Goodbye to Appalachia

“For the mountains may move and the hills disappear,
but even then my faithful love for you will remain.
My covenant of blessing will never be broken,”
says the Lord, who has mercy on you.
– Isaiah 54:10

My feelings about returning to the University of the Cumberlands for commencement were mixed at best. It was a fun time, and great to see family and professors and all that, but there was a bit of pointlessness behind all of the pomp and circumstance. After all, Caleb and I have already had our diplomas for nearly five months, were are both employed in exactly the areas were wanted to be employed in doing things that we love, and we have moved to another state. As cool as the ceremony was, there was a distinct feeling that we were beyond it before it began, and our excitement was not the electric pulse that seemed to course through the May graduates.

The real feeling I had while at UC was a sense of final goodbye. When we left in December, it was sad in a way, but mostly just exciting. We knew we’d be coming back for ceremonies. Instead of goodbyes, we said “See you in April’s.” In April, it felt weird to come back and realize life in the ‘burg had continued on as normal without us. I thought of other seniors I had known who left while I remained, and knew that just as life had not changed for me then, no one’s life had changed for them now. It was great to see old co-workers and professors, but once again instead of goodbye it was “See you in May.”

That May trip has come and gone, now, and at the end of it we had to truly say goodbye. For the first time in my life, I left UC without having even an idea of when I might return – much less with the knowledge of the exact date of my arrival back on campus as I have almost always had in the past. This uncertainty led to my first true “goodbye” to UC – not see you in the spring, have a great summer, don’t have too much fun over break. Those English classrooms, so much learned within them; those sidewalks, so many conversations they overheard; those mountains, so many adventures they have given me, but so many more they still hold. On my next trip, all might be entirely changed. The girl I was when I learned those things, talked to those sidewalks, adventured in those mountains – she’ll be gone too.

For the first time I feel I know what it’s like to truly leave a place, a place that has sheltered and fed and given life to me. I will miss you Appalachia. Now let’s see what I will be when I do return.

Graduate

Pensworth 2014

Some of you might be familiar with the annual publication put out by the University of the Cumberlands’ English Department – Pensworth, a journal of student art and writing. Although I did not have the privilege of acting as a student editor this year, I think the journal looks lovely! April is a fitting month for the journal’s publication, for me, because even though I haven’t celebrated Poetry Month this April the fruits of last year’s inspiration made it into the journal. My creative nonfiction piece which won the 2013 Creative Writing Award also appears among the work of many other talented writers! Please enjoy!

You can read last year’s issue here, or visit my post from last April.

P.S. Happy Earth Day! Go plant something! Green

Christmas Cheer: It’s the Little Things

It’s that time of year again! Yes, of course I mean time for Christmas, for Advent, for choosing the perfect gifts for the people who mean the most to us. But also the time for way too many cookies, for a schedule full of parties with friends, for playing Christmas music until it’s (almost) annoying, for watching the movies that only make us cry once a year. But also the time for final exams, and leaving some places to go back to others, and often for our lives to change with the season.

As I’ve been enjoying this season, sipping cocoa and wishing for snow that sticks to more than just the roofs, this year I’ve also been noticing things. This is the fourth December I’ve spent in Williamsburg, Kentucky, and realizing that it is also the last has put my ability to notice things in overdrive. From the beauty of a brown leaf skeleton-etched with frost lying in the grass as I walk to my last classes to the almost-warmth of the winter sun that shines bright and clear but cannot thaw even my nose, everything around me has taken on a surreal quality that it never had before. Each time I notice a thing of beauty on this campus I realize how likely it is that I will never see that particular thing in that particular place again – that as the Christmas season is beginning another season in my life is ending.

Take some time this month to reflect, to really take in your surroundings, and to enjoy the tiny details that we often miss due to the busyness of our crazy, wonderful lives. You never know when those tiny things might turn out to be just what you need.

Have a blessed Christmas everyone!

For some more thoughts about the Christmas season from a writing cast that includes some great talent, check out this Advent booklet put out by the Missions and Ministry Department at the University of the Cumberlands.

NaNoWriMo Day 19: Tips for Beating the Thanksgiving Breakdown

NaNoWrIMo 2013Well here we are folks, in the midst of the last week of NaNoWriMo that will be free of cooked birds and cracked family members. Before the festivities launch their full-fledged assault on our word counts and try desperately to keep us from finishing our novels, it’s best to have a counterattack ready. What are your strategies for achieving victory in spite of the holiday lurking at the end of the month? Here are some of my plans and tips for getting through to the finish line – share yours below!

1. Finish your novel before Thanksgiving stuff starts. 

Crazy Level: 5   Achievability: 3

If you are way behind in your word count, this may not be the best option for you. But for everyone else, Thanksgiving Day is so late this year that in order to finish on the Wednesday before, you would need to be only 5,000 words ahead! If you start now, this is totally doable!

2. Write in the car, on the train, in the plane, while snowshoeing toward home.

Crazy Level: 1  Achievability: 5

If you aren’t going to be able to get ahead, at least you can stay on par with your word count by using all of that time you’ll be spending traveling to see your family for your novel’s benefit. Airport terminals and passenger seats can be great writing spaces! (Of course, this is only really helpful if you aren’t the one driving!)

3. Set aside little bits of time for writing during the holidays. 

Crazy Level: 3  Achieveability: 3

This can be a really tough one, but in order to be a NaNoWriMo winner, it is vitally important to stay connected to your story by writing every day. Skipping days will put you so far behind so fast that you won’t know how to catch up! Some of the best ways to be successful with this are to get up a half an hour before the rest of the family, or stay up half an hour later, and use that time to keep your word count on target.

Don’t forget to share your own tips below! We’re gonna need ’em…

NaNoWriMo Cometh

NaNoWrIMo 2013

 

It’s that time of year again!

No, I don’t mean the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays or finals week crunch times that are slowly creeping up on us from out of nowhere. I mean those 30 days of literary abandon that are National Novel Writing Month.

I suppose in my case NaNo hasn’t actually come around for the past few years. What was so easy in high school seems so much harder in college, when there are major assignments, big job responsibilities, tons of fun stuff to do with friends, and a solid amount of sleep at night seems a lot more important than it did just a few years ago.

Attempting NaNoWriMo while in college is a big undertaking, but this year I am determined! I will overcome the obstacles and write a November Novel worthy of being extensively edited into something I can be proud of! I will manage to do this while graduating college, finishing up wedding plans, and getting (nearly) enough sleep!

It’s gonna be a hard, long, road. (30 days to be exact.) And I don’t want to do it alone! If you like writing at all, or like doing crazy things, join me! The Patriot Newspaper (I write for them, and you can read all of this semesters issues here) at The University of the Cumberlands is graciously sponsoring a Kick-Off party for anyone interested – for details look up the group UC NaNoWriMo on Facebook! Remember, the world needs your novel.

It CAN be done!

Jolina Petersheim

This past weekend was Homecoming at University of the Cumberlands, and I had the opportunity to meet Jolina Peterson, a UC graduate and author of The Outcast. Although I am not myself a fan of the Amish style fiction that seems to pervade the women’s fiction section in today’s Christian bookstores, I read The Outcast in order to review it for The Patriot Newspaper, and found myself surprised and delighted!

The Outcast is not a typical Amish novel. In it there is no budding romantic courtship, no countryside horse and buggy day trips, no women chattering along as they bake or keep house.  There are no goody-two-shoes characters, only characters who pretend to be so.  Inspired by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter and a story her parents told of an affair between a man and his wife’s sister who lived within an Old Order Mennonite community, Jolina set her story in a contemporary Mennonite society in the mountains of Tennessee. Although it is obvious that these two stories started the book off, there are Biblical themes throughout it that only came with Jolina’s own touch. The two sisters’ names are Rachel and Leah, a biblical reference that fits beautifully into the story and even makes it more believable.  There are other name games going on as well, comparing characters to biblical pairs of the same kind, but I don’t want to give everything away – read the book!

When I was able to meet Jolina and interview her for The Patriot, one thing about her became very evident: she is a woman who loves what she is doing, loves the people who support her in it, and feels that God has a purpose for the opportunities she has been given. The Outcast was published this year by Tyndale Publishers – one of the biggest names in Christian publishing today, despite the fact that Jolina has never published a book before and has only one degree – in English from the same university from which I will receive my English degree in January. And the book is good!

Jolina’s success itself has been a huge encouragement to me. A lot of people aspire to become published authors, but few of them really feel that they have what it takes to get there. I’ll be honest, I’m not sure if I’ve ever really thought that I have what it takes myself. But if someone else can be as successful as Jolina with the same degree that I am going to get myself, maybe there is hope for me, too! Not saying that I could make it as big as she has, but that maybe, just maybe, I can see my name on a cover someday, too.

Thanks for your encouragement Jolina, and for reminding me that the things we hope and aspire for in life really can be done!

The Beginning of the End

Last fall, as I drove from Williamsburg, Kentucky to Annapolis, Maryland for the last summer vacation of my college career, the last spring road trip home, it struck me that these were Last Things, and that the entire previous semester had been a Last Thing, and almost everything that I did in Williamsburg from then on out would also be a Last Thing. Last check-in, last dorm room, last Welcome Week, last Homecoming, last Patriot games, last Williamsburg hiking trips, last finals week. Not gonna lie, I teared up a little thinking about this during that drive home. As I passed each of the half-dozen colleges I drive by on the interstate during that trip, I realized that I could have gone to any one of them and had a very different experience, but instead I went to Cumberlands, and experienced the things that I was now thinking about leaving behind.

Now, an entire summer later, August has come with a great continuation of Last Things. For the last time, I made that long drive back to UC with visions of an exciting new semester ahead. One last dorm room to decorate, one last class schedule to write out, one last RA staff to get to know and work with.

One last.

And I realized – this is the beginning of the end. And as much as I will feel grown, accomplished, and ready for the next step upon graduation, I know that I will also be sad to leave this place and these people and this time of my life behind. I have never been  a huge fan of endings, and this one seems especially definite. So as this ending begins, I am looking back on the past three years and being thankful I am not quite at the end of it yet – not for another 125 days.

Gillespie Staff 2013

Pensworth: Spring 2013

The spring 2013 issue of Pensworth is here! Pensworth is a student journal produced by the Department of English and Sigma Tau Delta at the University of the Cumberlands. The student editors this year were Becky Branham, Madison Wesley, and myself. We had a lot of fun working on it! I hope you will enjoy my work and that of several other UC students which is contained in this journal.

For more information about Pensworth, visit the university’s website: http://www.ucumberlands.edu/pensworth/.