For two weeks this summer, I
participated in The Kenyon Review Young Writers Workshop. On June 26, I awoke
with the sun and looked forward to my trip. However, after going though several
doors and metal detectors and finally boarding the plane to Columbus, I
realized that the difference between getting to Gambier, OH (via Columbus) and
staying in DC meant conquering what had become one of my greatest fears:
flying.
After sitting through major turbulence in a plane that never quite
seemed to level out, it all became worth it once I was in the clouds. Once I
was in the clouds, there was no more fear or nervousness. I didn’t know it then,
but I would later come to realize that this plane was taking me away from a
nightmare and
towards a greater reality.
towards a greater reality.
After an hour and a half plane ride, I arrived at Kenyon, a quaint little campus intertwined in the city
of Gambier. As my feet grazed the pavement,
I began to look around and soon realized that my time at Kenyon mirrored my
life at SEED. Once again, I was a stranger among strangers which would have
been a bad thing except for three reasons: I was in a place where the people
were pleasant, where drama never seemed to reach extreme heights, and I was in
a place where
I was valued and respected.
I was valued and respected.
Participating in The Young
Writers Workshop gave me confidence in my writing and in myself. The Workshop submerged me in the world that I knew existed, but could never visit.
The Workshop gave me a first hand view of college life and gave
me something to look forward to in college: the chance to exist in a space
among strangers and flourish.
By participating in The Kenyon Review Young
Writers Workshop , I was able to explore my writing and that of others. I am
truly humbled, and enjoyed meeting the incredible Jerks of Ascension Room 114, a
group of incredibly talented, wonderful people. Participating in The Kenyon
Review Young Writers Workshop is an experience that I am grateful for and
will always remember.
will always remember.
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