The Final Piece of the Puzzle (or, The Epilogue)
If you follow my blogs here on The Wicked Ingénue or if you follow me on Facebook and/or Twitter, you’re probably aware that I’m four months away from earning my B.A. in English (with an emphasis in Creative Writing and Shakespeare. I get credentials and everything for these specialties. Now I can really claim to be a Shakespeare scholar without getting the ol’ eye-roll).
This may not seem like a big deal to some people. People graduate from high school, they go on to college, they earn a degree in something, they enter the job market, they get married, they have kids, they live the American Dream. This systematic process has become less of a hope parents (and society, for that matter) have for their children and more of an expectation.
But, as you may well know already, I didn’t follow this process (click here for a detailed explanation of my six-year detour in Las Vegas). Ironically, I dropped out of high school four months before graduation. Exactly ten years ago this month, I officially left high school and followed my heart’s desire to the middle of the desert.
I’ll never forget my last day as a high school student. For the first time in months, I attended every single class (I’d ditched class so much that I’d been sentenced to Saturday detention every day until graduation), participated in the discussions, ate lunch with my friends, poked around in the library, flirted with the guys hanging out in the auto shop garage. I thought this day was going to be my last day ever as a student, and I wanted to savor it. I never hated school or being a student – quite the contrary. I just hated everything else about my life. Mostly, I hated myself.
I remember it being unseasonably warm that day. You could smell the honeysuckle in the air, the warm asphalt, the freshly mowed grass, the promise of spring. I walked to my car, got in, and sat there in the parking lot for a long time. Until everyone else was gone. Later that night, I snuck out of the house, hid in my friend’s closet, and she drove me to Las Vegas the following morning.
It goes without saying that the rest is history, and I thought my days as a student were history, too. I mean, college? Ha! Not in the cards for Kristen. I was the rebel, the person who wanted to prove she could make something of herself without the input of authority. No more pencils, no more books. School quickly became a distant memory.
* * *
Fast-forward to last November. It’s my senior year of college, and I’m applying to graduate school. I considered several PhD programs, but ultimately decided that none of them had the writing emphasis I was looking for. A straight-up MFA program – Master of Fine Arts – seemed to be the best fit for my needs. A Shakespeare/Creative Nonfiction PhD would’ve been right up my alley, but hey, a girl can’t have it all.
For various reasons, I decided that I wanted to stay in California. There aren’t many MFA programs here at the UC (University of California) level – only three, to be exact – and only one of them offers an emphasis in Creative Nonfiction, which is my main area of interest and the genre of writing I excel in most, I think. So the very short list included UCSD (San Diego), UCI (Irvine, which is where I am now), and UCR (Riverside). Riverside is the only program of the three that has the Creative Nonfiction emphasis, and for this reason it became my top choice. That and the fact that they offer an excellent financial aid package.
The applications went out last fall, and for the past three months I’ve been waiting and wondering and hoping and wishing and praying and contemplating Plan B. I’ve been stuck in limbo, essentially. Then about three weeks ago, I received a rejection letter from UCSD. It was my last choice, but still – rejection stings. It got me thinking, “Dang, if I didn’t get into my last choice, what’re the chances I’ll get into my first and second choice?”
So yeah. I’ve been worried.
Fast-forward even further to yesterday. I’m sitting there watching “Notorious” (I give it three out of five stars) when my Blackberry lets me know I have an email. I ignore it until the movie’s over. Then I check. It’s from the director of the program at UCR:
Dear Kristen,
Congratulations! You have been recommended for admission to the MFA in Creative Writing and Writing for the Performing Arts Program here at the University of California, Riverside. We would like to thank you for choosing our program. It would be our pleasure to have you here.
And the letter goes on. I must admit I read it several times and verified the email address and sender’s name and whatnot just to make sure I was correct in acknowledging that I’ve been accepted into my first MFA program of choice. I’ve been trying to catch my breath every since.
* * *
If I had to pick a starting point for my memoir – the Prologue, if you will – I’d say it was that last day of high school when I wrote off any inclination I had to pursue higher education and, more importantly, my inclination to write. Back then, the idea of graduate school was laughable. The idea of my writing a memoir and publishing said memoir was laughable. The stuff pipe dreams are made of. No one believed I could get through my undergraduate studies, let alone go to graduate school, and how could I blame them? I didn’t even get through high school.
But now the moment of accumulation is finally here. I’ve always wanted to end my memoir – the Epilogue – with an anecdote about graduate school, but wasn’t sure things would fall into place the way I hoped they would. Securing a spot in a program that accepts ten students a year – ten out of thousands – what were the chances? Reflecting on my B.A. degree at the end of the memoir probably would’ve sufficed, but the MFA degree – the mother of all writing degrees – this, I feel, is the moment I’ve been pointing toward since the day I left Vegas.
I think the years I’m going to spend at UCR will be an invaluable experience for my memoir and for my future as a writer, and I thank you all so much for supporting and encouraging me along the way.


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