Staff Spotlight: Nikki Sambitsky

Staff Spotlight: Nikki Sambitsky

Interview


What do you write?

I write cre­ative non­fic­tion. I recent­ly dis­cov­ered and fell in love with the lyric essay/memoir, and feel like this is where my voice is. I’m cur­rent­ly writing lyrical non­fic­tion, and learn­ing more about the form as I go along. My mentor this semes­ter is T. Fleis­chmann. I am learn­ing so very much from them, and am so grate­ful that they are guiding me along in this new ter­ri­to­ry. I’m trying to learn as much as I can about lyric so that I can use the form cor­rect­ly to give my voice the avenue it needs to come out in the work.

Is there an author or artist who has most pro­found­ly influ­enced your work?

There are so many: Jesmyn Ward, Mira Ptacin, Nick Flynn, Maggie Nelson, Lia Purpura, Mark Doty, and, most recent­ly, Roland Barthes.

Why did you choose Stonecoast?

I chose Stonecoast because of the diverse faculty and the excel­lent rep­u­ta­tion of the program. Every single person on the faculty, in the admin­is­tra­tion, and in the student body gen­uine­ly cares for and about you. We have such a tight-knit com­mu­ni­ty. I don’t think you can truly find that any­where else. There’s just such an authen­tic, special feeling to this program.

What is your favorite Stonecoast memory?

My favorite Stonecoast memory has to be my first (winter) res­i­den­cy. I remem­ber feeling so shy and awkward. When I sat in the meeting with my cohort, I knew I was in the right place. Every­one was open, fun, and wel­com­ing. Also, I dis­tinct­ly remem­ber Suzanne Strem­pek Shea coming up to me and making me feel so wel­comed during one of the mixers before faculty read­ings. I was hanging toward the back of the room by myself, too afraid and shy to talk to anyone, and she came right up to me and struck up a con­ver­sa­tion. She has this won­der­ful­ly warm way of making people feel so welcomed.

What do you hope to accom­plish in the future?

In the future, I hope to publish my memoir and teach cre­ative writing. I want to teach adult ed, and teach in and around my com­mu­ni­ty, but I also hope to teach in a low res­i­den­cy MFA program like Stonecoast. My ulti­mate goal is to do all of this while making a life writing.

If you could have written one book, story, or poem that already exists, which would you choose?

Gosh, what a ques­tion! As far as memoir goes, espe­cial­ly lyric memoir, I really admire Nick Flynn’s Another Bull­shit Night in Suck City. The way the book is orga­nized and written is so beau­ti­ful, so painful. I am inspired to write and create a lyric memoir like that. Maggie Nelson’s Bluets is another inspi­ra­tional book. I would have to say that these two are tops on my list right now.

Gosh, what a ques­tion! As far as memoir goes, espe­cial­ly lyric memoir, I really admire Nick Flynn’s Another Bull­shit Night in Suck City. The way the book is orga­nized and written is so beau­ti­ful, so painful. I am inspired to write and create a lyric memoir like that. Maggie Nelson’s Bluets is another inspi­ra­tional book. I would have to say that these two are tops on my list right now.


Featured Work

“Ryan” and “Evelyn” are excerpts  from the lyric memoir Nikki is cur­rent­ly writing about her family, husband, and two autis­tic children.

Ryan

Cap­sules sustain. Pumped in oxygen, tubes, wires—green, yellow, blue, red—monitors beep, flash­ing numbers, sta­tis­tics rising and falling like ele­va­tors in skyscrapers.

One, two, three pounds. Average weight becomes the minority.

Cur­tains pulled, skin to skin, life breathed into pre­ma­ture bodies. Body heat, blanket warm and soft.

Tiny diapers not sold in stores. Clothes that fit dolls. Nurses guide trem­bling hands, hands press against cap­sules, breath fogs glass, eyes pierce through incu­ba­tors willing, begging, bar­gain­ing for life to stay.

Labor Day phone call. Medical jargon mis­un­der­stood as the doctor babbles on. PICC line pierces paper skin, infec­tion invades, infil­trates innocence.

My son, near gone, baby blue eyes roll back, body limp, each breath an exhaust­ed effort. Two pounds featherweight.

My heart races, doctor races, nurses race, reach for the vent. One shot at life.

I scream vio­lent­ly inside, tears pour out. I stand in silence. The whirl­wind whips around me.

But what I really meant to say was, don’t go, don’t leave. Don’t steal my soul, stay my son, stay, stay, stay, stay. Linger with me in this lifetime.

Evelyn

John walks through the door, dinner in hands. A small white box, my pizza nestled inside. His—a grinder—meatballs gifting grease to their paper bag captor.

We sit on leather, sur­round­ed by dogs sleep­ing, kids running, toys scat­tered on worn wood floors as tele­vi­sion blares innocu­ous obnox­ious sound.

The kids fight over my son’s iPad. Evelyn clasps it with small, stubby fingers. Ryan, lanky, deter­mined, quick on his feet, snatch­es the device from her inquis­i­tive hands.

“She’s going to bang her head,” I say. “I can’t reach her. You’re closer. Stop her before she does it.”

John, legs crossed, foot tilted, winter boot on top of winter boot, sits with worn-out dinner plate dec­o­rat­ed in tired pat­terns, hearts and birds resting on top of the lank of his legs.

“I’m eating,” he says. “My hands are greasy.” He makes his case, clutch­es the enor­mous half-grinder in his greasy grip.

My daugh­ter, scream­ing, drops body to floor, bangs her head—just hard enough to make pain—hard enough to create a hurt that creates more tears. Insult on top of injury.

I yell, rise from sitting, grab our daugh­ter. Looking back, I don’t recall the words, only recall their sting, their razor­blade sharp­ness, the metaphor­i­cal blood they draw as they slice my husband’s heart.

“Fuck you,” he says, my back to him as I strap our daugh­ter into her high­chair across the room.

The table’s large glass, lit­tered, clut­tered by books and papers, stands like a barrier between warring factions.

The energy comes first, pre­cedes the event, pal­pa­ble, tan­gi­ble. I hear the soggy crash, turn to see the grinder finish sailing, spit­ting sauce into the air, onto the table as it lands. My work, soiled, mur­dered, spoiled. Clean white papers bleed­ing mari­nara. John turns, walks out the door. Keys clink, heated energy, screech of tires scream up the dri­ve­way. Anger per­son­i­fied, running wild in the dark night.


Nikki A. Sam­bit­sky is cur­rent­ly pur­su­ing her MFA in cre­ative writing, specif­i­cal­ly focus­ing on cre­ative non­fic­tion in the Uni­ver­si­ty of South­ern Maine’s Stonecoast MFA cre­ative writing program. Mrs. Sam­bit­sky holds a BA in jour­nal­ism from Central Con­necti­cut State Uni­ver­si­ty. She is cur­rent­ly working on her memoir, which centers on her family, her husband, and two autis­tic chil­dren. Mrs. Sam­bit­sky enjoys writing essay and memoir that explore family, family issues, and autism. Her jour­nal­ism work and cre­ative non­fic­tion has appeared in many pub­li­ca­tions includ­ing The Helix, Gravel Mag­a­zine, and West Hart­ford Mag­a­zine. She lives with her husband, two chil­dren, and way too many animals in a peace­ful, rural area of Connecticut.



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