Meet a Tutor

Meet a Tutor: Trinity

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Tell us a bit about yourself! Where are you from originally, and what brought you to New York?

I grew up on the Texas coast, where I spent nearly every weekend swimming at the beach.  I lived in North Texas after college, where I taught high school English and coached softball and volleyball.  I moved to New York in 2014 to get my master’s degree in poetry at The New School.  

What was your favorite subject in school? 

My favorite subjects were English, Art, and Spanish.   

Is there a particular lesson or concept that you remember learning very clearly, either because of the way that it was taught, the way you came to understand it, or the way it changed the way you look at the world? Tell us about that experience. 

When I was twenty years old, I moved to England to study at the University of Leeds. I was a young American poet, and I wanted to prove myself.  Though I wrote a lot, I was hesitant to call myself a writer.  I thought I had to earn the title by being published, winning awards, and having a little fame.   

My new friend Beth challenged my idea of success.  She was a writer and artist who spent all her time (gasp!) writing and making art.  She wasn’t concerned with making the right impression on the right people; she considered herself a successful writer because she wrote every day.  

We spent a lot of time together then, poking away at old-fashioned typewriters and printing little chapbooks of our own poetry.  Thanks to Beth, I learned to take ownership of my dreams, instead of waiting for someone else to give me permission to be the writer I knew I was.  

What is your favorite book?

My favorite fiction book is The Secret History by Donna Tartt. It was recommended to me by my high school English teacher (she was a genius, but that’s another story).  The first time I read the book, I swear I didn’t look up from the pages once. It’s dark and fascinating, and the characters are artfully built.  

My favorite book of poetry is Reconnaissance by Carl Phillips.  I’m astounded by the leaps he makes in poetry; it’s like watching a magician conjure a miracle.  I don’t know how he does it, but I’m glad I’m in his audience.  

What’s one piece of advice you’d like to give to every student reading this?

Find a kind of creative practice that makes you happy, something that sends you into the zone where nothing else exists.  Maybe you like to write, draw, dance, make films, sing, make puppets, sew, tell jokes— the possibilities are endless— but make regular time for that in your life.  I think nothing satisfies human beings like the act of creation, and no matter what happens in your life, relationships, careers, you can always have that little zone for yourself.  

What’s your favorite word? 

This is a difficult question for a poet.  I keep a running list of words that interest me in my notebook, so I’ll lift my answer from that:  plum, notch, coin, pillowslip, la boca (spanish for mouth)

How do you spend your free time?

I write, read, swim, bike, doodle, cook, watch Texas Rangers baseball, and look at Doug the Pug’s Instagram. 

What does learning mean in your life?

Learning means all the doors are open and I can do anything. 

Meet a Tutor: Olivia

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Tell us a bit about yourself! Where are you from originally, and what brought you to New York?

I was born in New York City but I moved to Costa Rica at a very young age and spent my whole life there. My parents run a bed and breakfast and coffee farm in a town called Heredia, near the cloud forest. It was very rural and very fun; I spent most of my childhood with animals: horses, dogs, cats, rabbits and a pet squirrel called Sammy. I came to New York right after college as I was interested in film and theater, and haven’t left since!

What was your favorite subject in school? 

I loved literature, both English and Spanish. I lived in a pretty vivid fantasy world as a kid and reading was always my favorite way to fully inhabit those worlds and make them my own.

Is there a particular lesson or concept that you remember learning very clearly, either because of the way that it was taught, the way you came to understand it, or the way it changed the way you look at the world? Tell us about that experience. 

I had an English teacher in high school who spoke mostly in spoonerisms and never taught what was on the rigid curriculum. At the time, most of my classmates thought that he was a little looney, but the truth is that he was teaching us to think about language in a different way. We were encouraged to read and write in the most creative, expressive way possible and to make up words if they were part of the world we had created. In a system that often teaches language in a very rigid way, having a teacher who talked to us about the meaning of life and used language in a way that demonstrated other means of expression, really opened me up to appreciate literature and philosophy in a way I might not have without him. Mr Goldfinch was indeed loony, but only because he wanted to create a generation of free thinkers and totally unique loony creatives. 

What is your favorite book?

I have so many favorite books but I love anything by the author Wallace Stegner. Other favorites include Justine by Lawrence Durrell, Middlemarch by George Eliot and I have a lot of love for great fantasy novels I read in my youth like, The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman, The Chronicles of Narnia and anything by Ray Bradbury.

What’s one piece of advice you’d like to give to every student reading this?

Express yourself however you can! Whether it is through writing, reading, acting, singing - finding something that is all your own and not dependent on the validation of others is the best way to really figure out who you are and what makes you happy! Spending time coming up with stories, no matter how weird, is also great for your critical thinking!

What’s your favorite word? 

Oh, that’s a hard one! I guess I love the word HALCYON. It sounds mythical, like a half bird-half human… and the word feels warm. I also like LANGUID and SANGUINE; I guess I just miss the slow-moving optimism of the summer (also, I love the sound of those liquid ‘u’s).

Imagine a prominent author has been hired to write your biography: what would the title be? Write us a one-sentence tagline. 

“Living Life Out Loud (and in Technicolor)”

Captivated by the human experience, Olivia has spent her life learning from and exploring a wide array of cultures, mediums and and flavors in an attempt to Live Out Loud!

How do you spend your free time?

I love to act, both in theater and film and I love to write. When I’m not tutoring I am watching movies, dancing, reading, eating and going on auditions for various projects!

What does learning mean in your life?

For me, life is learning - I approach everything I do as learning and in this way am always excited about new experiences, new people and new hobbies. The thought of having a conversation with someone from a totally different background and upbringing is incredibly exciting to me- I want to be pushed to think about things in new ways and to learn about humans across all walks of life.