Sunday, July 2, 2017

Getting to No Me - Embracing Rejection

It's hard to send work out and then wait, wait, wait for the email to come back (if it ever does) with the polite explanation about why your piece isn't right. But it's necessary in order to get work out into the world. You can't succeed if you don't try.

My submission record was spotty after I completed my MFA program. At first, it was query letters out to select literary agencies, then more agencies, and then more. I stopped after awhile in fear of burning opportunities with everyone and dooming any chance of getting published EVER. Sound dramatic? Well, this is how it feels. Every "no thank you" bolsters that voice cowering in the back of your mind that tells you that you aren't good enough, aren't funny enough, not cut out for this. Meanwhile, other less-inspired work is printed all over the place. It's soul crushing.

So I took a break. First from querying agents, then from sending anything anywhere. I'd write a little, participating in short story and flash fiction contests, but I tucked those stories away. And all the while, I taught undergraduates about writing and literature. I taught them how to write query letters.
 
And then I read a blog post about changing the way writers should think about rejections.

http://lithub.com/why-you-should-aim-for-100-rejections-a-year/

I share it with my creative writing classes each term. I started looking for places to send the stories I'd stashed away. Interesting things started to happen.

Thank you for sending us "Stupidhead". We all appreciated the chance to read it. It's well written, and the ending is great (it's my favorite part). The ending, however, just doesn't feel earned. Comes a little too out of left field, which is maybe what you were going for. So, unfortunately, we're going to have to pass on this one. Please submit to us again, though. You've definitely got the talent. If it's any help, we often publish work that is a little more on the edgy side of things.

Thank you for taking an interest in Gathering Storm Magazine and for sending us "Stupidhead". We appreciate the opportunity to review your work. Unfortunately, this wasn't the right fit for us, BUT PLEASE KEEP TRYING! We just didn't feel that this submission was what we are looking for at this time. 

Thank you so much for participating in our March/April 2017 Very Short Fiction contest—we really enjoyed "Stupidhead"!
Although it did not quite make the top-25 list, it did make it a long way through the judging process, earning you Honorable Mention, which you should note on your cover letter as you send this story back out into the world. Here is a link to the Honorable Mention list, which you can post on your blog, etc., as you like: http://bit.ly/2017MarAprVSFhonorablemention


Thank you so much for sending "Beedancing." While the piece isn't right for Mortar at this time, we very much enjoyed reading it and would like to encourage you to submit your work to us again in the future. Thank you--We hope to hear from you again! 


 Still "no thank you," but these editors took the time to encourage me to continue trying. So I did. And soon, I started getting a "yes" here and there.

Thank you for your updated submission. My editors and I have jointly decided to accept 'Handymen'' for our Monsters Among Us anthology. Congratulations! You may spread the word far and wide that you will be published in this issue. We hope you will join the other contributors to this issue in promoting the work to friends, family, and fans around the world. 

I'm so happy to let you know the committee chose your proposal for this June's alumni seminar. I'm so excited to have you in Tampa again!

Citizen,

The Despot has deemed your story worthy, and it now appears on Scrawl Brawl. 

Long live the Despot,

Grovel Sycophanti

Minister of Information Dissemination

We hope this finds you well and your writing humming along smoothly! Cija passed on your work, and we really enjoyed reading your pieces.

We would love to have you join our Writers & Words series at Charmington's in Baltimore. We feature four writers each month in fiction, non-fiction, poetry and the ineffable "wild card" writing. We think your fiction would fit in well for our July 11th reading lineup, and we would love to feature you as our wildcard (we don't usually have mystery/suspense writers!). Are you available that day?

As part of our reading series, we also provide a chapbook for sale that features each writer's work. We will request a piece for the chapbook approximately three weeks before the reading.

Still plenty of "no thank yous" and I am no where near 100 rejections or even submissions yet, but I write and send and write and send without dread. I still do flash fiction and short story contests. I still teach. I still get giddy when an idea comes together, when someone reading it laughs or grimaces or gasps in the right places. And I will keep trying.

In August, I will attend the Writer's Digest Conference in New York City. While there, I will pitch my novel to agents again, setting aside my fear of no for that chance at yes. And if I don't get it there, I will try again and keep writing. I've started the next novel. Well, I've started thinking about the next novel.

So if you are discouraged, double down on the writing and the submissions. Accept speaking engagements, connect with your peers - your writing community, and gather those rejection emails as proof of your courage and hard work. I'll be sending the good vibes that a few yeses come your way!

Happy writing!

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Invisibility


Earlier this week, a man nearly knocked me off the sidewalk and into the street as I made my way from the parking garage to my office about two blocks away. The man was tall and sturdily built and wearing a very nice (expensive) suit in conservative navy. He held a stainless coffee travel mug in one hand and a copy of The Wall Street Journal along with a fistful of cash in the other. Seriously. He was carrying a wad of money. He pushed open the door as he exited the CVS on the corner and stepped into my path. He never even looked nor did he see me. I was literally beneath his notice. I recovered my balance without injury, but as I followed him down the sidewalk and then into the office building, I was struck by how inconsequential I was to this man in his expensive suit. He didn’t hold the door for anyone behind him when entering the lobby of our building either, just allowed the door to close on its own as if he was the only person in the universe.
This struck me as particularly aligned to our current political climate. The world continually surprises me with events both absurd and terrifying. I am incredulous at the voices that are rising to the surface while my own seems to be so muffled and ineffective as to render me completely invisible.  
Also this week, I found a flyer stuffed into my mailbox announcing an upcoming block party that would shut down our street (of about 24 houses) to all traffic and require that no one parked on the road. Cars with their visitors would have to find a space on a cross street or another neighboring road so that partygoers could set up their barbecues and patio chairs and lawn games and such. Sounds fun, right? The road would be closed from 10am until 7pm, the flyer informed me. Nine hours. Nine hours of people day drinking in the street in front of my home. Last year, a fight broke out right in front of my yard when the group failed to reopen the street for hours after the posted time and another neighbor tried to get home through the drunken revelers.
So I was surprised, and not in a good way, that this event was happening again and for the full day. The flyer directed us to a facebook group set up for the party, though it turned out to be a closed group that one has to request access to see. I did and was granted access. When I asked the question about why this closure needed to be nine hours, I was told:
Can’t please everyone 
The temporary barricades aren't very large, nor are they very heavy. If you must exit [the street] at some point on [ the day of the party], you can move the barricade. All that we ask is that you please have the decency to put it back where it was.
you can enter and exit through the other streets just as easily park at the end of the corner walk a couple streets walk a couple feet to the house ..wouldn't kill anybody to burn a calorie and have a little bit exercise for a neighborhood everybody get together and be a neighbor event
By law we need to keep the street passable for any emergency vehicles, so you'll be able to get past if you must.
Small inconvenience for a good party!
It turns out that anyone in the city of Baltimore can request a street closure for a party without asking anyone who lives there for consent. I looked it up. You pay a small fee, agree to post signs 72 hours in advance telling people to get their cars off the street (or they will get towed), agree to reopen by 9pm, and to complete other forms if you intend to sell food or have live entertainment.  This amazes me as did the response of my neighbors when I asked about the hours of the closure. In the spirit of “getting to know the neighbors” could I kindly shut up and go along with the plans made by the organizers? After all, it “wouldn’t kill anybody to burn a calorie and have a little bit exercise for a neighborhood everybody get together and be a neighbor event.”
I would argue that “being a neighbor” probably ought to include a discussion with the homeowners on the street before the permit was pulled to close it, but I can already tell that just like with the man in the suit, this group’s attention is elsewhere and they are not interested in hearing or seeing anything else. I’m curious what would happen if I randomly selected other streets to close around Baltimore. It seems like a dangerous hobby.  I also wonder how many other neighbors are taken by surprise with the street closure. After the drubbing I got on Facebook, perhaps no one else will hazard a query. I know that my next-door neighbors were not informed either and have concerns about where they will park that day. Somehow, I suspect the party organizers will be less than sympathetic.
Small inconvenience for a good party!
As it happens, this shindig of neighborliness is scheduled on the Saturday before my birthday when I might have been inclined to have friends and family over for wine on the porch or dinner and games. I can’t have them park ten houses away and schlep up the hill, though, so I will make other plans, being sure to be out before 10 am and back after 7. I hope my neighbors don’t burn my house down with all that bonding and neighborly goodwill.


Sunday, February 26, 2017

The Mourning After

My stepdad died this month.

Twenty months ago, he was healthy and thriving, and sitting in the audience at my MFA hooding ceremony. Cancer doesn't care who you are, that you didn't smoke, that you ate plenty of fish and vegetables, that you had a family that loved you. Cancer doesn't care.

My parents have never been ones to wait for some future point for their lives to begin. They wrung every bit of adventure out of the woven fabric of their lives together, sometimes acting more like my teenage kids than my parents. Though I've teased them over the years about running away from home, about sailing "for a year, at most," about deciding an island in Panama was a good idea, I've always been proud of their fearlessness. And for better or worse, some of that attitude emboldened me when I felt at a crossroads.

Do what excites you, what frightens you, what challenges you. And just keep going. Keep going. Keep going.

There are going to be some spectacular failures, and many more smaller ones that only you will notice. And if you happen to be daughter of adventurers, this could mean hearing tales of being rescued by the Coast Guard in the Gulf of Mexico or running aground in the Abacos. For us writers, it comes in the rejection emails and the vast, sucking silence into which so many submissions have been sent to no response. But persistence leads to growth, to moments of great beauty, and to later successes. Dare to dream.

That's easy to say, isn't it? Take the road less traveled. How does one do that with a mortgage? With others relying upon us? And how do we dream big when it's a struggle to just get through day to day? When we are grieving? When we feel loss that sneaks up to squeeze our hearts out of nowhere or pinch us in that cry-place behind our eyes so our vision blurs and we can't speak? What does fearlessness look like then?

Honestly, I don't know. But I know that Terry was a MacGuyver-level fixer. He patched up everything along the way in a world where the the thing you need is always the thing that breaks. He didn't quit; he went to work. I can't think of a better approach to life than that.

So for those areas of life that feel broken, know that I'm going to work. It may not look like much from the outside, and I may have some failures, big and small, but I'm going to fight for my own adventures. It feels wasteful not to try. It seems dishonorable not to leap when my legs work to carry me forward. Do the kindness, take the chance, make a plan and stick to it. Chuck out the unnecessary ballast and hoist your sail, whatever that is. And be a guide for others whenever you can. We need each other, really we do. Our time is limited.

Cherish those in your lives. And live the life you want, the way you want. The rest will take care of itself. At least I hope so.



Friday, December 23, 2016

Handymen

About three years ago, right in the middle of messy renovations in my house, I wrote a story in anger as a reaction to the crap I'd been dealing with from contractors and other tradesmen either working in my house or trying to secure work in my house.

There was the smelly guy who stole my utility knife, tried to convince me that my roof was leaking (it wasn't), and was taken off the job by his boss because he was "unqualified," before being reassigned again after missing the three days I'd taken off work. He wanted to work at night. He was fired.

There was the plumber who "accidentally" left items at my house so that he would have to come back for them later. He would sit in his van in front of my house from time to time, just watching. He didn't get past the "estimate" stage because it was all just too creepy.

There was the contractor who "forgot" a court date on the same day as my job so he didn't show up.

There was the guy who called me hon. He also left a few things at my house so he could come back for them. To date, that has never happened.

And then there was the guy who was a friend of another guy who worked on my place. This one was an equal mix of condescension, creepy inappropriate flirting, and angry political ranting while trying to sell me carpet. He also left a sample board at my house though I was clear that I wanted none of the selections he assured me were the ones I "needed."

So I wrote about it. Except, in my story, it isn't the single woman alone in the house that should be afraid of these guys. The story opens with blood soaking the upstairs carpet. A lot of it.

I didn't think about that story again for a long time. In the interim, I've had many good, decent people working in and on my house. I finished a kitchen renovation that took nearly 10 months. It's amazing! But when I saw a call for fiction submissions for "the monster within," I thought of this story. I pulled it out, dusted it off, and sent it over without much expectation.

The editor sent me a reply. Not a rejection. A reply.

She asked for some light revisions - a little less backstory, a little dialogue tweaking - which I did willingly before resubmitting. It was accepted immediately.

I'm a published author!

Not what I expected from this story, certainly, but I'm all for happy moments coming from less happy inspiration. If you are curious, the ebook anthology is available here. The print version will be released in 2017.

So next time you are FED UP, write that stuff down. It might bring you more than catharsis.

Friday, October 14, 2016

Civil Discourse in Highly Charged Times: Try On My 8.5s For a Few

I don’t mind that we disagree sometimes. I really don’t. If you say, “I’m concerned about immigration or allowing refugees in the US because of some things I’ve read about its impact in other countries. I want to know more before I feel okay about that.” I’d probably say, “I want to know more about that too. Show me what you find.”

Then it becomes an opportunity for us to examine an issue and learn more and maybe we find some common ground. Or not. But if we approach it like this, even if we disagree or we don’t feel the same way, I can still feel okay about our conversation.

But sometimes when sharing your concerns, I don’t hear it like this. I hear:

Muslims rape and kill people.
Black people hate cops and shoot them at BLM protests.
Protesters loot.
Rape culture isn’t real and persecutes white fraternity boys.

And I get upset. And I can’t have a conversation about that because:

Individual people rape and kill other individual people. Sure, there are some cultural differences that belittle women in general, but that has less to do with religion than control and it happens everywhere, including here. Right here. By people who look like us, were raised like us, and sometimes by the very people who did raise us.

And, if there was an environment where rape was somehow more acceptable, would we immediately want to assist any woman or child who needed to escape that? Wouldn’t we want those kids to grow up somewhere we don’t condone that treatment?

Protesters weren’t burning CVS stores and beating people, rioters were. Rioters are opportunists and will do it at rallies, protests, natural disasters – anytime they think the police are busy elsewhere. It has nothing to do with the protest except setting. Protesters marched and protested every day of the Freddie Gray trials without incident. Peaceful protests are a constitutional right. Harming people or property is not and is not okay.

Rape culture is real even if it hasn’t affected you. It’s not a punchline. It’s not about to diminish either if a presidential candidate can say “I just grab them by the pussy” and is cheered instead of prosecuted. The poor and unfair treatment of others is real.

Imagine this for a moment:

You are pulled off an account that you set up because your boss thinks the client might respond to someone more handsome or younger or less “ethnic” or more Christian. The account goes to someone else, and maybe they are even a good employee, but they didn’t bring this client to the table, you did.

You are “uninvited” to an event after work because you don’t attend church regularly and someone with “no grounding in faith” might not behave appropriately with work colleagues and embarrass the company in some way.

You are removed from the list going to a cool conference because you are unmarried and your colleagues are uncomfortable with traveling with an unmarried person. Surely you will act inappropriately or even if you don’t, people will talk about it and appearances matter.

You get talked over in meetings, and by people who understand less, but think they know more because you are just a dude. When they do let you speak, your ideas are either called “too aggressive” or “uninformed” because of associations they have with “male traits.” Or your ideas are appropriated by others and you are not mentioned. They may not even realize that they do it because it happens so often. Like yesterday.

You meet a girl at a bar and she’s really flirty. You are polite but when she pushes you or gets grabby, you decline her invitation to “go somewhere.”. She then makes you feel unsafe to the point that you have to call a friend to come get you or ask the bouncer/manager/cop to escort you to your car. You hope she doesn’t follow you or have a gun. (Multiply this by 100 and sub in ANY location, including work)

You have to be careful that you don’t get drugged, even by an acquaintance, when you are out, because it’s happened to your friends. You start to watch out for other guys just in case. You can’t accept when someone buys you a drink if you didn’t watch the bartender make or pour it because t isn’t safe.

You regularly have members of the opposite sex show you their genitals and make lewd or violent comments. No one does anything about it. They regularly holler obscene or frightening things as they drive by or you walk past where they work.

You know that you expected to have sex or “make out” when dating someone new if they have bought you drinks or dinner. If you do not want to, sometimes they get angry and threaten you. You have learned to watch for that anger and sometimes are too accommodating to stay safe long enough to get away. (Multiply this by 200)

Your genitals are grabbed by strangers without your consent. Yes, it happens. It’s happened to me in the last year. It’s not a hypothetical.  And that’s not counting the “accidental” butt grabs, the hands sliding between butt cheeks on the way to the restroom, the breast grazes, the “it’s crowded” full body feel-ups, and all the verbal stuff. It’s continuous and it happens to every woman I know, all the time.

It’s brushed off as “boys will be boys,” but it’s not okay.

This is real for all women. Individual women. Women that you know, that you date, that you raised, that you love. All women. But that doesn’t mean that we automatically hate men. We don’t blame the entire sex for behavior by individuals, but we are sensitive to it. We cannot condone excuses for it. We can’t encourage it or turn a blind eye to it. It’s not okay. We want to be reassured that the men in our lives aren’t these guys; that they don’t identify with these guys. We want to feel safe. We want to be valued as a human being. We want to let our guard down.

So when I hear that rape culture is a media thing or that the victims are the boys, the athletes, the honor students, I can’t. I just can’t.  The girls (or boys as applicable) being victimized are just as human. Just as worthy of basic human consideration.

These things have happened to me and I like to think that I am more careful than most. I surround myself with people I trust. I don’t currently attend high school or college where this is rampant. I work in a professional job. And yet it still happens to me. Not by groups or ethnicities or religions or political affiliates – these are individual people taking advantage of situations to intimidate or demean or attack or scorn another individual. I don’t know how to fight that except to be kind to others as an individual.

If you have a better idea, I’m open to hearing it. But let’s remember that we are talking about real human beings. Once we become comfortable devaluing a group of “others” it becomes all too easy to devalue anyone. And we should be better than that.

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Renovation Archaeology

I'm at it again. Early in the spring, I tore out my kitchen. Actually, I tore out my kitchen,  the pantry, a powder room, and a closet, opening the space into an adjoining useless room. Basically, I leveled a third of the first floor. I had to. The old kitchen was so cramped, I couldn't walk into it with groceries in both hands. I couldn't have the fridge door and the oven door open at the same time. It was walled off from the rest of the house and too small for more than one person. Thanksgiving dinner preparation should have been a Food Network reality show. I'd never be able to sell or rent my house to a sane person without upgrading.

I've been stalling. Most of the rest of the house has been renovated. After this, I'll just have one more considerably smaller project. The other rooms had been altered many times by owners before and I was mostly tearing out office-style drop ceilings and bad wall coverings, and installing mouldings to match what must have been there before. No one had really touched the kitchen though. The powder room and the closet were add-ons by some do-it-yourselfer of yesteryear. There were several layers of flooring and wallpaper, but previous efforts had been cosmetic.

 

 There is nothing "surface" about what I've already done.

 

People called me crazy. Many told me that they could never do what I've done. Everyone believes that I've taken on more than I can handle. Even me.

I'd like to tell you that demo feels good. And I suppose that it does at times, but mostly this has been a cycle of fear, feeling overwhelmed, perseverance, getting reassurance, and digging in again. I am in no way qualified to tackle this project! But I can't afford to have it all done for me, nor can I go it alone. So I got help - professional help. (at long last!) A very competent contractor, plumber, electrician, carpenters, drywall hangers, and a tile expert. The tasks that terrify or baffle me are commonplace for them. We are a team. And we will get this done. Together.

Sometimes, there are little surprises along the way. Little things that keep us engaged - committed to completing the work ahead. This week, we found a card behind a baseboard. From a laundry - in 1927. Our own tiny archaeological treasure.

 

 As it happens, I've finally started the process of putting stuff back in the kitchen. Last week, it was the floor. I can no longer stand in the kitchen and see into the basement through old pipe holes. I can walk in there with bare feet, at least until work starts up again. It's a start and I'll take it.

I like to think that I got my "fuck it, let's do this" attitude from my mother.  I've seen her take a circular saw to a wall to make a pass-through from the kitchen. She and my stepdad sailed around the Caribbean, vising new places, gaining experience and new friends along the way. They built their own shelter on an island in Panama. She certainly has a few large endeavors under her belt. She's currently assisting her husband through cancer treatments, having managed their relocation back to the U.S. practically overnight. No doubt she often feels overwhelmed, afraid, unqualified, and yet she perseveres because she has to. What is the other choice?

She's not the only one, I'm afraid. So many others face seemingly insurmountable obstacles - tasks so large as to seem impossible. An unexpected diagnosis, a reduction in force, an accident, a crime, a disaster. Just this morning, many neighbors in Ellicott City woke to devastation from flash flooding last night. The photos are mind boggling. It would be easy to quit in despair, after all, these situations are clearly too much for one person to handle. But none of us - no one - is alone. We are among professional help everyday. They are our family, our friends, our colleagues, our friends. Sometimes they are our doctors, our nurses, our counselors, our confidantes. Each of us carries our own unique experiences, our own expertise. Be sure to share it when the need arises. Be generous if you can. So many are plugging away at a task too large for them, one baseboard at a time.



Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Professor, Teach Thyself!

I dig teaching creative writing. I wish I could do it full time instead of tagging it on to the end of my workdays like a reward for making it to five o'clock. But this is my reality right now. To keep myself from feeling like the cliche - Those who can't, teach -  I find ways to make myself write stories along the way. The last one was as an example for my students, so they could see a draft, then see me tear it apart and put it back together, considerably shorter and more coherent. And then I used it to show how workshop would play out if I had been assigned this story to markup and return to its author.  Does this sound like an excuse to write? It was. With two jobs already, a house continually under construction (this summer, it's a kitchen remodel), and no one else who will agree to mow my lawn or do my laundry, it's not easy to justify shutting out the world and scrawling lines like I could when it was homework.

But I recognize that I must make the time, so writing contests are currently providing me the sense of urgency/anxiety/fear of failure that I need to crank out pages. I have little desire to revisit old stories. Part of this is the fear that, having sat alone in the dark for some time, they will have transformed into terrible stories that no one should have to read, like the story equivalent of those leftovers in the back corner of the bottom shelf in the fridge. I have no idea what's in there, but I'm sure I don't want it.

I'm worried that my novel will start to get fuzzy around the edges, too. I'm afraid to reread it. That hasn't stopped me from considering a title change for it, though. If I get around to the next batch of agent queries, I may test out the new one and see if it makes a difference.

Not long ago, I met with a literary agent at CityLit - a literary festival in Baltimore organized by a fellow UT alum. As instructed in advance, I prepared my pitch, with printed copies for both of us, and worked out my 15 minute spiel. The woman had no intention of hearing a pitch however, and instead, marked up my printed copy and gave me advice for structuring a query letter. Hardly helpful as I teach my own students how to craft query letters. To say that I was disappointed would be ignoring the frustration and anger that I managed to hold back like Hodor lest she suddenly blurt out, "This is the most interesting novel pitch I've ever heard! Sign with me right this second!"   (Apologies if that last Hodor bit is a spoiler, but seriously people - get up to speed on your Game of Thrones!)

So, it definitely feels like the deck is stacked, and not in my favor.

Over the holiday weekend, I abandoned Dave to his meat-for-grilling procurement at the local frou frou grocery to visit the Starbucks several doors down in the same shopping center. It was, after all, double star rewards day Monday and I function better after a good iced latte. A young man sat on a bench just outside the door, looking somewhat despondent. On my way out, coffee in hand, I saw that he was still there. He looked to be on the verge of tears. I had to stop.

I asked if he was okay and he said no, very quietly, almost a breath. I asked how I could help and he said no one could. I sat down. Dave would figure out where I was. I thought about how many people had passed this kid (he was probably 19 or so, but the older I get, the harder it is for me to guess ages) without speaking to him or "seeing" him.

He looked like he needed someone to see him. He was dressed in pressed khakis, a button down shirt, and "job interview" shoes. A black backpack was next to him on the bench. He was clasping and unclasping his hands and looking at the sidewalk. This boy was in despair. I spent a few minutes talking to him, learned his name, told him mine, and let him talk. He was looking for a job, and his success or failure in this effort might determine if he would be able to continue living at home. He'd had an argument with his mother. Heated words had been exchanged and he'd said she wouldn't care if he killed himself.

This boy felt like even his mother wouldn't care if he was gone.

I thought again about how many people must have passed him coming and going for their morning coffee and I took his hand and reassured him. People did care. They did. But we all get in this lane we create for ourselves to stay focused on what we need to do and sometimes it's hard to see beyond the edges. As it was a holiday, I doubted that he would get anywhere with his job search, so I recommended that he give himself the day off and start fresh in the morning. I hugged him and told him that I believed in him and that he should believe in himself. I wish I'd gotten contact information so I could follow up, because after I climbed into Dave's car, tears in my eyes, and told him about this young man and what he'd shared, I continued to have this pit of fear in my stomach for him.

This week is the final one in my current creative writing course and as I encourage reflection, share resources, and pass along encouragement to my students, I think about this boy. Sometimes, we all need to be heard. Sometimes, we all need to stop for a few moments and listen. Sometimes we need to tell others that they can push through, that they have it in them to go where they want, do what they want, be what they want even if it feels like the deck is stacked against them. I believe it when I tell my students. The least I can do is to try to believe it when I tell myself.