Saturday, October 12, 2019
Entrance to the Profession Narrative :: Essays Papers
Entrance to the Profession Narrative     I remember seventh grade Open House at my suburban Catholic grade school in the southern curve of St. Louisââ¬â¢ Mississippi River.  I remember the glaring, bowl-shaped auditorium lights hovering over milling parents and sheepish classmates, everyone looking for their own, or their own childââ¬â¢s work so they could make their exclamations and get on with the night.  I remember it so well because on my orange poster-board balloon, under a fifth grade school photoââ¬âwith the red pullover sweater, plaid Peter Pan collar, and bouffant bowââ¬âsomeone had written ââ¬Å"Aspiring Author.â⬠  I didnââ¬â¢t know anyone knew.  I didnââ¬â¢t even know myself.      Maybe it was in the stories I wrote for our weekly vocabulary sentences.  Or the dramas I enacted for book reports that ran fifteen minutes over our allotted five.  Perhaps I revealed it in my Social Studies notebook with pages upon pages of illustrated, full-paragraphed definitions of Civil War details, in the three-page poem I recited from memory in front of the class, in zealous literature projects, in my natural ability to crank out grammar trees, or in the novella I turned in for a one-page writing assignment.  It never occurred to me to articulate such an aspirationââ¬âperhaps because it was too close.  But others could see itââ¬âthis love affair with language.      For whatever reasons, I continued to dismiss that orange balloon discovery until several years after I leftââ¬âI thoughtââ¬âthe academic world behind for good.  I understand now why my undergraduate years were such a struggle.  This bouffant-bowed aspirant hooked flailing arms around a biology major, when math and science had been only sources of tedium and misery.  After a year of unbearable classes, I switched my major to Englishââ¬âmore out of a sense of failure than a sense of right.  My motivation for grasping onto science was the thought of a clear, and perhaps interesting, job-title after four years.  My motivation for running back into the arms of my former lover was that it felt familiar and natural.      I cringed every time I heard someone say, ââ¬Å"Oh, an English majorâ⬠¦what will you do?  Teach?â⬠  Was that my only option?  I couldnââ¬â¢t do it.  Yes, I loved to read and write, to crawl into glittering tunnels of analysis, to discover ideas as they revealed themselves under my pen, but it all seemed soâ⬠¦removed from life.  					  Entrance to the Profession Narrative  ::  Essays Papers  Entrance to the Profession Narrative     I remember seventh grade Open House at my suburban Catholic grade school in the southern curve of St. Louisââ¬â¢ Mississippi River.  I remember the glaring, bowl-shaped auditorium lights hovering over milling parents and sheepish classmates, everyone looking for their own, or their own childââ¬â¢s work so they could make their exclamations and get on with the night.  I remember it so well because on my orange poster-board balloon, under a fifth grade school photoââ¬âwith the red pullover sweater, plaid Peter Pan collar, and bouffant bowââ¬âsomeone had written ââ¬Å"Aspiring Author.â⬠  I didnââ¬â¢t know anyone knew.  I didnââ¬â¢t even know myself.      Maybe it was in the stories I wrote for our weekly vocabulary sentences.  Or the dramas I enacted for book reports that ran fifteen minutes over our allotted five.  Perhaps I revealed it in my Social Studies notebook with pages upon pages of illustrated, full-paragraphed definitions of Civil War details, in the three-page poem I recited from memory in front of the class, in zealous literature projects, in my natural ability to crank out grammar trees, or in the novella I turned in for a one-page writing assignment.  It never occurred to me to articulate such an aspirationââ¬âperhaps because it was too close.  But others could see itââ¬âthis love affair with language.      For whatever reasons, I continued to dismiss that orange balloon discovery until several years after I leftââ¬âI thoughtââ¬âthe academic world behind for good.  I understand now why my undergraduate years were such a struggle.  This bouffant-bowed aspirant hooked flailing arms around a biology major, when math and science had been only sources of tedium and misery.  After a year of unbearable classes, I switched my major to Englishââ¬âmore out of a sense of failure than a sense of right.  My motivation for grasping onto science was the thought of a clear, and perhaps interesting, job-title after four years.  My motivation for running back into the arms of my former lover was that it felt familiar and natural.      I cringed every time I heard someone say, ââ¬Å"Oh, an English majorâ⬠¦what will you do?  Teach?â⬠  Was that my only option?  I couldnââ¬â¢t do it.  Yes, I loved to read and write, to crawl into glittering tunnels of analysis, to discover ideas as they revealed themselves under my pen, but it all seemed soâ⬠¦removed from life.  					    
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