“The best thing you can do is the right thing; the next
best thing you can do is the wrong thing; the worst thing you can do is
nothing.” -Theodore Roosevelt
Our discussion last week about breaking through the “comfort
blindness” that can take over a session reverberated through the
back of my mind as my childhood friend asked if I would help her out with her
first major college paper. Knowing that she came to me mainly because it’s
familiar, partly because she knows that I love to help people with their
writing, and possibly due to the idea of going to complete strangers to pull
apart her work made her queasy—I found myself questioning the “correct” way to
approach the situation. And it’s so much
more complicated than questioning the opposition…
The value she sees in education has evolved drastically
in the last thirteen years. A high
school dropout at not even sixteen, she’s always been quick to judge what the
point of an education when she believed that life experience carried more credence
over book smarts. Even though we’ve grown up together, it’s always been on very
different paths.
I was what she called “a conformist”—I did what I was
told to do, therefore I never learned how to find the answers for myself. In a sense she’s been right. But that’s not the point of today’s post…
She has always been a fighter---skipping the “bullshit”
of high school, she received her GED/HSE at sixteen, ran away from home,
witnessed the harshness of the “real world” losing friend after friend to
overdose, suicide, to becoming a mother at eighteen. Every step she took from that moment on was
to provide the best possible life for her family.
Now, married for almost ten years, a family of five
children, Mandy carries guilt over her choice to return to college. Not for the path she chose, but for the
selfishness she believes her decision is for not “being there”-- to clean up
after her family, to sit in front of the TV and bond over “The Family Guy”—because
that has been their routine. So rather
than embracing this opportunity for what it really is, she came to me with a
chip on her shoulder that her paper is more than just a paper, it’s a sacrifice
for not being there for her kids and husband.
Before I could even address the content of her paper, I
found myself needing to confront the boulder of resentment that wedged itself
into the back of my best friend. Not the
easiest of tasks, mind you. But I HAD to—she
needed me to ask her the tougher questions--what choices brought her to this
belief, what choices brought her to this point in her life—a conversation that
I feared would be combative at best and fracture our relationship.
What shocked me were her responses—she’s here because she
needs to be.
Every choice she’s made up
to this point has been for her family and the decision to pursue a college
degree is not different. The value of
academic education adds to her life experience to offer her the chance to have
a career, rather than a life working paycheck to paycheck. Her piss-poor attitude
about public education isn’t what she wants her children to adopt. Rather,
witnessing her go back to school, struggle through elementary algebra for no
credit for the next two semesters because of her choice to quit school all
those years ago, could and should be a motivator for her kids to keep striving
on through school, no matter how difficult it may seem.
Helping her talk through her “walk” allowed Mandy to see
how her personal educational experiences tied into the articles that touched on
many different themes of education: the true value of knowledge, allowing one
self to see the bigger picture, and the value of the “last resort college”.
Provocative Revision
Our session, if you could call it that, moved into the ‘puzzle’
phase and I was able to utilize this week’s discussions about more provocative revision. Her final draft is due next Fri, so there is
a bit of a time constraint. However, I
was able to help her see where she could weave her personal narrative around
the different articles and show her the benefit of saving her drafts separately
rather than lose the opportunity to have hard copy evidence of the evolution of
her project.
We battled over phrasing,
rearranging paragraphs, etc. Because of
the emotional attachment to the paper she still had. But rather than it turn into an awkward,
uncomfortable mess I felt that, because what I’ve learned thus far, I was able
to approach the suggestions with the confidence that it was my responsibility
to.
I needed to help her unlock to shackles of guilt over
working on this paper rather than spend time with her family. Not to the extent of “soapboxing” of course,
but I had to get real with her at times and remind her that it’s not selfish of
her to choose homework over daily chores.
The world will not end if her husband or two 12 year old kids have to
pick up the slack now that she’s in school.
At one point I said, “It’s not your conscience that your
hearing or guilt that you’re feeling when you’re in the other room. You are going through withdrawal. You AND your family are detoxing from your
previous lifestyle is all. But it’s a
change that’s necessary in order for you to succeed at your goal of getting a
degree.”
I managed to open her eyes and see that the revision
process doesn’t have to hurt. I wasn’t
attacking her or trying to erase the amount of hardship that went into the
paper. She here until almost 1 a.m.…
…writing, deleting, writing some more, getting the
delirious giggles with her best friend and continuing a conversation about her
goals to remain motivated—even in times of guilt. And she went home prepared to hand in a first
draft that fulfilled the assignment for the moment—I warned her that the next
draft had the potential to go in a completely different direction.
But she left my house with an action plan: to keep a copy of this draft as a reference,
to practice limiting by free writing about a very specific moment that involved
her decision to go back to school, and to make an appointment with her school’s
writing center (CWI) and not be afraid to work with strangers. But that I’ll always be there for her.
I recognize that I won't get this kind of session
every time I work with someone. Perhaps
it won’t ever happen again. But I’m glad
I agreed to help my oldest and dearest friend—it definitely wasn’t easy, but
this night will remain with me as a pivotal moment. I am even more confidant in my choice of
major just as Mandy is secure in her choice to go to college.
Hi, Ali.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your story here with your friend Mandy. I think you'd be surprised at how often the baggage of life impacts the writing we see in the Center. We spend a lot of time getting writers to work through this. A larger part of our job than we realize is to deal with the affective dimension of writing--it's so much more complicated than comma splices or awkward transitions.
Let me know how Mandy's paper turns out! You did a wonderful thing for her. :)
mk