November 28, 2016

How I Quit Grad School Like a Champ

Someone recently asked me to how I quit grad school. 

At first I thought they meant the entire process of making the decision but they meant literally.  

And here it is, the email I sent to my advisor to inform him of my decision:


My advisor's reply:




And my reply to his reply:


October 31, 2016

Everything I Miss About Grad School

Here is a list of everything I miss about grad school:










From Gify

September 29, 2016

Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Disentangling Myself From Life-Sucking Situations


Quitting is Happiness
Quitting makes me happy. Quitting is a part of my self-care regimen. Quitting disentangles me from life-sucking situations. I am no mental health expert, but with over three decades of experience, I am a quitting expert.

A Brief History of Quitting
The story of how I quit my Ph.D. began when I was three years old. As the youngest of ten cousins and a rather amazing big sister, I grew up with a front row seat of How To Be Awesome While Still Pissing Off Grown-Ups.

Not that I was the best kid or a star pupil. I mean, I wasn't awful or anything. Though I was forgetful. Stubborn. Annoying, at worst. At best, I was clever. Clever enough to figure out that all I needed to stay out of trouble was the opposite of whatever mistakes my sister or cousins made to upset The Grown-Ups. These "mistakes" could send my parents, aunts, uncles, and grandparents into Olympic levels of fury and frustration.

No surprise there. From breaking lamps to breaking curfew to breaking laws, I watched, listened, and learned, and made mental notes along the way of what not to do.

Age 3: Taking Ballet Class. That tutu was nothing but burlap and barbed wire. All I remember is the crying and screaming. Probably not what Tchaikovsky had in mind (I lasted about 2 weeks before I quit).

Age 5: Eating Fish. On a family vacation near Lake Erie, I walked with my father to the beach. On the way, he said, "Hey, look, Erica. A Rainbow Trout!" What he neglected to say was that it was a half-rotted Rainbow Trout crawling with maggots. I can still smell it (2 years).

Age 7: Liking Math. In 2nd grade, I sat behind a The Smartest Kid In The Universe. One day during a subtraction test, The Smartest Kid In The Universe turned around in his seat, looked at my test, then told me I was doing it wrong. "Really. So that's how it's going to be, focker? Fine." And so, I faked math anxiety until after college when I started tutoring trigonometry. Turns out, I'm pretty great at Math. Sure showed him (6 years).

Age 9: Playing Flute. For whatever reason, we had to take an instrument. Something about being raised in a musically gifted family gave the music instructor little reason to doubt what would surely be Erica's Natural Gift. Right? Not exactly. I cannot read music for the life of me (4 months).

Age 10: Playing Flute. Again. I told the music teacher I had to quit because I had just gotten braces and the pain was unbearable, but really I did not want to learn to read music. I could play by ear and heard that if you learn to read music, you lose that (1 month).
Age 12: Playing Flute. For crap's sake. It was my first year in a public school. For some cosmic joke of a reason I was assigned to Orchestra but when it became clear that I did not read music, the Orchestra teacher said: "Why don't you head over to Band..." And so I went to Band where I was handed another freaking flute. After the third day, I was asked to report to Study Hall (3.5 days).

Age 14: Playing Soccer. Ah, high school soccer. No idea what I was doing. But I was loud and had energy and a ride to the soccer field so I tried out made the cut as a sub. Turns out, I'd actually have to play during the games. Soccer is running. Running hurt to breathe (3 months).

Age 15: Swimming. Oh my god, Swim Team was worse than Soccer. The My teammates were amazing competitors so if I was fast enough to keep up, it hurt to breathe afterwards (3 months).

Age 16: Track and Fielding. And by "Track and Field" I mean "shot-put" and "discus." Again, perfect form, no distance. I made it the whole season. Ok, part of a season. It hurt to breathe when it was cold (A few weeks).

Age 18: Attending College Out of State, Pennsylvania. I went for the animation program, stayed for the guilt. At the end of the second semester, I knew I was wasting my parents' money. I'd done maybe a dozen homework assignments the whole year yet maintained Bs and As (2 semesters).

Age 22: Working at My First Real job, Western New York. After college, I took a job at a rough school. Going home feeling guilty about how good my life had been drained me (1 academic year).

Age 23: Working in Outdoor Education, North Carolina. Rewarding job, not enough hours, physically draining (7 months).

Age 24: Interning as a Production Assistant, California. Moving to Los Angeles was only ever going to be temporary. It was an internship for the final semester of my first graduate school program in film. In the same year: a cousin died, my sister had a baby, and I was homesick (8 months).

Age 25: Working as a Wilderness Instructor, Maine. Amazing job in a breathtaking place. But guess who finds out she has exercise- and cold-induced asthma? No wonder it hurts to breathe (1 academic year).

Age 25.5: Tutoring, Connecticut. A good job in an amazing town with a verbally abusive boss (6 months).

Age 26: Research job, Connecticut. An amazing job in an amazing city. After five years, I plateaued. The only room for advancement would be buying the company or getting a Ph.D. And I was homesick. Something about the Ph.Ds I worked with struck a chord with me. They had a great life: Flexible hours. A cafe on the first floor. They wore jeans to work. And work had couches! Yes, a Ph.D. sounded very good (5 years).

Age 31: Getting a Ph.D., Western New York. Nooope. Nope nope nope (2.5 years).

Age 33: Adjuncting as a College English Instructor, North Carolina. A great job in a nice town. There just wasn't enough work (1.5 years).

Age 34: Teaching College Writing, South Carolina. My first full-time job in four years, but I'd rather not have to walk around a crime scene to get to my car (7 months).

Age 35: Adjuncting as a Life-Experience-Into-College-Credit Instructor, Remote. Awesome job. But they offered me a promotion and I could not do both (5 months).

While this is not a complete list, it is more than enough to see a pattern: I quit in the service of my own health, sanity, or safety. I think I'm wired that way. And I'm grateful for it. I might not know my limits, but my instincts sure do.

The Little Engine That Could Was an Ass Hat
It's like that second engine who wouldn't help out those circus freaks in The Little Engine That Could. That second engine said no. He knew his limits. That's self-care. He'd been working all day and even said he was tired and needed a break.

Also, what if those circus freaks weren't just circus freaks? What if they were really black market engine-knappers who would stop at nothing to get theirs? Did the little engine think about that? Nope. He just jumps right in, thinking nothing of his own well-being.

God, that book pissed me off. The Little Engine wasn't any better than those other two engines who made a conscious choice not to expend their resources. 

I can't pour from an empty cup. No one can. So, take care of your self and never stop quitting.

August 18, 2016

Five Easy Pieces: Punching My Book Proposal in the Face

Five Easy Pieces: Punching My Book Proposal in the Face


Amazing cupcake on fire courtesy of this place.

I had an epiphany that made me punch my book proposal in the face. Last week I started a new job and was feeling pulled in so many directions with work, the book proposalthis blog, that blog, and these articles, that I didn't know where to start.

So I took a breath and approached myself as if I were one of my own overwhelmed students:



   
     Instructor Me
: Hey there, Erica. Which of those tasks is most urgent?


     Me: All of them.

     Instructor Me: Great! Now, which task are you avoiding?

     Me: The annotated table of contents for the nonfiction proposal.

     Instructor Me: Why?

     Me: Because I don't know if this book will ever sell, so what's the point?

     Instructor Me: Ah. Well. That sounds like a problem for Future Me. Would you send a baby to prom?

     Me: What?

     Instructor Me: Exactly. So why not combine the annotations with a blog post? You like blog posts.

     Me: I guess. I mean...It would be cool to use this blog as a place to authentically draft my chapters. All I need are the mini-sections I'm going to use in each chapter and start there. 

     Instructor Me: And what are those mini-sections?

     Me:Uhm...The Confession, The Story, The Hindsight, The Takeaway, and The Resources.

     Instructor Me: Great! Let's do this!

     Me: But what if the book doesn't sell?

     Future Me: LOL

And so, Dear Reader, I have a solution. My next dozen or so blog posts will be structured how I'm planning the book as well. With these five pieces:
          The Confession: A true confession about my time as PhD student.
          The Story: The story behind the confession.
          The Hindsight: What I realized a little too late.
          The Takeaway: What I've done or improved upon since the hindsight.
          The Resources: Resources I wish I had before I made these mistakes.

I haven't the slightest idea if the book will end up exactly with those five sections, exactly, but it's my starting point.

So here we go.

The Confession
I might be writing this non-fiction book proposal because I'm too chicken to finish the MG horror bookI know it started that way, but I genuinely can't tell anymore.


The Story 
This blog used to be called The Davis Girl, but now it's specific to my time as a PhDidn't. This is intentional because one major section of a non-fiction book proposal is my personal platform, and how it relates to this topic. So the new focus on this blog does double duty for me: It keeps me focused and helps me draft the chapters of Confessions of a PhDidn't.

The Hindsight
I should have been updated this blog weekly, if not monthly while I was in grad school. Then, it would have served as a perfect archive in my book. While there are some posts from that time, it's mostly just a glaring gap in time.

The Takeaway
Our forebears kept journals as a record of their daily lives. Why not maintain that tradition in our current literacies? I do keep scrappy journals, but something about a public web log ups the ante. I'm already editing as I type this. 

The Resources
Whoa. I just found an amazing article that's going to help me retroactively spruce my archives up, a bit. Take a look here for tips on how to increase blog traffic. 

The name of this site alone with an article on why we should blog makes me so happy.

Anyone else? How is your blog going? What are you punching in the face?

Let me know in the comments! 



August 5, 2016

The Davis Girl vs. A PhDidn't: The Path of Least Resistance

The Davis Girl:
Or the blog formerly known as this one.
Confessions of a PhDidn't:
Or the blog now known as this one.










Introduction: The Big Picture
The Davis Girl is now Confessions of a PhDidn't.

I've been considering starting a new blog anyway, and this was the path of least resistance. Why reinvent the wheel when I could just rename the thing? And right now, I could use some simplicity.

Background: What the What
As you probably know, I write scary stories for kids. Some of these stories might even get published.

However, I decided to take a break before rewriting my first Alphagories book. In the meantime, it's time to tell the story about my time as a PhD student. Why?
The voices said so.

Methodology: How the Things Are Done
The end game for my PhDidn't story is a cautionary humor memoir/handbook for struggling grad students. Because sometimes it's OK to quit. More on that in a few posts.

No, I don't know if Cautionary Humor Memoir/Handbook is an actual genre, but it is now.

I wasn't planning on beginning this project so soon, but when I shelved the scary book project, the PhDidn't story wouldn't leave me alone. It's all I could think about. I dreamed about it a few times too. But how different could non-fiction be from middle grade horror fiction:

Write the thing.

Query the agents. Blammo. Right?

Results: The Things About It
Wrong. Turns out: Nonfiction gets a proposal not a full manuscript. 

A nonfiction book proposal has about eight some-what agreed upon sections which you can learn about here or read more about here.
Screen shot from proposal Table of Contents

What I appreciate so far about this whole process is that it reminds me of academia: everything has a place. And it better be there. Or else.

And I like it.

I never cared much for schedules or structure, but now that I know how much easier it is on me when there's no guesswork, I crave it.

There's method to this nonfiction proposal madness.

And I got to make a progress chart. I've wanted to do this for my fiction projects before, but it never made sense to me because I kept changing chapters and scenes and structure and...

Roll that beautiful bean footage:


Who doesn't love a star chart?

Discussion: The Part With More Info

Moving forward, this blog will center on the writing, content, and progress of Confessions of a PhDidn't: How to Quit Grad School Like a Champ. If anything staying to this narrow of a focus will keep me on track. At this point, I am drafting the proposal itself. 

Here we go.



March 21, 2016

A is for Authorstition: #ThisIsMyBookSpot

I do not consider myself a superstition person. 

Sure, I avoid walking under ladders --because danger zone, party of one-- and, yes, I hold my breath when driving past a cemetery until I pass a white house because why would I want my soul ripped out of my body by the evil-magnetic ectoplasm that most ghosts have?

And I don't know if I'd call them super, but I've recently developed two authorstitions that just so happen to take place in my professional mothership: the bookstore. 

These authorstitions are as follows:

AUTHORSTITION #1: 
I ALWAYS make a spot on the bookstore shelf where my book will be.

Authorstition #1: Finding my book spot and making a space.


AUTHORSTITION #2: 
I ALWAYS walk away from my future book spot, circle the store, then go back to my spot and act disappointed that the latest Davis Girl book is temporarily Sold Out. 
Authorstition #2: Aw, man. The latest Davis Girl book is Sold Out [wink].

My most recent authorstition event occurred during post-dinner coffee with three amazing Buffalonian-Authoresses. No two of us are in the same stage of publication, but a few similarities did rear their lovely heads over the course of our evening.

The Buffalonian-Authoresses kicking it in the kidlit section. 
(L to R: Dee, Sandi, TheDavisGirl, Nicole)

After a long overdue dinner out, we four Buffalonian-Authoresses teleported to a nearby bookstore, bogarted some chairs, and set up camp in the kidlit section next to the toy train table with all the toy cars and germs. 

We talked the big issues like writing, and where the bathroom was. And dogs. And children. And spouses. And caffeine. And Fuller House. It was cathartic. Especially swapping WIP stories, plot lines, fears, frustrations, and favorite writing snacks. 

Then writing habits came up. Good habits. Weird habits. 

So when one of them looked around at a shelf and mentioned that she likes to picture her book on the bookstore shelf, I spilled. I told them about my book-spot authorstition AND THEY DIDN'T EVEN LAUGH AT ME AND WE ALL FOUND OUR BOOK SPOTS TOGETHER AND TOOK PICTURES AND IT WAS AWESOME.

This is Nicole's book spot


This is Sandi's book spot.


This is Dee's book spot.


In addition to a night of writerly bonding, I acquired a new respect for the differences between my colleagues' good, bad, and ugly writing habits and my own. In conclusion, Buffalonian-Authoresses are awesome because they know that writing is awesome. 

And fun.

And maddening.

And unpredictable.

And stupid.

And exhilarating.

And hateful. But only on Sundays. 

And I wouldn't give it up for anything. 

Except coffee because Coffee doesn't slam into your brain in the middle of a conference call with your new boss to inform you that It won't share anymore information with you until you make Its nemesis appear in every other chapter starting with scene six.  I know this doesn't happen to everyone. But this is my book adventure.

And this is my book spot: 
#ThisIsMyBookSpot. 
So, fellow writers: What are your authorstitions?

And where is your book spot?

Let me know in the comments or post your #ThisIsMyBookSpot on Twitter.

January 24, 2016

Winter Storm Jonas & Other Cool Things

Winter Storm Jonas

Three-and-a-half weeks into 2016 and it's already kicking 2015's backside.

This morning I took my laptop and sunhat out on the deck into my Adirondack chair to field notes of concern regarding our well-being during Winter Storm Jonas.

Here's my view of Winter Storm Jonas from the Adirondack chair:



I'm grateful for the concern, but it was about 68 here today.

#NotBuffalo.

Other Cool Things

In keeping with the infancy of the new year, I've chosen to simplify. In my writing, my home, my career, my food. In fact, this simplicityness started with food.  Corn syrup allergies don't care that I love Chinese food and Count Chocula.



Though, I can't eat enough raw fruit lately. Also, carrots. And pizza. But homemade pizza.

What makes the home made pizza even better is that we inherited a stand-mixer and the dough/bread/cookie batter has never been better.

Curse you, technology.

I thought I had it down pat, but man-oh-man. That mixer, what with it's knobs and such.


What a world!

Predictions for 2016:

My freelance business will starts with a bang and a continue with fizzle.


I dabble brilliantly in curriculum design.

My Etsy store will sells out--in the good way. (Thanks Mom!).

Trump drops out.



Three friends will get pregnant.

Nieces and nephews will compete musically.


I will be published seven times.

Henry and Ridley coach me to stardom on their Animal Planet variety show.

I will sell out--in the bad way--on YouTube.

Unicorn overlords will reveal themselves at the first new moon after a solstice, only to be usurped by Peruvian Howler Monkeys.


New bicycle!



Inevitable heat-death of the universe.



What are YOUR 2016 predictions? Let me know in the comments!