The Rise and Fall of Me – Part 3 of 4-ish

Inspired by true events that were based on something that should never have happened.

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The Rise and Fall of Me – Part 3:

“I’m Graduating from College.  No I’m Not.”

To review part 2 – I returned to college, did very well, and then was about to get kicked in the balls….

My grades were improving with each semester.  I was liked, really really liked, in my writing classes.  I was named editor of the college literary magazine for my last year in school.  In this case, “named” meant that during the creation of the previous year’s magazine, I hung out a lot with the people in charge.  When they all graduated, I was the only one left over from that group, and nobody else was willing to be editor.  I successfully ran for an elected position on student government.  In this case, “elected” meant I had about 13 votes and the other guy had about 6.  More important than those prestigious moments, I won a poetry award.

At most colleges and universities, there’s a yearly awards ceremony for students from various areas of study.  Each school (humanities, science, etc) and each department within each school (chemistry, theater, etc) gets to name an award winner for whoever did a great deal of something for some reason.  Athletes, actors, artists, scholars, and scientists and anyone else worthy were assembled on stage for an audience of faculty, family, and friends.  It was like graduation, but only for those people who did something extra special.  Maybe not, but that’s how it felt so I’m going with it.  I don’t recall anyone from my family being there or even knowing about it, but that’s because I just never really shared anything with anyone.  Still don’t, except here.  I share more here than anywhere else in my life.  If I had given my blog more thought, I would have begun it absolutely anonymously, which would have allowed me to share even more than I already have, everything except going to Mardi Gras with Becca.  That’s nobody’s business.  Who pukes in Nola stays in Nola.

not actually Becca, as far as I can prove

I had very few friends in college, but one was Amy (last name withheld because she probably doesn’t remember me at all), who won a theater award that night I won the poetry award.  For some reason she imagined I was cool enough to hang out with.  You know theater people, always looking for that “cool” factor, but she was stuck with me instead.  We met in a class called Playscripts, where writers created short scripts and actors performed them for feedback.  After the ceremony, she invited me to a party her family was having.  It was probably the largest house I have ever been inside that hadn’t been turned into a museum.  It was like a movie, when you see all the fanciest table settings, chandeliers, and furniture.  I was not just impressed but highly intimidated and wondered what I could have done, right or wrong, to end up in such a house.  She seemed almost embarrassed by it, but I think she sensed my uneasiness and may have even expected it considering the beat up car in which I drove her home.

She likely wanted to avoid the party because it bored her, where to me it seemed like a wedding reception.  Instead, we hung out in her room, listened to music, and talked about life after graduation.  She was going to be an actress, I was going to write shit that she’d act out, and it was all that simple.  Not simple were the things I was imagining about two college kids up in her room while the rest of the family gathered for a party without noticing that the honoree wasn’t there.  Her room was bigger than a small apartment I used to have.  I remember her unhappily standing in front of a mirror.  She asked, “Do you think I’m hot?”  What else could I possibly say?  I thought of myself as a writer, but all I could come up with was one word.  “Yes.”  I wasn’t very impressive, and I was beginning to feel awkward.  “I gotta go,” I said, and I don’t think she was happy.  In the company of a hot wanna-be actress or not, I just didn’t feel right and asked her to guide me out of her giant house.

On the way out, she introduced me to a high school friend.  Short guy, kind of dumpy, but a huge smile and a strong handshake.  He had those eyes when someone always looks like they’re squinting at bright lights.  “He’s an actor,” Amy said.  “Nice to meet you,” I said.  “Jay Greenspan,” he said.  That was his real name, but now he’s known as Jason Alexander.  Nice guy.  Two years after that, he won a Tony Award.

Unfortunately, that’s all there is to the story.  A hot rich girl  intimidated the crap out of me, and I met Jason Alexander when he was Jason Greenspan.  Nice guy with even less hair than me.  There have only been two moments in my life when I felt like I didn’t “belong” where I was.  That was one of them.

So I won a poetry award and was honored in front of the college.  It was fun to finally actually feel accepted into something other than detention or the cafeteria.  But just as I was feeling accepted into the club, it was pretty much time to go.  I had surpassed the needed 120 credits and checked off all the necessary courses for the English Literature degree with a writing concentration as well as a minor in Dramatic Arts.  I was about to feel like I had really accomplished something – a bachelor’s degree in literature and writing from a college that had won national championships in bowling and fencing.  I felt pretty good – until my future ex-wife asked me a very important question.  This is the part where I got kicked in the balls.

“What are you going to do when you graduate?” she asked.

flipper farts

That’s when my brain did the cerebral equivalent of shitting its pants.  What the hell?  I had never given that a moment’s thought.  What job would I go into after all those years of studying literature and writing?  I had no clue until I remembered what she was studying.  Far unlike me, she was one of those freaks who only needed to get to age 7 before knowing exactly what she would do when she grew up.  She was going to be a teacher.  And her second question solved the first one:  “Why not be a teacher?  Teach writing?”  Bingo, problem solved, except that I was about to graduate.  Luckily, I was able to delay that and instead remain in school for a year of education classes.  In what seemed like no time I had gone from getting kicked out, then kicking my way back in, finding out I could write, and accidentally becoming a teacher.

Me?  A teacher?  I hated school.  I was the guy who unleashed stink bombs and put tacks on the teacher’s chair.  Seriously, I did both, and the stink bomb caused kids to leap from second floor windows because they couldn’t breathe.  What made the idea of being a teacher more but less funny is that it wasn’t until then that I realized something interesting.  My father and sister were teachers.  So were about 20 uncles, aunts, and cousins.  Why hadn’t I noticed that before?   It was like a secret that everyone else knew but me.  And everyone else knew that I didn’t know and could have told me, but it was more fun to just let me find it myself.  Ha ha.  Thanks a lot everyone.  Real nice.  Well played, bitches.

It’s very difficult to get a writing job immediately after graduating college.  Instead, I would get a job teaching writing and language and literature, just as I had been studying.  Of course, my desire to write could be satisfied doing my own writing on the side, at night, in the summer, whenever I had time here and there.  I spent an additional year taking classes on education theory, teaching reading, and a few other things.  Then all I had to do was a few months student teaching – in which I follow a teacher around all day for about four months and learn everything from the inside out, then take a test, then I’m a teacher.  Seemed easy enough.  Unfortunately, it actually was that easy.  Too easy.  It shouldn’t be that easy to become a teacher, one of the most difficult jobs there can be, and I’m not sure if I did a good job.  I was loved by kids, liked by parents, disliked by colleagues, and hated by administrators.

College was over.  I graduated with 152 credits.  Most people are done at 120.  Took me seven years, although one year was when I was kicked out.  Most people take four years.  My complete grade point average was a 2.58, which is about a 65 on a 100 point scale, but if you erase my first two years, my average was about 3.3.  Respectable, I think.  When high school kids ask me if college is hard, I tell them that it depends on one thing:  do you know what you want to study?  If you know what you want to do, if you have a goal, a career in mind, then college is easy.  Then you can more easily get through the anthropology and psychology classes.  I also tell them to find friends.  If you try to be like me, stoically introverted and isolated, college is much more difficult.  Don’t be afraid to ask for help because you’ll get back even more than what you need and make great friends.  And you might end up in the bedroom of a hot, wanna-be actress or meet Jason Alexander.

Coming soon, part 4 – a lucky idiot becomes a teacher.  Highlights include jobs both won and lost,  the day a kid brought a gun to class, the day a kid masturbated in class, making students cry, teen suicides, an amazing thank you note from a parent, the do’s and don’ts (really just don’ts) of dating colleagues, and what’s wrong with education today.

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31 Responses to The Rise and Fall of Me – Part 3 of 4-ish

  1. Bumba says:

    I was hoping for more when you were in the rich girl’s bedroom. You have such low expectations and keep degrading yourself, but wind up succeeding somehow in the end. A great character, fictional or real.

    • rich says:

      yes, i was hoping for more, but i felt very out of place amongst people from a different financial level. and yes, i do degrade myself but somehow succeed. not sure how or why.

  2. ShimonZ says:

    A well told, fascinating story, up to here. As before, I’m waiting for the next chapter. I enjoy the humor and your light touch. Actually, I would like to hear a lot more about the development of your awareness; what was occupying your mind during these stages; what you really wanted… more than your desire to study or get by.

    • rich says:

      good question. it was a question from another blogger that spurred this whole thing, so another question should add another “chapter.” thanks for wanting to know and for reading.

  3. This is a wonderful read. I seriously hope this is a practice run for your memoirs because I want to see this on bookshelves.

    • rich says:

      i’m not important enough for anyone to care about my memoirs. i think my conversational style is fooling you into thinking i actually wrote something interesting. or maybe i can just tell a good story. either way – thanks very much for reading.

  4. SocietyRed says:

    I’m lucky, I only just stumbled into your blog and have plenty of catching up to do. I felt like I was there with you, not only because you write so well but also because our approach to college was similar. We might have been “stoically introverted and isolated” friends…if that’s even possible.

    • rich says:

      i think it would have been such a combination of negative energy that we each would have spontaneously combusted. thanks for reading and wanting to catch up.

  5. 7 years at college, see I’d love that. seriously considering going back for a phd… I don’t know, maybe to really like it you need to also have a sense of agreement to authority / discipline / rules etc, so that you don’t mind exams and still enjoy the process?

    • rich says:

      i wasn’t happy about it for sure, but i felt like i had no place else to go. i wasn’t ready for the working world, that’s for sure, and i was without direction, or even a steering wheel.

  6. Hi Rich,
    This reads to me like Holden Caulfield’s college days, only in first person. The self-deprecating humor is devastating. The comments say it all, how good this is, how wel written. This deserves a wider audience. I don’t know where, but it has strong appeal. I had a similar moment in college when I realized being a creative writing major in Oklahoma was not going to work. I switched my major to journalism. Can’t wait to hear the teaching stories. Ron

    • rich says:

      thanks sir. all from your suggestion, which i’m very thankful for. holden caufield, i think i see what you mean, and that’s almost scary, but it’s also not uncommon at that age.

      • You’re definitely obligated now to write the sequel to Catcher. Actually, you are writing it. I don’t think it helps to know somebody was more screwed up, and I’m not trying to top you, but I took way longer to get my degree, had a lower gpa, changed my major and college almost as often as I changed my socks, and I ended up in teaching also. But I always believed that my struggles helped me relate to students who were often going through some of the same mazes I’d traveled. Write on. I don’t want this to end! Ron

      • rich says:

        totally agree. sometimes we’re the ones who can relate to the students who are as equally “lost” as we were. part of the motivation for discussing the GPA and failures in class was so others could realize there were lots of us out there.

  7. becca3416 says:

    Can’t wait for part four Rich. Oh, and GPA’s never matter. I don’t even know why they always stress that. I suppose for intimidation? But what do I know, you are the teacher, not me.

    I can also confirm that the girl in the photo is not me. I wouldn’t wear that shade of green except on St. Patrick’s day. But Nola WAS that fun.

  8. Jillian says:

    Definitely waiting for part four :)

    And totally agree with you, if you know what you want to do, college is a breeze – if you don’t, administration DOES eventually come after you telling you you have to pick a major… whoops…

  9. ha even if you know what to study it’s not that easy…well it depends on your class…(english students are considered to have it easy).

    • rich says:

      we do have it easy because, as long as we can write, we can find a way to justify their answers. especially if our style of dress isn’t as impressive as others

  10. aFrankAngle says:

    Do you realize that if you hadn’t ran away from her, you may not have met Jason Alexander. Which begs another question … but I won’t go there.

  11. Jeni says:

    “cerebral equivalent of shitting its pants.” <– beautiful

  12. Parul says:

    You, sir, have had a very interesting life.
    I take the liberty of almost envying you! :)

  13. I can see why you sort of fell into teaching – it’s one of those jobs that is suggested when people are struggling for ideas. I wonder how many teachers ended up teaching because they simply didn’t know what else to do, and how many teachers always wanted to be teachers?

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