The Stories Behind the Poems in My Forthcoming Collection

One of the poems I wrote when I was 21. My then-boyfriend—a kind, gentle soul—had come to an impasse with me about something, and I wrote the poem about the distance it created between us, how I wanted to close the space. It was one in a group of poems I submitted for my college’s poetry contest, and I remember that my father had a work conflict with the ceremony where the contest winner would be announced, and I wanted him there so very badly since I became a writer and poet largely because of him, and he surprised me by showing up, and I won the contest. I have a picture of us from that day. It’s one of my favorites—me next to my father, a man I loved then and love now. I broke up with the boyfriend a year and a half later—not because there was anything wrong with him, but because I was too young to pick one person for the rest of my life—and years later, after my first marriage and divorce, I regretted that decision, I wanted to take it back like so many other things, but of course I could not. 

I wrote one of the poems after I heard about the terrible death of a young actor. 

I wrote another after I returned from teaching in Mexico and I could not stop thinking about a student’s unwillingness to step out from the shadow of her boyfriend. My time in Mexico had taught me about stepping out of shadows, about figuring out what I wanted, and I can see now the poem is about my recognition of myself in her.

I wrote one about gardening, but it’s really about marriage.

I wrote another about gardening, but it’s really about surviving illness.

I wrote imagined poems—poems not based on truth—and I wrote poems that have a little bit of truth mixed with a lot of fiction. Poems don’t have to be true, after all. 

I wrote one while sitting in the Underdog Cafe, a coffee shop in my hometown (and my favorite in the world), after I had walked by a high school acquaintance whose brother had just died. That poem is about him, his brother, but it’s also about small towns, about our connections.

I wrote one about my great aunt who was a feminist but would have likely never called herself that. This poem started out as an essay that I revised a dozen times but could never get right. I eventually cut it down and it became a poem. This poem got published in one of my absolute favorite magazines, The Sun

I wrote one when I was in love. That poem won a contest. The relationship did not.

I wrote one about tornadoes—I grew up in Ohio, after all—but it’s really about a relationship’s implosion.

I wrote a few about cooking—I must have been hungry a lot—and about what cooking has taught me, why I do it. I wrote about someone cooking for me. That person taught me how to care for an iron skillet. He also taught me about what it means to want two things at once that are impossible to have simultaneously, and the consequences of this yearning.

I wrote some when I was young, and some when I was not so young, and I wrote some about being young.

I wrote one about eating falafel sandwiches on Paris streets with someone I used to love. That trip was the only time I have ever been to Paris, or France for that matter. We walked around so much our feet swelled, but we loved exploring the neighborhoods and we loved Mediterranean food and falafel sandwiches that were so stuffed they fell apart in our hands. Months later, we fell apart. The poem is a little about that, too.

I wrote some poems when I lived in Ohio, some when I lived in North Carolina, and some when I lived in Tennessee, which I still do. I wrote one about Tennessee.

I wrote one about the last time my mother saw her mother. This poem is also about my grandmother’s death, which happened the summer I was about to leave for college, and it was the only time in my life my mother and I argued and argued for weeks. I understand now we were trying to hold on and let each other go as I transitioned to a new chapter, and we didn’t have words to express our sadness at having to do this.

I wrote one about the things someone took from me, but the poem is ultimately about how I willingly gave up those things.

I wrote one on a morning when I was grappling with medical issues and trying to focus on all the things I was grateful for in the face of my fear. 

I wrote another, years later, about wanting to protect the people I loved from something terrible befalling them.

I wrote one for a former love’s birthday, about how we had managed to put aside our baggage to come together. Except a week later, we were broken up. I thought I broke up with him. He thought he broke up with me. I told him if he wanted to be the one who broke up, that was fine since I would have preferred we work things out. I cried for weeks and then months afterward. I understand now I was grieving not just our relationship but trust in myself. Six months later, when he said he wanted to get back together but with certain “conditions,” I built trust in myself by realizing he didn’t love me just as I was, and that I would accept nothing less. 

I wrote about a time when I was 21 and in college, but it’s not about the boyfriend, that kind, gentle soul. It’s about a life lesson I learned. 

So many poems are about life lessons. And I’m still learning, and I’m still writing, and I’m already working on the next collection.

Trouble Can Be So Beautiful at the Beginning won the Adrienne Bond Award for Poetry. The collection will be published by Mercer University Press on February 1, 2021. (Cover photo by August Michael Knemeyer). Learn more about the book here.


UPCOMING WORKSHOPS

The Art of Memoir & Personal Essay: A Generative Writing Workshop
March 10-April 7, 2021,
2:30-5 p.m.
Join me in this five-week, online (Zoom) workshop during which you will generate new writing, read writing that inspires, and learn some tools and techniques on the craft of personal essay/memoir writing. The goal is for you to leave with first drafts and a writer’s toolbox ready to help you finish and write the rest of your own life stories. Learn more here. Cost: $329. REGISTER HERE.

Let’s Write Together!

February 9, 2021, noon EST: Register here
February 16, 2021,
noon EST: Register here
March 2, 2021,
noon EST: Register here
Having a hard time finding inspiration and motivation to write? Join me for any (or all) of these online one-hour sessions. We’ll talk about a piece of writing, I will give you a prompt, and then you will WRITE. These workshops are part of Press 53’s High Road Festival of Poetry and Short Fiction. Cost: $10/session.

Online Poetry Workshop
February 11, 2021:
7-8 p.m.
This workshop is part of a series of writing workshops with Community Building Art Works. Register here.

Moments that Matter: an Introduction to Flash Nonfiction
February 20, 2021,
2:00 p.m. EST
In this workshop, we’ll talk about what flash nonfiction is, how it works, and why it works. Together we’ll mine some powerful flash pieces for effective techniques you can use in your own writing. This program is part of Press 53’s High Road Festival of Poetry and Short Fiction. Cost: $30. Register here.


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A “No” Never Means You’re Not Good Enough

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Many years ago, I liked a boy.

No, I’m just kidding. This isn’t a blog about relationships, although I admit that some (not all!) of what I am about to say could apply to relationships.

For those of you who are my long-time subscribers, you know that this is the time of year when I review my submission success—the number of times I submitted my work to magazines, and the number of times my work was accepted or rejected—and the lessons I learned along the way. For newer subscribers, welcome to my world of being a writer and getting the big boot (which is what I call it when I get a big ol’ NO).

And let me tell you upfront, this was a year of a lot of big boots.

But let’s start with early 2020, just before the pandemic truly hit, when in early March I got a yes from The Sun, one of my dream publications. I’ve written before about how hugely important this was to me—I had submitted 24 pieces to them over the course of 14 years, so I did whoop it up when I got the yes. And when I say I whooped it up, I mean I WHOOPED IT UP!

This boded well for my year ahead. But, like the pandemic which I had not anticipated to take the turns that it did, the year of submissions did not turn out exactly as I hoped. What followed was a no. And another, and another. I had expected to get more rejections than normal as this was the year I submitted almost exclusively to what I call “reach” magazines—magazines that I had never been able to get my work into before. I knew that if I didn’t try, I had zero chance of getting in, so this was the year of try.

And try and try and try. I might as well give you the number of rejections now to get it out of the way: 88. I usually aim for 100 rejections, but apparently I did not submit enough work because I can assure you with the trajectory I was on, I would have easily made that goal. I got 88 rejections in 2020, almost all in a row. I admit, sometimes it did feel a little like someone was throwing pebbles at my face for days and weeks and months in a row. Some days I got more than one rejection (yippee!).

But here was the big lesson for me: It did not make me give up. And it did not make me think I was not a good writer. Not once.

Sure, I got tired of the big boot, but there were some bright spots even in the sea of rejections: one of my reach magazines (I’ll call them Reach Magazine One) encouraged me to submit again. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the type of rejection you can get, there are typically two: the flat-out NO, and the no-but-we-liked your-work-so-please-try-again. So when Reach Magazine One encouraged me to submit again, I did—another three times because they kept saying no-but-try-again. My fourth submission is still out with them right now. Another reach magazine—Reach Magazine Two—I have submitted to 14 times (!) in the last five years. They are a dream publication, one of my top three journals I want to get into. In 2020, I submitted to them four times: the first two I got back just standard rejections; the second two were no-but-we-liked your-work-so-please-try-again. I consider that progress. I’m waiting for their submissions to open again so I can try. This year will also be the year of try, try, try. 

My total number of 2020 acceptances? Two. The Sun back in March, and then another on December 28th, just squeaking in to 2020. I’ll take it.

In the meantime, I’m still writing, I’m still teaching, I’m still very grateful for all the yeses I have gotten in life. So what if some magazine said no? There’s always another. All it takes is one.

Photo credit: Racquel Raclette from Unsplash.com.


Upcoming Workshops

Let’s Write Together!
Having a hard time finding inspiration and motivation to write? Join me for any (or all) of these online one-hour sessions. We’ll talk about a piece of writing, I will give you a prompt, and then you will WRITE. These workshops are part of Press 53’s High Road Festival of Poetry and Short Fiction. Cost: $10/session.
January 12, 2021, noon (EST): Register here
January 26, 2021,
noon (EST): Register here
February 9, 2021,
noon (EST): Register here


My Bookshop & Doodleshop are always open here.

Postcards and note cards, some 2021 sales, and more cards to come for Valentine’s Day.

You Really Should Think About Teaching

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Years ago when I was in college, my professors told me, “You should think about teaching. You’d be good at it.” But I didn’t want to teach. I wanted to be a writer. 

I did become a full-time writer, eventually. In the meantime I became a study abroad administrator, an admissions recruiter, a publications coordinator, a career counselor, and a financial counselor.

(I did have a short stint teaching at a university in Mexico early on, but I told myself I wasn’t any good at it—I couldn’t motivate the students who didn’t want to learn, the ones who talked through class and rolled their eyes. But the ones who did want to learn? They loved me and I loved them.)

Life went on, and it looked as if I were zig-zagging through a zillion careers, but if you looked closely, you could find some common threads—things I was drawn to, things I sought—and one of them was this: connecting with people. When I recruited for university admissions, driving all over Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana in a red Ford Taurus sedan with a trunkload of brochures, I enjoyed sitting down with high school students and talking to them about their futures and academic interests. When I was a career counselor for The Women’s Center in Chapel Hill, working out of my upstairs, closet-sized office that I loved with a view into the trees, I looked forward to talking with clients about their career aspirations—what did they want to do, what was holding them back, and what tools did they need to become successful? I liked taking on interns and helping them get the skills they needed to launch their careers. I loved training, mentoring, and yes, teaching, though I am not sure I would have ever used that word exactly, not back then. Now I can see I was teaching in small ways all along but without the title. 

When I applied to master’s of fine arts programs in creative writing, I looked for studio programs—programs that focused more on how to write, less on how to teach. I wasn’t planning on becoming a professor, so what did I need all that for? But looking back, I do remember thinking that one day, when I had a book or two under my belt, I wanted to teach at writing workshops and conferences like the ones I had attended. I’d had my fair share of good teachers (the ones who taught me craft tools that I still use today, the ones who encouraged, the ones who inspired) along with my fair share of the bad (the ones who said none of us were good enough to write a full-length book, the ones who delivered criticism with knives instead of neutralities, the ones who got exasperated with beginners). I wanted to take all of the good things I’d learned and I wanted to help others the way I’d been helped. 

It’s kind of funny how life can be taking you along a road for years, for decades even, and you’re so busy chatting and looking up at the stars and looking down at your feet that you don’t have a clue what the destination will be—you’re not even thinking about a destination, you’re thinking where the heck is the bathroom and I’m getting hungry, did anyone bring some food? And then you arrive, and you open the door, and you realize the door was there all along.

I’ll be teaching another memoir/personal essay workshop in January. This won’t be my first time teaching it, but I still bring that giddiness to it that reminds me of other kinds of firsts—first day of school, first day of the new year, first love. I’ve been sitting at a big wooden table at the back of our house, a place by a row of windows, and poring through essays and memoir chapters and finding what I hope will be just the right prompts and pieces to show these writers the tools that can help them chisel out their most important truths, the stories that keep them awake at night, their stories that need to be heard.

I love seeing writers grow and change. I like seeing their lightbulb moments. But every single time I teach, my students teach me something in return. I change and grow and am better for having known them and their work.

The motto of my alma mater is: “Having Light We Pass It On To Others.” My professors did that for me all those years ago and now it’s my turn with my small but unflickering light. I guess they were right after all when they said I should think about teaching.

(Photo credit: Kelly Blanchard)


Upcoming Workshops

The Art of Memoir/Personal Essay: A Generative Writing Workshop
Tuesdays, January 5-February 2, 2021,
2:30-4:30/5 p.m. (EST):
Join me in this online (Zoom) workshop during which you will generate new writing, read writing that inspires, and learn some tools and techniques on the craft of personal essay/memoir writing. The goal is for you to leave with first drafts and a writer’s toolbox ready to help you finish and write the rest of your own life stories. Cost: $329. Limit 12 participants. Register here. Learn more here.


Let’s Write Together!

Having a hard time finding inspiration and motivation to write? Join me for any (or all) of these online one-hour sessions. We’ll talk about a piece of writing, I will give you a prompt, and then you will WRITE. These workshops are part of Press 53’s High Road Festival of Poetry and Short Fiction. Cost: $10/session.
December 29, 2020, noon (EST): Register here
January 12, 2021,
noon (EST): Register here
January 26, 2021,
noon (EST): Register here
February 9, 2021,
noon (EST): Register here


Looking for Last-Minute Gifts?

I have lots of sales going on at my online doodleshop and bookshop.

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