14 comments


  • I appreciate your introspection and your willingness to be so honest with us. What you shared about being a poet, and writing in general, is so true. Thank you!

    August 23, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Thanks, Yvonne! You know, I always want to be honest about the writing life, but not so much so that I am discouraging newer writers, you know? I remember when I was super optimistic and enthusiastic – it was a fun time – and never want to take that away from someone who’s still all gung-ho…

    August 23, 2015
  • Jan Priddy

    I have to say how refreshing it is to read this post. I went through much that same agonies of choice when I was in my 20s. I chose to have children and that dictated what I could do in addition to raising children. It is also the reason I became a writer—enameling on copper was dangerous, writing was safer.

    But there are always hard choices. You have committed to being a poet. In twenty years or thirty or forty years, will you be content to look back on a life with more than a dozen books you are proud of or a job in technical writing and only two or three more?

    I am content with where my life has gone because I made a choice and I accepted that it might lead somewhere unexpected. It has! I have another ten or twenty or thirty years to do something else, if that’s my choice. But yes, hard choices.

    You will make your own choices. I wish they would be easier ones, but they will not. But you will choose and I believe you will not regret the direction you decide to turn. I think a lot of us have faith in you.

    August 23, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Thanks, Jan! I know – every twenty years or so, there seem to be these crossroads. I picked technical writing once, right after getting my Bachelor’s degree in science – and then I picked poetry, fifteen years later. So, you know, maybe I’m just pulled between these two lives – one practical and safe, the other less so, but maybe more rewarding?

    August 23, 2015
  • Jan Priddy

    Interesting that you say every 20 years or so. Now that I reflect on it, that’s pretty much how it has happened for me. Choosing art degree (3 of them), then ten years later children, then twenty after that teaching English which led me to writing, and now twenty-five years later I am at a choosing again.

    August 23, 2015
  • Like Jan, I appreciate your honesty, the sharing of your process. And I appreciate the dialogue in the comments. It’s helpful to see people wrestling with these choices, and also touching back down into the reading and writing that feeds you so fundamentally. Makes me realize that my worries are not unique, and I’m not “wrong” to be engaged in this particular struggle.

    August 23, 2015
  • Lana Highfill

    I consider myself a new writer and yours are the poems that I love now, and will remember, years from now, when school is a distant memory. So, for what it’s worth, I hope that you feel encouraged to keep writing, as I want nothing more than to keep reading.

    August 24, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Thanks Lana. That is encouraging!

    August 24, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Not wrong at all! I think all poets must struggle with this at least a little bit, right?

    August 24, 2015
  • Eloise Ritter

    Thank you for sharing your soul searching comments on your beautifully written blog. We all go through this process of re-evaluating the path we are on periodically…I know that I have. Sometimes I am lost as to what is next…so I stand still figuratively till My feelings are directive and not spinning.
    I am thinking of you and praying for you to find the perfect home that will nourish your creativity in whatever direction it takes you.
    Love you! Eloise

    August 26, 2015
  • I was moved by this post Jeannine. The sentence that was key for me is this one: ‘It’s impractical, it’s often unrewarding, but it is something I’m passionate about and, just like visual art, makes me happy to be around.” I’ve been writing poetry for several decades now- sometimes all out, more often in between the crises, adventures, distractions, suffering and enthusiasms that constitute a life. When I come to terms with the fact that I can’t control the world’s relationship to my art, I can only control my relationship to the creative process, then I find some peace. Of course, I have to revisit and relearn this basic wisdom every once in awhile, but when I was younger I grappled with it nearly every day, so I guess that’s progress!

    August 26, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Yes, Sarah. I think you’re right! It’s reassessment time again for me, I guess.

    August 26, 2015
  • Jeannine Gailey

    Thanks Eloise!

    August 26, 2015
  • After organizing monlhty poetry readings for the past three years, I have been happy to find that there are plenty of good female poets to go around. On another note, my name often makes editors assume that I am a woman, so I get a lot of acceptance/rejection letters addressed to Ms. or Mrs. (admittedly, way more in the rejection category). Now, I can console myself that it might not have been a reflection of the quality of my writing…I was probably just getting shut out of the old boys network, along with some of you!

    October 10, 2015

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