Skip to main content

Post-graduation

Dave and I graduated from college 8 days ago. In this picture, my scarlet journalism tassel is resting against my cheek; Dave's bright-orange engineering tassel is half-hidden under his left wrist, still attached to his quickly-doffed square cap.

Graduation brings the question of "What next?" During the preceding weeks and the following days, the question I've been asked most is, "What are you going to do now?" I tell the Asker that I have a good part-time job in a law office which pays the bills and provides health insurance, so I'll be there for the forseeable future and attempt freelancing in the mornings. The Asker gives a typically bland response, such as, "Well, that sounds good!" and the topic is laid to rest. Meanwhile, I'm fumbling in my purse for an antacid because this scripted conversation always gives me heartburn.

Three weeks ago, I got coffee on a Saturday morning with my dancer friend, Katie. On the whim of caffeination, we walked a couple blocks south to the community market and ambled around the stalls and stores. We ducked into the bookstore to avoid the crush of people and strollers and were surrounded by tall narrow shelves brimming with books that spilled into piles on the floorboards.

I tossed my empty coffee cup in a small metal trash can as we headed toward the back room, a small space suffocated by bookcases 4-aisles deep. And there, sitting on a rusted white stool at the back of a row of poetry, I looked up and up the beautiful rows of torn and peeling books, and a horrifying realization dawned on me: I recognize almost none of these authors' names. And as if on cue, Katie came around the corner, musing aloud as her fingers brushed the spines, "Being in a bookstore reminds me of just how many writers are out there trying to make it."

I wanted to throw up.

It's not because it's news to me - I know what I'm getting into. But seeing it there, 10-shelves tall with nameless names, is disheartening.

And I think of that shelf every time someone asks me, "What are you going to do now?"

But I also think about my part-time job - my black pleather chair, my grey pressboard desk, my cracked plastic in-tray, the hundreds of documents I've labeled, and the hundreds of labelled documents that come back to me to be recycled.

I have a good job. And I love every single person I work with. But I despise the thought of wasting my abilities and my degree (I have a degree now, not just a major!) for the sake of predictability and financial comfort. I taste acid when I think of my writing being ineffective, but I also fear staying in this legal world when I want to throw my mind and body into the pursuit of writing. And sometimes I wonder if I'm being a coward for not dropping my plows in the field where they lay to make chase.

I'm afraid that my voice will be silent, even when printed and hardcover-bound. I'm afraid that I'll use my degree as decoration and stay comfortably at the law office until I'm 80.

But this is my present post-graduate plan: to remain a part-time legal receptionist and begin freelancing in the mornings. And I hope in time I will fade out of the office to focus on writing, rather than fading out of writing to earn money at my comfortable job.

I hope I hope I hope.

Now where did I put that roll of Tums...

Comments

Ian Robot said…
I definitely fell that fear of what to do next. You want to stay realistic, not aiming for the impossible, but at the same time that fear of the blank page ahead of you can keep you hemmed in to stay where you are. The familiar will always have some more solid pull than the fragile dreams of the future. Keep your hopes up, though! You're a grownup now haha

Popular posts from this blog

The First Stages

2 days ago I had a coffee date with the girl "in charge" of the house I'll be moving into this Sunday. Snuggled down in a sweatshirt over a white chocolate mocha during a drizzly afternoon we went over last minute details to make sure she and I were on the same page. As we wrapped everything up, she told me to wait and dashed to the car; coming back in with a polka dot gift bag I had only eyes for what lay behind the curled red ribbon tying the two handles together: two shiny silver keys. Inside the bag was a beautiful red journal and a heap of candy from all the girls to welcome me into the house, but I couldn't get over the feel of those keys in my hand with fresh cut grooves. I marveled at the sight of them threaded onto my keychain as Sarah Brasse's eyes danced from across the table. I looked up, feeling the warmth of the mocha spread from my abdomen to my fingers and toes and the ends of my hair. "It's real, isn't it?" I said. "It's

The Core Four

What a wonderful delight - the Core Four are back and typing about their lives. Nothing makes my day quite like reading a fresh entry - or two even! - from Tricia AND Traci AND Jans. Nothing compares. Especially Jans; that was what, a two, maybe three month difference between entries? It made me sad, but I checked as often as I thought of it. What a tremendous treat to click your link and find my name invoked in the first sentence - I'll be on a high from that for hours to come. To the rest of you wondering what names I'm referring to, check on my links sidebar; the three of them and I used to live in three different cities and two different states (now three cities and three states), and our little-traveled blogs kept us connected. These girls are the reason why I started writing a blog at all; it's hard to imagine that I once was the worst at updating consistently...now I can't get enough of it, and I run out of stories to tell (which is saying alot for me...) We all

I Watch You Smile - You Steal the Show

Anyone ever see "Mean Girls" with Lindsey Lohan? When she was pissed off, she suffered from a symptom she dubbed "word vomit". Hers was the result of her convulsing anger, but I have a different word vomit. Mine is basically the result of my vocabulary and emotions upchucking at the same time. I'm not quite sure what to tell you guys; what's appropriate to say, what you don't need to know, what's too much to tell you. This is probably gonna be a pretty long entry, which might scare you off, but after hearing my unusally discouraging tones I have no doubt that many of you are now riveted. I guess...you guys love me and want to know me, and for some, this is the only way you keep up with me. I'll figure out the limit as I go, I guess. I had a very good talk with my momma today, which is a good sign for our relationship. It was violently and starkly splintered for quite a while, but it has progressed in leaps and bounds lately as I've better und