blog before, so some of it may sound familiar).

I don’t know the man who is my birth father. I’ve met him, I’ve been told, but only when I was a baby and so, I have no tangible memory of it. I’ve over thirty years old and today I still fear what might happen if I were to track him down and meet him. Mostly, I fear that he wouldn’t want to know me, wouldn’t care to see me, and would reject me all over again like he did before.

I remember when I was about eleven years old we were sorting through pictures on the floor of the spare bedroom. These weren’t your average number of pictures, found in a shoe box or a few envelopes from the photo lab. Hundreds and hundreds of pictures were piled into a large cardboard box, about a foot and half wide and tall and two feet deep. There were a lot of pictures. There were five of us sitting on the thick carpet around this box—my mom, me, my friend from down the street, her older sister, and a girl from across the street who was my step-brother’s age (three years older than me). We were a group of girls and women having fun, laughing at the silly photos of my family. One photo was of my step-brother and I dressed in my grandmother’s old clothes. We both had on dresses that hung like tents from our 4 and 7-year-old bodies. We had on huge brimmed hats, and pearls and beige leather purses. He and I looked like Halloween gone awry. My step-dad never liked that picture, I assume because he didn’t like to see his young son dressed in drag.

So, there we were, all of us girls, giggling at the photos and talking and having a good time. I picked up a photo of a man and it struck me that I had to know who this person was in the photo. I asked my mom, “Who is this?” But she ignored me as everyone kept looking through the pile. “Mom, who is this?” I asked again. My mom looked up at in that certain way that said we will talk about this later. It was an unspoken command that I was out-of-bounds, even though I didn’t know why or how I could be.

Later when we were alone, my mother explained that the photo was of my natural father. She had told me at a younger age, around six, when I was confused by the fact that I had a different last name at the doctor’s office than the one I used at school. The doctor’s office knew me by my birth name, by the last name of my natural father. Everyone else knew me by my step-father’s name. At age eleven, I didn’t remember that conversation at all. And so my mom briefly explained it all to me again.

I never talked to my mom about why things happened as they did—why my birth father chose to stay away and never know me. But it was one of those things that as a child I could only rationalize as something wrong with me. I wasn’t good enough. I was the reason he left. He didn’t want me. To this day, some of that lingers, these thoughts that I was abandoned because I wasn’t good enough. They linger even though I know that it probably had more to do with other things. Perhaps it was his fear of my step-dad, who can be rather intimidating. Perhaps it had more to do with the complication of feelings he had or lacked for my mother. Perhaps it had to do with the fact that he already had a daughter who was being torn away from him in a nasty divorce. This last idea is something I learned a few years ago from my mom’s long-time friend, who knew them both way back then.

But the fear of rejection lingers. I fear that someday I’ll find him, show up at his door, and say, “Hi, I’m your daughter.” And he’ll be standing there, unwelcoming. It may be fear in his eyes that I have come, or maybe just that cold, dead look of apathy. Either way, my own fear has kept me from seeking him out. Some days I wish I could meet him easily. I wish he would find me, and tell me that he has thought about me all these years like I’ve thought about him. I often wish it could be that easy, but somehow I know it won’t be. If I ever want to know my birth father, I know I’m going to have to face up to my fear.

Posted by Erin at 07:19 AM.
Filed under: PersonalWritingNonfiction
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Wednesday, August 06, 2003

I was tromping through some of my files when I came across a short paragraph that I wrote awhile ago. I think it might have been for a character I played on a MUD (multi-user dungeon), but I’m not really sure because after a second look it could be something that I threw down about the verbal abuse that was inflicted on me while growing up. So, basically I’m recycling old stuff for here (yep yep lazy lazy).

As you exhale the poison floats as if on a current, curling past your lips, billowing outward, and saturating the air. It is now the very air surrounding me. I breath in your gaseous venom like a first inhale after near suffocation. My body demands a need for it, though the bells in my head are clanging with danger. It dazes my mind, numbs it with intoxication. There’s no resistance now; your poison has its desired effect on me, controlling me just as you intended.

P.S. We saw Evanescence in concert Monday night with Cold and Revis (and Cauterize, but we missed them), and it was a great show even with all the kinks they were working out since it was the first night of the tour.

Posted by Erin at 08:28 PM.
Filed under: PersonalWriting
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