Monday, March 4, 2013

Life is the Song, Love is the Music


So here it is.  2013 is already in full swing.  The joke is on you Mayans; we survived 2012.  Even me, even though I had many experiences and trials, I pushed on through like I always do.  I’m a Lewis, also known as ‘Bonecrusher.’ 

I.  Am.  Tough.

I should be working on a brief right now but I’m not.  This law student is fried, and the only thing that clears my head is writing and driving.  How ironic is that? You’d think that since I’m supposed to be writing a brief it would work? Nah. I can’t clear my head like that.  I certainly can’t drive at this hour through the hood in Cincinnati…even I’m not that stupid.  I have to clear my mind.  I have to write, and let the words on these pages free my thoughts and share them with whoever wants to look inside my mind.  Be careful, it’s scary in here!

So, most of you that know me or for whatever reason follow these blogs, know that I always do a year-end blog.  This year is no different. However, I did not post it.  Why, you ask? Because. It was just for me. I went through a rough state for a few months that only those closest to me were privileged to know about and help me through. I can take a lot, I have learned about losing in so many ways. But after so much hurt and disappointment, I collapse, like I did last semester.  I was still determined enough to finish finals at an above average pace last semester, but nothing like I pride myself in doing.  Sometimes, life just gets to be too much. 

However, I will hit the high points – and low points – of last year. I dealt with a lot in the beginning of the year.  I was studying for the LSAT and fearing the worst about my future in law school.  I lost a dear person in my life, Marie Garrison, to cancer (see separate blog from last year) and my Great Uncle Oaf Lee, also to cancer and other problematic health issues.  It was a rough beginning.  But then things turned around.

By some Miracle, I managed to get into Salmon P. Chase Law School, a part of Northern Kentucky University.  I say miracle because of how it came about.  I had a pretty bad score on the LSAT so I didn’t think I was going to apply to Chase.  I thought I was just going to apply to somewhere else and hope that maybe I could transfer, or go where I loved -- Tennessee.  It was certainly heavy on my mind to apply to Duncan School of Law, a part of Lincoln Memorial University that was started a few years ago in Knoxville.  The only problem is that they are not accredited by the American Bar Association yet.  But I wanted to go to law school so bad I didn’t care.  I applied there and a couple more places, and wasn’t going to apply to Chase because I didn’t think I could get in.    However, about a week before the deadline to apply to Chase, the admissions office emailed me and told me that they were still taking applications.  She had got my information off the Law School Admission Council website.  I told her I had a bad score and didn’t think they would accept me.  She sent me the link to a chart of LSAT scores crossed with GPAs.  Out of the applicants with my score and GPA, four people had applied last year.  One of the four was accepted.  ONE.  I was at work and I remember turning around, looking at Amber and saying,  “I could be the one!”

At least then I was optimistic.

I applied to Duncan in Knoxville, TN, a school in Charlotte, NC and Salmon P. Chase in Northern Kentucky.  Those were the only places I was willing to go because I don’t want to be too far away from home.  I got a letter from Charlotte immediately but it was a few weeks before I heard from anybody else.  I heard from Chase exactly four weeks after they received my application.  I was at work (always) and I saw I had an email on my phone. The subject line said “NKU Chase – Congrats” and I freaked out.  I started screaming, “I got in!! I got in!!!”  Randi and I started jumping up and down, I started texting and calling people to tell them about my good news.  It was one of the happiest (and proudest) moments of my life.  I started planning when to leave work and what I was going do.  I was still in shock. 

I decided that I was going to reward myself.  My cousin Elizabeth and I planned a cruise for the summer.  I had never been farther south than the Tennessee border, I had never seen the ocean, never been on a plane and I had never really left the country.  I was about to have a bunch of ‘firsts.’  

Now, I generally have good luck. But sometimes I have both good luck and bad luck at the same time. For instance, I got an email telling me I had been accepted into a scholarship program known as KLEO where I would receive $5,000 but it required me going to live in a dorm on UK’s campus for two weeks while attending sort of a “boot camp” for law school.  I thought this was a great idea but it happened right during the week of my cruise.  BUT, the amount it cost to change the cruise to a week later was not nearly enough to worry about in comparison to the $5,000 I would lose if I didn’t take the scholarship.  Which, turned out to be $5,000 each year for a total of $15,000 for those of us at Chase.  That also meant my summer was pretty much booked.  But it was all worth it.  I gained a new understanding and preparation of law school, and I realized that I really loved the direction I was heading in.  The cruise also changed my life.  It sparked a love for travel and treading new ground that I will never lose.  I can’t wait to go on my next adventure. 

Let’s recap:

I got into law school. I was a KLEO scholar.  I flew for the first time. I went on my first cruise. I saw the ocean for the first time. Basically, I had a perfect summer. Booyah!

Now, moving right along.  School started, which unleashed a whirlwind on my life. I was fortunate enough in September to stand beside my best friend and former roommate Kathryn Boggess as her maid of honor and watched as she vowed to share her life with her new husband, Ben.  It was one of the most beautiful weddings I’ve ever seen and I was honored to be a part of it.  It is an amazing feeling to watch two people who are perfect for each other join hands as husband and wife.

But…in true me fashion I always seem to take on too much.  It’s a gift, and a curse.  I still managed to plan the entertainment for Mary Breckinridge Festival and have Emerson Drive as the headliner, which I’m pretty proud of. The festival is a headache and a thankless job, but I love it.  It still reminds me of my days in Nashville, and helps me keep my music dream alive in some ways.  And truthfully, I’m not happy unless I’m helping others.  I’m not happy unless I’m doing something productive for someone else.  I’m not happy unless I’m staying super busy and losing sleep and living on the road.

That takes us up through October.  There is only one event from October to December I will never forget…my baptism.  The rest of the year, well, it pretty much sucked. 

In November, I was baptized – something I had wanted to do for a long time.  The day it happened, I will remember for the rest of my life; November 25.  That day, my life changed forever.  During just one of many emotional sermons by Keith Bowling, I felt my heart being tugged as if there was a rope lassoed around me, pulling me to the front.  It was a feeling I could no longer fight.  My eyes filled with tears and I nearly ran toward the front.  It was as if the gap in my heart was filled immediately.  And, I was able to share it with one of the best people in my life, Ms. Rebecca Couch.  She never left my side.  She stood at the base of the stairs and helped me in the water.  She was the last thing I saw going down, and the first thing I saw coming up.  She helped me out of the water and waited patiently outside as I changed out of my wet clothes.  She has never let me down, but has been there for me through one of the most important journeys of my life, my journey toward God.  For that I will always love her and be grateful.  I don’t know what I would do without her.  My entire church family is amazing and I am blessed beyond measure to be a part of that congregation.  It has truly been one of the best things to ever happen to me.



So, after all I had went through, by the time finals rolled around this semester I had no motivation left.  None.  Zero.  Nada.  NOTHING.  I didn’t even care.  I wasn’t nervous, I didn’t cry, I didn’t get freaked out, I just slept, ate, watched TV and studied with my group.  I guess I’m not normal but I never have been.  I’m just who I am.  I was ready to come home.

The last few months of my year, minus my baptism, was very disheartening and painful.  Having to remove people from my life isn’t a happy thing.  Being betrayed isn’t a happy thing.  Losing friends and people I thought I could trust and count on isn’t a happy thing. But that is why I will skip it.  I want to be happy.

And believe me, I am.

January 7 was the day my life changed for the better.  I sent a random text message to an old friend asking about a building he used to work in because another friend of mine was curious about it.  January 7, I realized that friend might be a little more than I thought.

If my life were a play, the script would read, “ENTER: Frank Wayne Baker II.”




We spent quite a bit of time together after that. We figured out pretty fast how much we cared for each other and how much alike we were.  On February 1, he asked me if I felt like putting up with him for a while, and of course I said I did.  All I can say is, I am the happiest I’ve ever been. Because for once, it seems like all the pieces of my puzzle are fitting together.  I am in law school working toward my dream, I have the best, most supportive family and friends and church family one could ever be blessed with, and I have the man in my life I have always wanted.  

It is not everyday you find a man who:

·      Opens every door for you;
·      Wears two jackets so he can give you one when you’re too hair-brained to remember your own;
·      Respects your brother enough to ask permission to date you because they’re friends;
·      Respects you, and your life choices and decisions;
·      Spends 16 hours hand-making roses out of duct tape for you on Valentine’s Day because he knows you don’t like a bunch of real flowers that die;
·      Wants to go to church with you;
·      Doesn’t care if you don’t feel like wearing makeup today;
·      Wants to make your life easier;
·      Supports and encourages you while you’re in school and sacrifices time with you when needed;
·      Wipes your tears away when you cry;
·      Makes you order first in a restaurant because ladies go first;
·      Considers you in his decisions;
·      Doesn’t mind going to concerts because you have an addiction (LOL);
·      Reminds you you’re important to him and he appreciates you;
·      Tells you that you’re beautiful;
·      Sends you emails with funny comics or song clips because he knows you’re having a rough day and he wants to make you laugh;
·      RESPECTS your family, and understands that time with them is important;
·      Adds to the family, not take away from it;
·      Shows concern for your safety and tries to protect you;
·      MOST IMPORTANTLY doesn’t want to change who you are.

I could go on, but I’m sure some of you are already gagging a little.  Sorry, my apologies.  I’m just so stinking happy!

ANYWAY – the point is, it is rare to find a man like that with those qualities these days.  His parents have raised a wonderful son, and I can’t express with words how much appreciation and respect I have for them. 

I really am lucky! (Even though he argues he’s the lucky one.)

We watched George Strait the other night in concert on this 2013 leg of the Cowboy Rides Away Tour, sadly his last tour.  It was a bittersweet moment for me because music is a huge part of my life, and it’s like a chapter is over.  Some people understand that and some people don’t.  But for me, a concert, feeling the music, sharing it with all the people and the artist in one room, feeling the energy that we all create, is one of the best feelings I know.  I love it. I’m addicted.   But it was sad last night, watching another part of my childhood walk away.  I was raised with music in my ears. When Brooks and Dunn left, I cried, several times.  I’m not ashamed to say that I shed some tears last night.  If George Jones ever dies, I’ll need Oxygen. True story…

But the point of this is how little by little I am realizing where I am in life, and how fast the years are flying by.  Music isn’t what it used to be, and the older they get, the older I get.  Yes, I am only 25, I know.  But, in the words of Conway Twitty, “Life’s too short, no matter how long it lasts.”  It seems like yesterday I was 16.  I went to sleep and when I woke up, I was 18.  I went to sleep again, and when I opened my eyes, I was 21. When I woke up this morning, I was 25, a law student, and TIRED!  I never realized how fast that life goes by.  Especially when you are unhappy and you don’t like to admit it.  But being happy, finding what I was missing, has changed my life.  I was missing a relationship with God first and foremost, and since that happened, my life has kept going in the right direction.  The power of prayer and God’s plan for you is amazing!  As Keith and Eddie have said so many times in church, why people don’t want it I don’t know! I think I always wanted it but I was afraid.  And now that my life has taken all these wonderful turns, I believe even stronger. 

The sad part – I just wish my granny were still here. I know she is smiling, watching over me, but there isn’t a day that goes by I don’t miss her, and think about her, and wish I could tell her about the things in my life and wonder what she would say to me. I have tried to live my life continuously in a way that she would have been proud of. I would never want to let her down or disappoint her. 

I know my dad won’t be around forever, or my mom. But I have never loved or appreciated my parents and my brother and my entire family more than I do at this moment.  Because dysfunctional or not, we are a family. We are a team. We are one.

Maybe this all seems like a silly post to some of you.  Maybe it seems like I’m behind and I should have been playing catch up.  But I’ve heard you never realize what you have until it’s gone.  I’m trying to stay ahead of the game.  I’m in Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, 5 nights a week, sometimes more, away from most everything I love.  If I hadn’t made such wonderful friends in law school, I’d have lost my mind by now.  But that is one thing I’m blessed with, loyal friends.  And not just here, but back home, too.  And you know who you are because we stay in contact, somehow.

I just want to thank all of you again – all of my loyal supporters – who have kept me going for so long.  When I’m having a down moment in school or life, all I have to do is post on Facebook and within minutes I have a load of comments cheering me up and giving me a pep talk and putting me back where I belong.  Thank you, from the bottom of my heart.  You will never know how much it means to me.

In closing, I am truly blessed with a life that is far better than I deserve.  The good Lord has seen to my happiness and pulled me through my trials and tribulations to build me into the person I am today.  I can’t wait to come home this summer and see my family and friends and be a part of my hometown and see all the faces that I’ve missed.  But until then, keep thinking about me, typing away at this computer at all hours, working on getting this second semester of law school completed, and one step closer to home… For good! 

By the way, did I mention that I’m in love with Frank Wayne Baker II?  I think he already knows, but just in case….


“Cause even the stars they burn,
Some even fall to the earth.
We’ve got a lot to learn,
But God knows we’re worth it.
No, I won’t give up.


<3 Jess




Sunday, August 26, 2012

Summer At A Glance: How My Life Changed Forever


You know those dreams you have, the ones when you wake up, you think, “Wow, I wish that really happened…” Well, I lived that moment, several times in fact, this summer. Only it wasn’t a dream. I lived it.  So many things happened where I stopped and thought, “I can’t believe this is reality.” It was one of two of the most perfect summers of my life. I say two because last summer was pretty perfect, for a lot of reasons. I found out who I am, I had a lot of fun, and I grew into the person I had always wanted to be. A lot of things were responsible, and a few people. One person especially, because they helped me realize my law dream and push me in the ways that I needed to succeed.  But alas, I have had multitudes of supporters in that department, and I absolutely cannot thank all of you enough. But let’s get back to the heart of the matter, this summer.

On May 11, before summer even began, and exactly one month to the day after receiving an email from Chase Law School stating they had received my application and would be getting back to me in four weeks – I got another email with the subject line “NKU – Congrats!”

I. Freaked. Out

I was at work and received the email on my phone. I was speechless for about all of two seconds. Then I just shouted, “I got in!!!!” to the entire bank lobby.  So my customer in the drive thru, and the customer that Randi was waiting on in the lobby, ended up having bad timing. They had to wait as two seemingly retarded blonde chicks decided to jump up and down and hug frantically in celebration mode. Then it was past time to switch back to reality. “Thank you, have a nice day!”

The first thing I did, obviously, was call my brother. He didn’t seem as thrilled as I’d hoped at the time, but he’s coming around. Slowly. Then I called my parents. They were excited. Then I sent out a mass text to my nearest and dearest friends and family telling them the good news. It was a surreal moment in my life. A day I thought would never come, when I could actually announce with certainty my admission into a school of law.

Before this time, I had given up on it. Well, not entirely, but I thought that it was probably best I did. I knew my LSAT scores weren’t adequate, and I honestly felt that taking the LSAT again would be more than excruciating after my first two attempts. And you can only take it twice in three years. It just didn’t seem like the dream was going to fall into place. So, I started looking for other options. Not that I didn’t love working at the bank, because I did. But it was never going to pay me what I needed to live on, and it was never going to give me the opportunity to move up and be the successful person I had always dreamed of being. Or if it did, I would probably be near retirement.

I applied for a marketing job in Hazard that paid pretty well. I got an interview, thought I had the job, but they sent me a letter a week later telling me they had found a better candidate. Ugh. Sadness. I actually had a degree for that one.

So. I knew I loved kids. I knew I loved being around kids. I had once thought of being a teacher. Why not? I began getting feedback from some important people in my life and their thoughts on the subject, which rendered mixed reviews from all. Everyone knew my real dream and they didn’t want to discourage me but they weren’t going to lie and tell me they thought I would make a bad teacher either. So. I looked into programs. I had always loved LMU – the area, the school, and the feel. They had an 18-month Masters program that would allow me to teach with my music business degree. Again, why not?

One week after I had decided I would try to apply to the program, I got my acceptance into Chase, the school I had really wanted to go to. I knew it was meant to be. At this point, I can really only thank God, my parents, and a small handful of other people who helped me get there.  Mostly God. Here’s why: He made it happen.

I’m drifting away from the task at hand, which is how this summer was life-changing, but there is a point. All my life I’ve heard the phrase “everything happens for a reason.” When I got that acceptance letter, I believed it.

So many things had to come together for me to be able to end up at that place. First, my three-year relationship had to end last year. It was a devastating blow, but it was really for the best. I had to find a way to get back on my feet, pull myself together, and force myself to do some soul searching that I desperately needed. I had to ask myself what I wanted out of life, not what I was willing to settle for. I had to have a conversation that would change my life with someone who would also change my life, which would lead to me taking the LSAT for the first time. I had to fail miserably the first time, enough to really put my heart into it the second time, and get tutoring from the bestest tutor ever, Clarissa Constantine. Then there was the horrid day, in which I took the LSAT the second time, and which if you all read the blog about it then you know that God was in control or I would never have even been admitted to take the test. But I failed miserably again. So, I felt like my dream was gone. It just made me appreciate it that much more when I got in. And realize I had help.

Not only that, but I recently found out that I didn’t get the marketing job in Hazard because I had a faulty background check. They saw some other Jessica Lewis who had a record and wouldn’t hire me. However, if they hadn’t, they would have hired me, and I would never have applied to law school. Everything happens for a reason…

After the LSAT scores the first time were horrible, I was hesitant to apply to any school. I didn’t apply to UK at all. I didn’t want laughed at. I applied to a school in Charlotte, NC, Knoxville, TN, and I waited to apply to Chase.  Randomly, I got an email from the admissions officer at Chase, telling me they were still accepting applications. I emailed her back and explained my situation, that my scores were probably too low, and I was afraid to apply and have a rejection on my record with them in case I retook the LSAT. She sent me a chart breaking down the scores and GPA of the accepted students from the last entering class. She told me to look at the chart, examine the odds, and make a decision.

The chart, following my GPA and LSAT score, showed that four students within my range had applied last year, but only one had been accepted.  I folded it around in my mind for a moment. Looking at it one way, that was a 25% chance. 25% was better than the 0% I expected. I started telling my formal decision maker at work, Amber Barger, all about it. She was always the first person I asked these things if they should happen at work, but her opinion was always summoned at some point. I liked her train of thought. She made concentrated, calculated, and wise decisions. I remember turning to her and saying, “I could be THE ONE!” She agreed to the possibilities and told me I should apply.  Then I started working hard core on my application, and my personal statement.  I was honest, I was open, and every word I spoke, I meant. It was time to convince them why they should take a chance on the backwards girl from Leslie County.  I’d like to think that my personal statement was what got me in, but like the old question of “how many licks does it take to get to the tootsie roll center of a tootsie pop?” well, “the world may never know.”

What does matter, is that I got in. And I wanted to celebrate. So we dive back into summer.

My dear cousin Elizabeth mentioned the idea of a cruise to me while at a family dinner. I had often tumbled the idea of a cruise around in my head, especially with my beloved roommate who had planned to be my cruise partner up until her move to Chicago and engagement happened. Again, why not?

We booked a cruise to the Bahamas.  Bingo!

Four days and four nights on the water, rocking to the rhythm of the waves, or the rain I suppose, if the Judds had been there. Point being, I was going to celebrate law school acceptance, a feat I thought impossible, in style, by doing something I had never done before. I wanted to be adventurous for once. Until the second big email I got, subject line: NKU Chase – KLEO Recipient.

Kentucky
Legal
Education
Opportunity

In the words of my dear banjo-picking friend Obadiah Golding, “Wait, what now?”

Upon opening the email I found I was being offered a $5000 scholarship to my school (bada-bing, bada-boom!). Reading further, I saw that to obtain this scholarship I was to spend 12 days on UK’s campus. In a dorm. Showering with other people.

Ew.

I had never stayed in a dorm. Ever. I missed that whole experience, and I wasn’t really thrilled about getting it this late in the game. But…it’s five grand! The quickest and probably easiest $5000 bucks I’ll ever make. Maybe. Let’s hope not…I am in law school.

I check the dates. It’s sooner than I thought…I would have to leave work a week early. But something else looked funny about the dates….oh…yeah…of course. It would happen right in the middle of my cruise. Well, vice versa I suppose. But still.

Decisions, decisions.

Let’s weigh this option. It costs about 500 bucks to rebook, OR, I can turn down five grand. What was the problem again? So I rebooked my cruise, and prepared for what I thought would be the most horrid 12 days of my life. Boy, was I wrong.

It was the most sleepless 12 days of my life, but certainly not the worst, not even close. Upon arriving, I discovered there were five students from each law school in Kentucky, and a returning mentor who had completed the program a year before. What a diverse group of people I was seeing, but then again, it is a diversity scholarship. Ah, makes sense.

The first person I saw was Professor Allison Connelly, or as we learned to love her later, Professor C. I didn’t know what to make of her at first. I don’t read people well on first impressions usually, so I just watched during our lunch registration and attempted to fill out the other students.  All of a sudden, a girl comes running frantically into the building yelling, “Who’s in charge?! Who’s in charge?!”

Professor C runs to her in a state of a semi-calm panic mode, and announces that she, in fact, is the leader of this here outfit. She, like the rest of us, probably thought a murder had just occurred, or a drive by, maybe even a shanking. It was hard to tell with the level of emotion this person had expressed.  Turns out, she was just afraid of being towed. Introducing Scarlett Steuart, UK law student. We all found it funny, and we still redneck her over it. Who wouldn’t?

Now to tell you the occurrences in their entirety would take 12 days to write, and to read. We did a lot, so I will attempt to give you the ‘meat and taters,’ if you will. For 12 days, we were in law school. We had class from 9 to 5. Somewhere in there we ate; Professor C did feed us good. We never went hungry. Especially Jeremy Fugate, also known as the human garbage disposal.  I froze to death, so bad I had to bring a blanket at least once, but a jacket I required daily.  At night, we went to eat with our specific class group, anywhere we wanted. So believe that I ate GOOD for 12 days. So good that I would attempt to take the 10 flights of stairs to my dorm at least once a day in attempt to burn a few stray calories. Gee, that was fun. Not.


But what was fun was the dorm life. I really thought I would hate it, and I’ll be honest, still not crazy about the shower thing, but it wasn’t as bad as I expected. I didn’t mind it. I found a roommate indirectly. We had our own room, but just like Carl and Frank, the boy, in Sling Blade, Laken Gilbert, another UK law student, well we made friends right off the bat. Despite the fact that she was on one end of the political spectrum, doing diligent work with the Democratic Party, and I as a proud eastern Kentuckian am on the other end.  She moved into my room after a couple days and we were seldom to be separated after. I always like telling this story. Laken had me at “No, you will see my meth lab!”

The story behind that is we were in our rooms one morning sitting on Facebook. I messaged her to see if I could come down and hang with her. Her response, “No, you will see my meth lab!” Now, while some people wouldn’t find this funny, I thought it was hilarious. She had my sense of humor, and we understood each other. We made a good team. And I miss her. *Sad face*. I miss them all. Some days, I really wish there was a KLEO School of Law. But, I digress.

Anyway, back to the point.  Those 12 days were tough at times, but they still rocked. We had real class, real finals, real professors – it was a boot camp. It taught us some of the most important things we could ever hope to learn about law school, and gave us a HUGE jump on the “dead weight” as our bewildering, yet always entertaining, Professor Bucknam would say.  Professor Douglas was intimidating, but really quite humorous in his own right, especially after the program had ended we had some good conversation. Those professors made me wish for a time I was going to UK. I loved Professor Price, she was one of the coolest people professors I had ever met – funny, nice, and super smart. Her and Professor C made a good team.  Also during this time, we did cool things too, like eating lunch with the Supreme Court of Kentucky, eating lunch with the Dean of our schools, meeting some past KLEO participants, and other important figures, not to mention shadowing a judge or attorney for a day. That day was really fun. I almost saw a fist fight in motion hour.  Professor C really took care of us. So now I will talk about her.

Professor C is one of the most influential people I have ever met. As I was told, she has basically never charged a dime to any client. She runs the legal clinic at UK and does all pro-bono. She’s thebomb.com, in other words. She has ran the KLEO program for 10 years. She has been helping students get their legal education for many years as a professor. She is an exceptional teacher and friend. This woman believed in us, before she even met us. She wanted us to succeed, and she felt in her heart of hearts that we would. She pushed us, she challenged us, she laughed with us, cried with us, and she loved us. I will never forget these words, “From this day forward, you’re mine, ALL of you.” And as fellow KLEO member Laura Myers stated, we all feel like that goes both ways. She is our rock, our safe place, and our light at the end of the tunnel when the days get too rough. We think about her and all she has vested in us, and we move forward like there is no other choice, because there isn’t. We won’t quit, ever, because of her. She believes in our success, and she will be there to share it with us in every way. We love you Professor C, and we miss you terribly!


 She had a banquet for us at the end of the program where we were awarded certificates as completion of the program. Us Chase people found out that our school was the only one renewing the scholarship so we will end up getting $15,000. That was great news. But most of all we learned valuable skills that we will always hold with us. I met friends that I will keep forever, I crossed boundaries that most people in my hometown wouldn’t dare cross or ever have the chance to, making friends with people from different walks of life, from countries as far as Serbia, or counties as close as Harlan. Amanda Birman and I hit it off too; she understood the words “Cumberland Gap water” and “Don’s Supersaver cakes” and how precious those words were to the folks back home. We threw her a surprise birthday party since she didn’t get to be home with her family. It was a sad day packing up and moving out to come back home. However, it was a memorable experience, one of the best in my life, and one I will hold dear for years and years to come. We will always be a family.      

I will list the names of my KLEO peeps here, because I don’t want to leave anyone out. We lived together, learned together, and loved together. We are a family. Always.

UK Students:

Chelsea Granville
Laken Gilbert
Carl Williams
Scarlett Steuart
Laura Myers
James “Tee” Pennington (Mentor)

U of L Students:

Sana Abhari
Chris Jenkins
Amanda Birman
Grace Chambers
Mijlia Zgonanine
Aaron Marcus (Mentor)

Chase Students:

Jessica Lewis (Me, duh.)
Lindsay Oakes
Jeremy Fugate
Danny Ackeret
Michele Nguyen
BreAnna Morgan (Mentor)

There is something special to be said about each of these people. They are all great and I am proud to have been a part of the same program with them all. I wish the best of luck to them all as well.

Now, let’s get this show on the road.

After returning from my scholarship program, I only had a few days before the cruise. My mom and dad decided to let me fly to Miami, where we would be porting from, as opposed to driving, which would have been really dumb. Kentucky to Miami….like 17 hours…. yeah, no.

We flew out of Lexington, and I thought I was going to be really nervous. But no. I wasn’t.  Not at all. I just sat there. We took off.  We landed. We waited. We took off again.  We landed again. Boom. Four hours later, we’re in Miami. It really beat 17 hours let me tell you. And I Ioved it! I absolutely loved it!! I honestly can’t wait to fly again. So we get to Miami, grab a hotel close to the port, and chill for a while. That night, we walked across the street to this place called Bayside where they had an outdoor type mall, lots of food, a stage next to the water where the dock was, and we had a blast. Dancing on the pier, eating ice cream, watching the boats roll in and out, it was great. The next morning we left for the boat.

It. Was. Amazing.

I loved every second of that cruise. I treasured it all, day by day, every minute.   We ate on the top deck watching the water, we lay by the pool, we watched comedy shows, we danced into the night, I learned the John Travolta, and we slept very little. On the beach days, we did crazy but fun things. We took a banana boat ride where we thought we were going to die a couple times. Flying through the ocean jumping off the waves because the boat pulling you is doing 90 mph isn’t as much fun as you’d think. We bought souvenirs. I snorkeled and swam in the ocean, not to mention seeing the ocean for the first time. I fell in love with it, too. Sometimes I would go stand on the top deck and just stare out at the water. It was the most relaxing, calming, crystal clear thinking I had ever done. If you’ve never been, you have to go, at least once.  It was definitely an amazing experience. I had so much fun, and I survived. We got back to Miami, spent a day on the beach, shopped around, and flew back the next morning.


This was my favorite picture from the cruise. It’s my favorite picture of me I’ve ever taken. If I could go back to that moment daily, it would be fabulous. There are some moments that you wish could be frozen in time. This is one of mine. I will always cherish that moment, the way I felt, the thoughts surrounding my mind, and the view as I stared out into the open water at sunset. The most gorgeous view I’ve ever seen.  

After returning from vacation I spent the next week packing, moving, and making rounds either seeing or talking in some way to the people most important in my life and explaining to them the decision I had made – where it would take me, and how I may be absent from their lives for a while, but asking them to keep me present in their thoughts. I know I’m not leaving forever, but I am going to be gone a while. I’ll get to come home and visit, like I did this weekend, but not that often. Something I have found hard to deal with.

I have just completed my second week as a law student – one week of orientation, and one true week of classes. The first day was pretty rough. When I got home, after taking a break from unpacking, it finally hit me; I was gone, I was alone, and there was no turning back. I cried for about 45 minutes, but then I was OK. I have adjusted well I think, and I really do like it. I like the learning, and although the Socratic method makes some people’s heads hurt, I kind of like it. It gives me a rush.  I like being prepared for it. The work is a lot but nothing I can’t handle. I’m pretty ambitious, I’m pretty tough, and I’m very determined. I’m from the foothills of Eastern Kentucky, I’ve already run into political disagreements that didn’t turn out well, but I can’t be expected to stand idly by and listen to people badmouth the coal industry that is currently helping pay for my education, and so much more in my hometown. Everyone has the right to their opinion but I can’t be expected to cave in when someone who knows nothing of the topic and has never lived here or seen it first hand is challenging the livelihood of my friends and family to me. So, know that you are being well defended in the north my friends. I indeed have your back.

To end this little chronicle, I conclude that this has been a perfect, life-changing summer. I am living out my dream, finally, after all these years. I was able to do things that I thought I would never do, and I have finally made it to where I need to be. It’s been a slow struggle. Next month, I will turn 25, not where I had imagined myself up to this point, but I am so thankful to be here. I am so grateful to have walked the road I did, and ended up in this very spot of my journey. Again, everything happens for a reason. I don’t look like every other law student. I certainly don’t act like every other law student. Nonetheless, that’s what I am.

I miss my job at the bank. I miss my co-workers and friends, my family, and my routine. But this is something I had to do. I had to go after that dream, I know now I would never have been satisfied had I not. The very moment I got that acceptance email, I realized how bad I had wanted it. The moment I set foot in Professor C’s Criminal Law class at KLEO, I knew how much I was going to love it. I love a good challenge, and it looks like I’ve finally met my match.

On another note, let me just say from the bottom of my heart to all who reads, thank you. I have been absolutely overwhelmed by the amount of support I have received from my community, my family, and my friends. It has meant so much to have you all backing me, encouraging me, and putting the faith in me that you have. Everyday I receive countless Facebook messages, comments and likes, text messages, and indirect comments delivered to me by others like my parents from people who send me their well wishes and love. Never in my life did I expect to be a part of so many lives, and I am humbled by the respect, love, and faith that you have bestowed upon me. I promise that I will not let you down, in any right. I will make Leslie County proud. 

This may be my last blog for a while as I am embarking on one long, hard, but rewarding journey. Please do continue to keep in contact. I love hearing from everyone and it makes the days when I feel so far from home a little easier.

This morning I was so excited to be back in church. Keith always seems to know when I need to hear something, and this morning part of his sermon was about ‘givin’ it all you got.’ Church and the family I have there has really helped this to all come together for me, too, and it’s hard not being able to make it every Sunday anymore. Faith is something that we all should have, but some of us do not nearly have enough.  Between my support system throughout this county and the church, I have so much more faith than I used to. God really can do so much; I am living proof.

Now off to my other favorite part of coming home on a Sunday – Lewis family dinner.

God bless and love to all,

Jess

Friday, June 22, 2012

Daddy's Little Girl: Father's Day Tribute

When I was about 11 years old, I went into Colter's with my dad.  For those of you that don't remember, it was a local chain jewelry store.  We were in the one in Hazard, Dad had went in to get a battery for his watch or something random like that, so like any 11 year old I was attracted to shiny objects, and I walked about the store looking at all the pretty, shiny things. I almost passed up this little shelf with a round moving case displaying necklace charms, but something caught my eye almost immediately. It was a golden heart, with the words "Daddy's Little Girl" forged as one with the heart, and tiny pinkish roses placed strategically for decoration.

I wanted it. Immediately.

Not only because it was pretty and such, I mean gold isn't even my color and they unfortunately didn't have a silver one, because believe me, I looked, but also because I was, in fact, the proudest of the group of  daddy's little girls.  My dad and I were thick as thieves, there was no mistaking that. I did everything with dad. From campaigning during elections to riding bulldozers and big trucks, to chewing on the Swisher Sweets tip cigars he used to 'puff' on as he called it.

That necklace had to be mine. It had to be.

But it wasn't. He wouldn't buy it. He said maybe later. I was NOT a happy camper. At all. But I let it go, because I knew my daddy. He would want me to have it as much as myself, just because he knew better than anyone what a daddy's girl I was. I knew I would end up with it, eventually.

A month or so later, Christmas morning, despite having to wait to open our presents to deal with the store burning to the ground, I was not at all surprised to find the little box holding my necklace hidden in the same box as a pair of Dr. Scholl boots my mom had bought me. Yes, I was 11 years old with Dr. Scholls. Mom made it her goal to make me the most UNcool kid at Stinnett University. Yes, I said University. Don't be hatin'.

This was the kind of things my dad has always done for me. There is not one time I can think of when I have needed him that he hasn't been there. He is undoubtedly one of the best father's a girl could ever have.

When I was little girl and I would get sick, I would sleep on the couch in the living room because of having the TV in there. I was real bad to go in and out of naps and such when I was sickly, so I would stay close to the TV to ward off boredom instead of staying in the back bedroom that felt more like a dungeon. More than once, I have woken up to find my father next to me. He would move the other couch up closer to mine and sleep beside me in case I got worse so he could be there to take care of me.

In fact, most of you probably don't know that my dad saved my life once. Well, probably more than once, many more times than once, but this one I vividly remember. I went into the store with him one morning when I was little and asked for a bacon and egg biscuit, which the lady working gave me. However, the bacon was something known as 'soft bacon' and it got hung in my throat when I swallowed it, and I started choking. My dad in the quickest reaction time ever, picked me up and laid me in his hand and hit my back, like sort of a heimlich maneuver technique, until I coughed it up. I shudder to think what would have happened had he not been there.

If I was pouting at him or mom, and we drove thru McDonald's or somewhere, I would always say I wasn't hungry. Dad would order me food anyway, and not even make me ask or apologize. He would just hand it to me because he knew I was hungry, and he probably knew I had his stubborn streak.

When I was little, I used to play hooky from school a lot. Dad knew the principal Mr. Couch quite well since they were best friends at the time, and I could get by with it. *wink*. I would go to Harlan with daddy to get his haircut occasionally on these days, and we would always stop at McDonald's where I would get the pancake breakfast (yes, one of the reasons why I'm so fat. *sigh*). We would sit in the parking lot of Magic Mart and eat, and what I didn't eat we would feed to the pigeons. These are some of the memories with my daddy that I will always keep, because they were ours, just mine and his. Nobody else's.

I loved going campaigning with him when I was little. He would pick me up from school and we would always stop at Pansy's on Beechfork and get a catfish dinner or Debbie's on Stinnett cause they had the best chicken planks. Yes, food was always involoved. This is why I'm fat...I never stopped eating as a child.  We would go from house to house where I would meet new people and learn the art of politics. This is probably why my mouth never stops now, 'cause I'm just like my daddy. I absolutely loved that whole politic'n deal. I got to spend time with him, see new places, meet new people, and fall in love with small town life.

When I graduated from Stinnett University, I went on home school for two years. Now there are things that I regret about not going to public school, but then again there are things that were great about it. Like trips with dad. He took me every week to take my tests at Calvary Christian Academy. We would have good talks and listen to the Crazy Friday Show on WSGS. And On the way back, providing I did good on my tests (which I always did), he would stop and let me buy Ty Beanie Babies at Dawahares, because that was the latest cool kid craze.  And through the week, we would move trailers up North a lot, around Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, etc. I would ride up with dad in the Toter truck. I. LOVED. That. Truck. I cried when he sold it. We both did. The last night, before the new owner came to get it, we both sat in our usual seats, cleaned out the truck, and sat there and shed a few tears together. We've had a lot of great father-daughter moments. No doubt about it, I am one of the luckiest girls in the world.

High school was a challenge of course. We had some rocky days. I wanted to be like the other kids. Go home with this one and that one, ride to town with whoever, go to the football games and run amock. But I was a teenager. And not a very smart one. So I didn't get to do those things. And looking back now, it wasn't so bad. When Junior Prom rolled around, my daddy rented a limo for me and my friends, paid about $400, and some people didn't even ride there and back. Dad didn't care. He did it for me. Just like always.

When college days rolled around, however, dad was on my side for the most part. He and mom constantly disagreed on where my boundaries should be and what I should be allowed to do. Mom is MUCH MORE protective and paranoid at times than the normal mom. She sometimes has a hard time accepting that her little girl is grown. But dad remembered what it was like to be 18, 19, 20, etc. He knew I needed to live my life, and he knew that I was gonna make a few mistakes but that I had to learn somehow. I wasn't a wild child but I had my share of stupidity. And stupid friends. I was a tomboy for sure. I had more guy friends than girls, which for some reason made mom feel better because she thought they would protect me if something happened. Go figure.

During that time too, Gran got sick, mom's mom. She spent A LOT of time in Cincinnati helping out and taking care of her, so me and dad spent a lot of time together. We'd take off for the day. Drive down to pigeon forge, or wherever the road took us. We would get lost, but it didn't matter because we didn't have a plan, didn't care where we ended up. We liked seeing new places. We hit the flea markets, or just wherever we could think to go. Blasting George Jones, Merle Haggard, and of course his all time favorite, Conway Twitty the whole way. Singing to the top of our lungs until we were hoarse, and looking for the next gas station to find a bathroom, a Diet Mountain Dew, and a candy bar. We were inseperable.

Dad was and is always trying to prepare me. For instance, when I decided me and some friends were going to go Pigeon Forge for the weekend, he made sure I was prepared. He drove me down there, making sure to point out all the turns, and the places I needed to beware of. He gave me all kinds of pointers and tips, just in case I hadn't been paying attention the last 20 years he'd been taking me already. When I went to Murfreesboro to school, same thing. Made sure he taught me all I needed to know about the area, again, just in case that I hadn't been paying attention during all that time we spent in Nashville.

And dad continues to prepare me for life. He has been guiding me for nearly 25 years now. Advising me against things I should or shouldn't do, what's a good idea and what isn't, what could be dangerous and what would be safe, everything he can think of to share from his 50+ years of living. And he has done the same with my brother, maybe more so since they share that whole being a male thing. Sometimes he takes it too far, but he is from the old school, however, so I understand. He just doesn't want anything to happen to his little girl. Yeah, I said his. Not that mom didn't have a whole lot to do with me turning out the way I am, but dad might just have had a little more in some ways. We've been closer than mom and I, and he has always understood me better and discounted for things. Mom tends to expect too much most of the time.

Even as recently as this weekend, (since I've been working on this blog for a couple weeks) I hit a deer and daddy came to the rescue. He didn't lecture me, he wasn't mad, he just hugged me and let me cry. He understood. He knew what I needed.

I only remember him whipping me twice in my life. There may have been a little love pats here and there, but I can remember the only two times he 'spanked' me, and yes, I sure as heck deserved both.  You know that song "Daddy's Hands" by Holly Dunn from back in the day? If not, it goes like this:

Daddy's hands, were soft and kind when I was crying.
Dadyy's hands, were hard as steal when I'd done wrong.
Daddy's hands weren't always gentle, but I've come to understand,
There was always Love in Daddy's hands.

It has really rung true over the year. Both times my daddy whipped me, it was with his hands, and it lasted for days it seemed like. It HURT. Bad. Which is why I remember. Not that mom's didn't, because believe me they did. But there is something much more significant about a daddy whipping his little girl.

But he does have that soft side. When I had my first big heartbreak a year or so ago, my daddy held me more than once while I cried for hours at a time. He was there for me, to help me, to understand, and to love me when I didn't feel like anyone else did.



Yep, that's my dad.  Lover of Country Music, Diet Mountain Dew, peanut butter, big trucks and equipment, Coal, the open road, politics -- Ronald Reagan especially, and family.  His stories are priceless. Whether it's about the 7 total wrecks he was in, the 1 motorcycle wreck he was in, hitchhiking to all parts of the country with his best friend when their cars would quit, working on strip jobs with his dad and brothers, drinking with whoever, making moonshine as a child, all of his childhood meanis and high school tales. I wish I could write it all down. I should have been keeping a log over the years. I never want to forget one story he tells.

And how could I write about my dad without sharing some of his wisdom? I couldn't. So here are a few of his most favorite phrases:

1.) You can't pack a dog to hunt a bear.
2.) Nobody misses the water til the well runs dry.
3.) Things you can't change, accept.
4.) Credit is a good thing to have, but a bad thing to use.
5.) There are three kinds of people -- those who see things happen, those who make things happen, and those who wonder what happened.
6.)  Everything is a trade-off. You trade this time for that time. There will never be enough time in life for you to do all the things you want to do in life, or feel like you should do. (My personal favorite).

Regardless of the disagreements or the fights he and I may have had, I don't know if there is another father out there who has went as far or done as much for his children as my dad has. We have never wanted for anything really, if we need it or have to have it especially, he finds a way. He has bought us vehicles, places to live, any toy or piece of electronic devices we have ever asked for, and I can't speak for my brother but he still gives me money whether I need it or not. It doesn't matter what it is, if he thinks we want it, or need it, he will take care of it. He paid for my tuition in college, what I didn't have scholarships for, took care of me financially when I couldn't work, never hestitated or complained about all the days he had to fight the snow and cold to work or get up super early to earn that money, before the wreck he was in anyway.

He was never reckless with money, he always reserved what he had for us and my mom, and of course his other family. I don't know if his brothers or sisters or aunts and uncles, even cousins, have ever asked him for anything that he didn't come through with. And I can think of at least 3 times in the last month that we were approached at restaurants and gas stations by strangers needing gas money or money for food, etc, when he didn't reach in his pocket and find something for them as well. As magistrate, he took care of his precinct to the best of his ability, and I'm sure the majority if them will tell you that.

My dad is truly one of a kind.

Let's face it, what other dad would take their daughter to a casino and sit side by side with her playing blackjack and slots? Probably not many, if any. But those are the kinds of random moments we enjoy sharing together. We're not like just any regular father and daughter. We're cool. As Cucumbers.


I am a better person, better daughter, better sister, better student, and a better friend and family member because of my dad and the lessons he has taught me. And hopefully, someday, a better parent. I hope that when that someday comes, dad is around to be just as great or better of a 'grandpa' as he was a 'pa'. But hopefully my kids won't get his big nose like I did :(.

And I'm not writing this, to brag about my dad to anybody. I have some great friends who have really crappy  dads or no dad at all. I know I am very fortunate not only to have a father, but to have one who has went above and beyond for his children the way he has. And for being like a father to many other people I know. I'm very proud of my father, the man that he is, and who he has taught me to be. I really do wish everybody could know a father like him.

So here's to you dad, for being the best dad I could ever hope or want to have, one certainly far better than I deserve. Thank you for always being there, for always taking care of me, loving me, keeping me safe, and preparing me as best you could for life. I love you, more than anything.

You are, and always will be, my hero.

Happy Father's Day, again.

Love,
Shoog  








And so, I end with one of his favorite Conway songs. I can't listen to it without crying, because I know the day will come when I have to give up my daddy. I dread it. I fear it. I'm terrified of it. But it will happen just the same. So, I will enjoy every minute with him that I can, until then. And pray that is a long, long time away.




That's My Job
By: Conway Twitty



I woke up crying late at night,
when I was very young.
I had dreamed my father,
had passed away and gone.

My world revolved around him,
I couldn't lie there anymore.
So I made my way down the mirrored hall,
and tapped upon his door.

And I said, "Daddy, I'm so afraid
how will I go on with you gone that way?
Don't wanna cry anymore,
so may I stay with you?"

And he said, "That's my job,
that's what I do.
Everything I do is because of you,
To keep you safe with me.
That's my job you see."

Later we barely got along,
this teenage boy and he.
Most of the fights it seems
were over different dreams,
we each held for me.

He wanted knowledge and learning.
I wanted to fly out west.
Said, "I could make it out there
if I just had the fare.
I got half, will you loan me the rest?"

And I said, "Daddy, I'm so afraid,
there's no guarantee in the plans
I've made, and if I should fail,
who will pay my way back home?"

And he said "That's my job,
that's what I do.
Everything I do is because of you
to keep you safe with me.
That's my job you see."

Every person carves his spot,
and fills the hole with light.
And I pray someday I might,
light as bright as he.

Woke up early one bright fall day,
to spread the tragic news.
After all my travel, I settled down,
within a mile or two.

I make my living with words and rhyme,
and all this tragedy,
Should go into my head, and out instead
as bits of poetry.

But I say, "Daddy, I'm so afraid,
how will I go on with you gone this way?
How can I come up with a song to say
I love you?"

That's my job, That's what I do
Everything I do is because of you,
to keep you safe with me.
That's my job you see.

Everything I do is because of you
to keep you safe with me.