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Stepping Stones

My Journey to Becoming a Teacher and Writer

By D.K. ShepardPublished 7 months ago 8 min read
Wilderness State Park - Lake Michigan - Photo by Author

When I was in early elementary school I wanted to be two things: a teacher and a writer.

My love for writing definitely blossomed from a love for reading. I developed an appreciation for books and experienced the power of stories at a pretty young age. My dad would read me a Little Golden Book at night before I could read independently. And once I started reading, my mom would take my sister and I to the huge public library near where we lived in the suburbs of Denver every week.

At one point, I became enthralled with a series of books about girls who rode horses called The Saddle Club. (I’m pretty sure a lot of little girls go through a horse phase and I definitely did!) I would write my own chapters of tales involving the characters from the books and let some of my friends read them.

In regards to wanting to be a teacher I think there were a few influences. My mom used to be a teacher before I was born and my aunt who’s always been pretty present in my life was a teacher up until she retired several years ago. I also adored my teachers from kindergarten up until third grade. I specifically remember my second grade teacher, Mr. Parrish, reading aloud from the Chronicles of Narnia every day after lunch and recess. I went on to read them for myself and then listen to the fantastic audio theatre versions of the stories over and over again. It sparked my love for fantasy and remains to this day my favorite book series of all time.

My younger sister and I

You might be thinking, “Wow, you knew so young what you wanted to be and had your path laid out for you.” And while I think the dream of being a writer always persisted – though its intensity waxed and waned at times – the dream of being a teacher was definitely discarded all throughout adolescence and into my early undergraduate years.

There is one very vivid memory I have that I think initiated an attitude of apprehension toward being a teacher. In elementary school we would have spirit weeks in which each day had a special theme and if you dressed up accordingly the principal would come through the classroom and give out candy to those who participated.

I can’t remember exactly which year of schooling it was, but for one of our spirit weeks there was a future career day. Since I wanted to be a teacher my mom got me a sweatshirt with a design featuring an apple, ABC, and 123. The principal came into the classroom with his bucket of candy and asked everyone who dressed up to stand. There were doctors, a vet, a fireman, and even a future NBA player wearing an over-sized jersey. Each of them received their candy and took their seat. When the principal arrived at my desk he squinted at me and asked what I was dressed as. I said “a teacher.” He looked at my outfit skeptically and must have decided my teacher outfit wasn’t convincing enough because he shook his head and moved on. I didn’t get any candy. I sat down confused and embarrassed.

It seems silly looking back at it now, but I think it made me question that desire to be a teacher. If on a "future career day" in a classroom, my choice of wanting to be a teacher wasn’t taken seriously then maybe it wasn’t a worthwhile occupation to consider.

By the time we had moved to Tennessee and I was in middle school I was dead set against being a teacher. Maybe an actress, a lawyer, or a business person. Something impressive with a big salary. This mindset continued into high school. Although teaching was out, writing was permitted to linger. After all, being a writer had the potential to fit into that category of being majorly successful.

My freshman year of high school I had to take a keyboarding class and the teacher gave us a prompt for a Law Day Essay Contest. Most kids in the class typed something up quickly and turned it in, it was after all just a keyboarding class. But I liked writing and I knew I was decent at it. Writing essays certainly wasn’t my favorite but I put some work into it. My teacher encouraged me to submit it and it ended up winning the 1st place prize at the local level and then achieved 2nd place in the state competition. My teacher, my parents, and I were all invited to the Knoxville Bar Association Law Day Celebration where a portion of my essay was read out in front of a room packed with law professionals. It was one of the first times where I thought I might just have some talent in the field of writing.

My keyboarding teacher and I at the Law Day Award Ceremony

I took creative writing classes in high school and then went on to pursue a creative writing certificate in college. The fiction professor at my university was none other than New York Times Best-Selling Author Kevin Wilson. I remember being so nervous when my first piece was up for workshop discussion. And how utterly ecstatic I was when Professor Wilson gave it some glowing feedback.

The summer after my junior year of college I was doing an internship through the Yale Child Study Center and I decided to take the plunge and start a rewrite of a novel I’d conceived in high school. I was able to write a handful of chapters and was excited by the prospect of what it would become.

It was also during my internship time at Yale that I began to seriously look into opportunities to pursue teaching. At that point I’d come to the realization that although I was good at economics and psychology (my majors), I just didn’t enjoy either enough to pursue it further. Thankfully I’d at least acknowledged this could be the case and had been taking classes to earn a minor in education. The times I spent with students in classrooms for those handful of classes had opened my eyes to the dramatic difference between good and bad teachers. After observing a really good one for a semester I felt a desire growing in me to be like her: creative, nurturing, intentional, and problem-solving.

There was still some hesitancy to commit myself to the path of becoming a teacher. When my finance professor asked what my plans were for after college and I told him that I hoped to go into teaching he literally shook his head and said, “what a waste.” The common perspective that teaching is some sort of “lesser” career and the saying that “Those who can, do; those who can't, teach” were definitely hurdles to my pride that had to be cleared.

I got accepted to a program called TeachKentucky my senior year and moved to Louisville after graduation. I was hired as a middle school English Language Arts (ELA) teacher and embarked on my first year of teaching.

It was a disaster.

First years of teaching are notoriously rough, but mine was truly something special. I was in my post as a 7th grade ELA teacher for three weeks. Then someone quit and I got moved to teaching math intervention, reading intervention, and social studies plus running half of a computer lab. For a new teacher whose biggest hurdle is learning classroom management, it was an absolute nightmare! Nine weeks later, after a total breakdown in the assistant principal’s office, I was moved to teaching 6th grade ELA. Though it was far from smooth sailing after that, I at least had my head above water for once.

After three years at that school and constant upheaval to what I was teaching after the start of each school year I switched to another school where I’ve been teaching 6th grade ELA for six years now.

A colleague and I at school on Twin Day of Spirit Week

My first year at my current school was the 2019-2020 school year and that spring was when COVID-19 hit the U.S. At that point I was living alone and for two and a half months my work consisted of sitting on an empty Google Meet call for a couple hours a day. I had done some more work on my novel sporadically over the prior summers but it still hadn’t progressed very far. But with the world shutting down and so much time to myself I decided to go full throttle. I wrote 1,000+ words a day for about three months and completed the novel! The rush I felt when I wrote the final page was indescribable. I’d done it! An over 120,000 word fantasy novel that had existed in my head for years was finally out on the page.

Since then there’s been a beta reader, edits of over 20,000 words, and batches of unsuccessful queries to literary agents. I finally conceded to let my husband read it this spring. He’s a very direct and honest sort of fellow, so it was a little scary to allow him to put eyes on it. But he didn’t hate it, he actually really liked it! I know you might be thinking, “He’s your husband, he has to say that.” But he is very analytical and critical about everything he reads and watches and there was no chance he was going to be able to turn that off, even for me.

My husband and I

In fall of 2022 a friend shared the Paolini contest on Vocal with me and I was super intrigued. I’m a huge Eragon fan and writing a dragon story was totally in my wheelhouse. I took the plunge and joined Vocal. I didn’t end up placing in the Paolini challenge and then soon after life became quite a whirlwind. I got a dog, met a guy, got engaged to the guy, and married the guy all within a year. But in November 2023 I decided to take a look at Vocal, realizing I was still paying for a Vocal+ membership. There was a challenge deadline for that day, the Neolomicro challenge. I hadn’t written in a year and I was sure I’d be too rusty to put anything coherent together, but an idea struck and I ran with it.

A couple weeks later I saw my name on a Challenge Winner list and it was like that moment in high school all over again where I felt like, “Hey! I can do this writing thing!” It meant the absolute world to me! I know in my head that validation isn’t everything, but when it comes in those moments you need it most it is such a gift that it’s impossible to take it for granted.

Alfie and I in the writing room (aka the sun room (aka Aflie's room))

There have been so many stepping stones on this journey to become a teacher and a writer. The two goals I dreamed of as a little kid before the social pressures and harsh realities came barging in. The path was definitely a winding one with some precarious steps along the way. But here I am. I’ve been teaching for nine years and this past year is the one I’m most proud of. And I daresay I can call myself a writer too. Sure, my novel hasn’t been published yet, maybe it never will be, but I wrote it and I love it. And all these other stories and poems that I’ve been encouraged to write through Vocal have shown me that there are more paths to explore in this writing adventure. I’m excited to see where I might end up next.

The pieces I write are my stories and so is this. A succession of countless moments that have brought me to where I am right now. The adolescent version of myself who cared too much about what others think might not give me her seal of approval, but the child version of me who dreamed with all heart would give me a big thumbs up.

Me at Lake Michigan

Life

About the Creator

D.K. Shepard

Character Crafter, Witty Banter Enthusiast, World Builder, Unpublished novelist...for now

Fantasy is where I thrive, but I like to experiment with genres for my short stories. Currently employed as a teacher in Louisville.

dkshepard.com

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Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

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  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

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Comments (17)

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  • Shirley Belk3 months ago

    D.K., thank you for sharing your amazing story. You make me smile for many reasons. One is that I can relate to wanting more than one career. When I was young I thought about being a missionary. But I had 4 children, my private mission. I also wanted to be a nurse. I did that. And I wanted to be a teacher. My greatest achievement was being a mother, but the job I most enjoyed was teaching nursing students. I think God already had our lives mapped out? Seems so. I am retired now, but I say that your life is just taking off and you will have so many places to go, things to do, and people to meet....just like in Narnia!

  • Euan Brennan6 months ago

    Can't believe this didn't place!! Had to double check the results to make sure I didn't miss your name. I wish I had said it before, but you deserved the candy! If it's any consolation, I'm learning a lot from your writing, so you're a teacher in more ways than you may know. And you may not have won the challenge (unbelievable!), but you're sure as heck winning at life, D.K.! And I know it's not much, but I hope you accept the tiny little tip. Thank you for writing and sharing yourself like this. You are an inspiration.

  • Matthew J. Fromm6 months ago

    Ahh man this is so good and I wouldn’t be surprised if it places. World definitely needs more teachers like you, and remember there’s nothing that says you can’t self publish!

  • Imola Tóth6 months ago

    I surely want to read your novel when you publish it. Sign me up for the pre-order already! It was fun to learn some personal details about you. I envy you for that creative writing course, I always want to sign up for one but I'm too afraid they will tell me that I shouldn't force what isn't working for me (as I was told with many things I loved to do before) so I just live here in delusional.

  • Rachel Deeming6 months ago

    That principal needs a clout! Oo, that made me angry! I loved learning about all your inspirations! Narnia! Those books were such an inspiration for so many, me included. And teachers are completely undervalued. That saying about those that can't teach? Whoever came up with that needs roasting. I must confess- I didn't read this at all. I went straight to the video and listened to you. It was great! And listening to you talking about your writing has inspired me. I felt buoyed by your enthusiasm and self-knowledge. Also, if you want an objective reader of your novel, I'd happily read it for you and feedback. Good for you, getting it done. What an achievement!

  • Joe O’Connor6 months ago

    Crazy how different cultures can have so similar upbringings- we read the Little Golden Books and the Chronicles of Narnia too! It's also telling how influential teachers can be in our lives- both ones we remember for good reasons, and for bad...This was cool seeing how you've made your way to where you are now, and the little and big moments along the way. Also- a huge congrats finishing your novel! I'm still very much procrastinating my own, and need to dig my heels in and just write. So well done to you for actually doing the thing, and I hope one day it does get published DK!

  • Silver Daux7 months ago

    Thank you for sharing all of this, it's such an incredible story and real proof that those desires and passions stay with us. I'll never understand why teaching is considered a waste when it's such a critical job and so difficult too. And what is up with that principal? That's so unnecessary! Anyway, glad you are doing what you're doing, sharing stories with all of us and teaching kiddos! Also, Alfie is adorable :)

  • Gorgeous photos to enhance your enthralling, heartwarming read.💖 Our family love Narnia. My Mum read them to my little bros & I read them to my children.The BBC audio books broke the boredom of 1400 km road trips each holiday, to visit far flung family. What a pity that Principal didn’t appreciate & reward your costume. I hate choosing ‘Winners’!😵‍💫 My squabbling baby bros put me off being a teacher!🥺 I only became a Teacher Aide after my kids went to school. Great work writing your book!👍🏼You’re an excellent writer & would be a blessing to have as a teacher.💖

  • John Cox7 months ago

    Wow! What an incredible story. You are definitely a gifted writer, DK! If and when you publish your novel, please let us know! I’ll will definitely want to buy it!

  • Laura DePace7 months ago

    Such a treat to get to know a bit about you - and the pics are great! I'm glad you persevered, with writing and with teaching. I taught 6 grade ELA myself (as a 4th career change - 5 if you count stay-at-home Mom) until trying to teach online thru Covid killed me. Kudos to you for sticking with it! Thanks for sharing your life with us.

  • Gina C.7 months ago

    Congratulations on finishing your novel and to 9 years of teaching!! ☺️💙 That’s so awesome. I can definitely relate to the disaster early years with classroom management 🙂‍↔️ It was so fun to learn so much about you :) The pictures are all so cute!

  • Omgggg, it made me so happy to be able to see and hear you! You're so pretty and Alfie is sooo adorable! Your principal was an asshole! He still should have given you a candy! Gosh adults never think how their actions would affect children! I'm so happy that now you're both a teacher and a writer! I hope one day, your novel gets published 🤞🏼🤞🏼✨️❤️

  • Lana V Lynx7 months ago

    What a great insight into your life and goals, DK! I wish you all the success you deserve and hope one day that novel will be picked up by an agent. There's always a self-publishing option as well.

  • Sean A.7 months ago

    I see you’re already working on the beginnings of your autobiography for when you get your book published. Keep trying!

  • Caroline Craven7 months ago

    This is absolutely lovely - it's fantastic to put a face to a name and learn so much more about you. I wish I'd had teachers like you in school - really passionate about their subjects and a desire to teach, rather than considering it just something to do. I hope with all my heart your novel gets published. I truly enjoy reading your work and I know I am not the only one. You'll get there - after all, you've already come this far. Good on you and good luck too with all the challenges.

  • Mother Combs7 months ago

    It's funny you paid for Vocal for a whole year without writing. I did the same, but for 2 whole years before I got back to doing what I really love doing. I love Eragon too. Love the pics, DK. So nice to put a face with the name <3

  • Paul Stewart7 months ago

    So so so so lovely to see you and hear from you. The pictures are brilliant. Love your big giant dog. ha. And love the progression from small DK to adult DK. Well done for your perseverence. I am glad you came back to teaching and that you never lost your love for writing. Selfishly cos I'd never have met you/connect with you and got to read your wonderful writing. It was great to learn more about your story to becoming you. Well done for doing the video and record too. You were very natural and it brought your words to life even more. Now I have a voice to go with your writing in future. :) Awesome challenge entry.

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