Tyler and Dawson
During Tyler's visit, I remember him and Dawson saying "You have to apply.". Now, I know they were talking to the undergrads more than anything but it kinda hit me that I needed to do that as well. Here I was, making some things, enjoying teaching, now some other things had to happen and that meant "applying". Now, I also know they meant apply with applications to stuff... stuff being classes, scholarships, grants, anything really. But, you could also read it as apply yourself. Neither of which I was really doing, so I decided to apply myself to a number of things and it yielded big results.
Pilchuck
First and foremost, I asked Tyler if I could use him for a reference for the upcoming Pilchuck Poleturners union. He said yes, and so there was that application going. While hanging out on Pilchuck's website for that application, I noticed that a person I had met a few years ago in Japan (Ryo Sekino) was teaching a class on straight up glass blowing. Sweet. So I applied to that as well. Before I left Pilchuck's website I also applied for a scholarship for a more experimental kiln-casting class with Anjali S. and Amiee Sones. So I applied to a few things and waited.
I got accepted to Poleturners, I was put on stand-by for the TA position in Ryo's class (there needed to be 8 students for me to be activated), and I was accepted to the kiln class but didn't get the scholarship. All good information to get right before before my Spring Break! So as these acceptance emails were coming in, I remembered that CCAD has faculty enrichment grants available. You apply, it gets reviewed, you might get some funding to better yourself and ultimately the school. I got the application sent to me 4 days before it was due, and that last day I was going to be flying down to Florida and had a small window to get it sent out barring any type of delays. In that time before the flight I had managed to hand write the majority of my grant application. I finished writing it out, still by hand, in the airport waiting for my flight. While in transit, I typed the whole thing into the form on my iPad and had enough time to read a few more times and tighten it up before landing. Once on the ground and waiting for my baggage, I connected to the airport wifi and sent my application off with about an hour to spare before the deadline. Technology at work for me. I have never written out something that fast for grant before, but it paid off. Roughly a month later I found out I was awarded all the money I asked for. On top of that I also received word that Ryo's class now had 10 people into, so my status went from stand-by to activated.
Wow.
So I will be spending 2 weeks in Pilchuck for Poleturners, help with the turn over, spend the next 2 weeks as a TA for Ryo. Once I get home, it's help to rebuild our casting kilns at CCAD. Then it's off to Pilchuck again to take Anjali & Aimee's class on kiln-casting. Most of the funds have been provided for, so really I'm only spending about ~$1,750 of my own money to be on the mountain side working with glass for just over 6 weeks. I'm so thankful to have the opportunity that sometimes I'm dumbstruck by the whole ordeal. It seems surreal, but the reality of it is setting in VERY quickly. As I write this I have less than 36 hours before I'm on the plane to this wonderful summer.
But the whole point is, it never would've happened if I didn't apply.
So thank you Tyler and Dawson, because of you two I'm having a summer I was only dreaming about before... thanks.
So thank you Tyler and Dawson, because of you two I'm having a summer I was only dreaming about before... thanks.
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