Read Writing Is My Drink Online
Authors: Theo Pauline Nestor
Tags: #General, #Reference, #Writing Skills, #Personal & Practical Guides, #Self-Help
nemesis: the Success Skil s course.
“Hold on, let me get this down,” I said, digging through my
purse for paper.
“Don’t worry about it,” she said, her mouth half full of salad,
waving away my search for paper with her free hand. “It’s all on
the notecards.”
“Notecards?” I asked, hope rising in me for the first time in
days.
“Notecards,” she said with a wink. “It’s all in the cards, my
friend. No worries.”
The day after B. left for Stanford, I tracked down the file with
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the note cards. For each of the Success Skil s lectures there was
a stack of about ten note cards paper-clipped together. I started
with the one for Class Three: How We Learn. “In Piaget’s schema
theory,” the card read, “he asserted that our brains are like filing cabinets.” Okay, I thought, fair enough. The next card read, “For
each topic, we own a folder, which may be very thin or quite
full.”
The cards lacked the promise of revealing the mystery of
Success Skil s I’d hope they’d deliver. But I was also tired of
being afraid, of thinking about the dreaded class, of preparing
for something I didn’t truly know how to prepare for. I’d read the
corresponding chapters in Pauk and Owens’s book
How to Study
in Col ege
; bring the cards and it would work out, right? B. had done it, hadn’t she?
I overlooked the fact that B. had created these notes based
on her own knowledge, which was immense. Each of the mi-
nuscule notations on each individual card pointed to a large file
in her brain that she would download when prompted by each
tiny note. I had no such files in my brain. I had only the tiny note pointing to my vast ignorance of how we learn and many other
subjects.
Enrollment in the Success Skil s class was mandatory for
students participating in a certain scholarship-generating grant
program. No typical college student would take such a course
otherwise. My first quarter of Success Skil s was taught in an au-
ditorium of seventy-seven freshmen in which I couldn’t make out
the faces in the darkness of the top rows. I’d never taught a class in my life, let alone a group of seventy-seven freshman. When
the fated day arrived, I stumbled into the first class, blinded by
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the bright stage lights. I focused on the people in the first three rows. I began my rambling Welcome to the Class! speech, never
letting my eyes stray above the third row. I’d never taught a class in my life, but to let that on would guarantee a bloodbath. All
power would instantly be transferred to the sharks; I’d be de-
stroyed.
The class met twice a week for ten weeks, and I got through
each class, but just barely. I clung to the note cards and made up
all sorts of stuff, to the point where I thought I might be arrested and run out of town. I made a lot of jokes and, frankly, the class
was easy, so most of the students liked me well enough. But I
knew the class wasn’t
good
. Then it came: course evaluation day.
Let me pause for a moment and say this: Yes, in most jobs,
one is evaluated, but there is only one job in which one is evalu-
ated
anonymously
by a group in which the median age is 18.75
years.
The evaluations came back to me a few weeks later, and it
was quickly clear that this wasn’t the most discerning group. Ex-
cept for the occasional gripe, they were happy enough. A few
people had things to say about my hair and shoes. But there was
one evaluation that jumped from the pile. “Let go of the cards,”
the young evaluator wrote in loopy cursive. “You know this stuff.
You just have to
trust
yourself. Just put down the cards and tell us what
you
know. You’ll do great. I promise!!!”
Let go of the cards.
I felt so naked, so revealed. It began to occur to me that every job has an unspoken emotional requirement that, while never listed among the qualifications in any
job description, is just as vital to one’s success as those that are.
Doctors have to be able to cope with facing the grief of others;
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lawyers have to be willing to assert themselves even when they
don’t feel like it; and teachers have to feel the exposure of all eyes on them, of being the starting spot for everything in the room.
Writers have to make themselves vulnerable by sharing their
opinions. You can be a genius and still not be up for teaching if
the emotional requirements of the job—including the ability to
handle this exposure—are beyond your reach.
The next quarter I began to loosen my grip on the cards a
little. One thing I noticed about the cards was they made me feel
like crap. Life with the cards involved me following a very loose
script instructing me on how to impersonate B., a person who
cared about a different set of things than I cared about, which
is easy for me to say now. But mostly, back then, the cards re-
minded me of all I felt I should know if I were ever going to be
half the teacher I imagined B. had been.
Occasional y, I found myself putting the cards aside, and
then I’d tell a little story about when I was in college, about how I felt afraid and unprepared most of the time. I’d blush as I told
these stories, but I noticed that when I did, the students would
actual y begin to wake up, and sometimes they’d laugh and
sometimes they’d even tell stories about themselves, about their
experiences in the classroom. The note cards gradual y fell into
disuse as I brought in research about learning that I had done
myself, but a large part of the class became stories: stories of
barely getting by, stories of succeeding unexpectedly, stories of
finding your passion and the topics you can learn without strain.
Even though I still wanted to prove to my students, my fel-
low faculty, and myself that I was as a real academic, that I was
as hard-core as B., the truth—revealing itself in the classroom as
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gravity reveals itself in every object that fal s—was that I am not truly of the academy. My strength does not lie in the rigors of
research or in the dogged pursuit of knowledge or information.
The truth, which I still wanted to deny, is that I am far too erratic and sil y to be a true academic. But it was also dawning on me
that this might actual y make me
more
suited for the job at hand, and that a true academic might not be interested in working for
long in this particular trench of higher education. Case in point:
B. was gone.
I also began to realize that I shared a special bond with the
majority of my students in rural Utah: We doubted our own
smarts. Most of my students’ parents hadn’t gone to college.
This, the department head told me, made them “high risk” for
not completing their own college degrees. I nodded. This made
sense and made me want to help them. Why didn’t it occur to
me then that neither my mother nor my biological father had
finished high school? I could understand what “high risk” meant
in terms of my students, but I had never been able to see myself
as falling short for any reason other than my own failings.
As my first year of teaching came to a close, the class no lon-
ger looked much like the course B. had taught. It wasn’t any bet-
ter or worse, but now it was mine. I was my own kind of teacher
and no longer simply an impersonator of a person I believed
could do the job better than I could.
As it turns out, many of the lessons of teaching are also the
lessons of writing, with both tasks entirely dependent on your
confidence in your own material, point of view, and voice. In
the classroom, the teacher’s voice is the thread that stitches the
pieces together, that takes the jumble of readings, activities, and 6 5
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discussion and renders them into knowledge. The class relies on
the teacher’s ability to make the parts cohere, just as the reader
depends on the writer to make the disparate parts of a story
unify. But unlike writing, which allows the writer to do the work
of unification on the writer’s own timetable, teaching demands
that you get your act together
now
, in front of everyone
.
There isn’t much room in the classroom for the teacher’s crisis of faith,
“intellectual anorexia,” or doubt in any other shape or form. In
the classroom, all eyes are on
you
.
Teaching two to three classes a day five days a week, I found
myself in a boot camp for confidence, a “scared straight” pro-
gram for doubters. Some days I faltered, others I didn’t, but
every day it was my job to teach and so I did. It got easier. I
still felt nauseated the first day of a new quarter, but my confi-
dence in my voice grew, and having gained that confidence at
metaphorical gunpoint in the classroom prepared me to face my
doubts in myself as a writer. The lesson of learning to put down
the cards and trust myself was essential to finding my voice on
the page, and soon I would have an opportunity to use that new
knowledge.
Living in Utah was a complicated experience for me. Even
though I’d felt like an outsider most of my life, all that garden-
variety alienation was child’s play compared to living in a cul-
ture with secret rituals and underwear, a place where old folks
with little suitcases walked into the giant white temple to do who
knows what. A place where coffee is
not
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me was always at odds with the culture, but living in Utah also
freed me. No longer surrounded by strivers and creative types
and haunted by a feeling of falling behind, I now resided among
people who were either tremendously talented at hiding their
lust for more or who were, in fact, fairly satisfied with their lives.
Life in southern Utah is M-E-L-L-O-W, especial y if one is
not Mormon and therefore not expected to go to Relief Soci-
ety meetings or have Family Home Evenings or attend church
services for three hours at a stretch. Plus, all this mellowness is happening against a backdrop of red canyons, long mesas, and
the bluest sky imaginable. Hours after my arrival in the state, I
stood in the middle of the red and white rock of Snow Canyon
State Park and thought I’d never heard such quiet. I felt an odd
sensation wash over me that I thought might be what the less
anxious must call “peace.”
After spending the last two and half years primarily indoors
reading, I now lived in a place that insisted that I go outside, a
place where it seemed like enough to just exist. Once I estab-
lished a teaching routine, I began to relax in this land of very
few demands. I biked up and down the empty streets of my new
small town on Sunday mornings. I hiked. I rode in a two-seater
plane over canyons inaccessible by car. I caught exactly one fish.
I made apricot jam and planted tomatoes. Sometimes, I’d think:
I should try to write. And then I’d take a nap.
I felt like the upward push of my twenties had landed me
in a big warm desert resting spot. I now watched TV and slept
in when a year earlier I would’ve been reading something way
over my head, but I had a
job
, a
career
, which implied that all the reading and studying and sweating over seminar papers
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on Shelley’s
Frankenstein
had led me out of the wilderness of eternal poverty and identity-crushing restaurant work. In San
Francisco, I’d always been strapped for cash, sleep, and time,
schlepping in the fog from my tutoring job, via two trains and
a cable car, to my waitressing gig in North Beach. Now I slept
eight hours a night and commuted ten minutes through hushed
desert to get to work.
Within a year of my arrival in Utah, I began to acknowledge
that my stay there wasn’t a temporary one. Yes, my spiritual and
political beliefs might’ve separated me from the pack, but in-
creasingly my life resembled that of the locals. Within another
year, I married a transplant from California. Six months later
we bought a house and then, of course, next came the inevitable
dog. A job, a husband, a house, a dog, and somewhere in there I
turned thirty: My footloose, angst-y twenties were official y over.
Inevitably, the novelty of the peaceable kingdom waned,
though, and restlessness and ambition soon flickered again.