CREATIVE. INSPIRED. HAPPY Mid-Career Writing Scholarship

$2,000
2 winners, $1,000 each
Awarded
Application Deadline
Dec 31, 2024
Winners Announced
Jan 31, 2025
Education Level
Eligibility Requirements
Field of Study:
Writing
Background:
Experience in the workforce

Evelyn Skye used to be a corporate attorney whose days were unfulfilling. Then she discovered writing, and it completely changed her life. Now, Evelyn is a New York Times Bestselling novelist, #1 Netflix film/literary collaborator, and Founder of the CREATIVE.INSPIRED.HAPPY online writing community. She established this scholarship to kickstart a writing career for someone else, too.

The CREATIVE.INSPIRED.HAPPY Mid-Career Writing Scholarship is a scholarship for an aspiring writer not currently in a professional writing career, for use toward furthering their education in writing, such as continuing education or community college courses on writing.

This scholarship is open to aspiring writers in any field, including fiction, poetry, and non-fiction.

To apply, tell us what you love about writing and why you want to further your education in the field.

Selection Criteria:
Ambition, Drive, Passion
Published July 1, 2024
Essay Topic

What do you love about writing? Why do you want to further your education?

400–600 words

Winners and Finalists

January 2025

Finalists
Beth Henshaw
Daniel Groves
Celina Dobson
Elizabeth Beilharz
Cliff Hansen
Danielle Benvenuto
Courtney Dunn
nicholas arce
Hannah Barnes
Aaron Skentzos
Jackie Sommers
Phylicia McDonald
Beste Yuksel
Cassandra Manuel
Jessica Lundgren
Wlatee Weah
Veronica Verdejo
Heather Rolland
emilian gheorghe
Maria Arettines
Todd Dessinger
Harrison Bron
Stephanie Larkins
Gregory Delia
Abraham Kim
Mathe Desir
Claudia Gaxiola
Nakeshia Shannon

Winning Applications

Katrina Donham
North Carolina State University at RaleighAsheville, NC
Back in January, I successfully weaned my second child, just three weeks shy of her second birthday. Soon thereafter, I felt this pronounced shift in focus and desire: a small voice that grew louder with each passing day, urging me to sit and write, to return to my earliest passion, but, this time, with renewed confidence, clarity, and conviction. I love that writing is multi-purpose. It’s a home for healing. It’s an oasis, an escape from reality. It’s a best friend, waiting and listening and giving the advice that you already knew deep down but needed to hear from elsewhere. It’s a guiding light, illuminating the darkness for those who are lost or off-course while also piloting all vessels to their destination—to knowledge, newfound perspective, and empathy. These are things that I love about writing. I started my Substack, Human/Mother, in February of this year. Since I started my nightly writing practice, after tucking my little ones into bed, a magic has occurred between my fingertips and the keyboard. Although I haven’t written in years because of Life Happenings, it’s as though no time has passed. I feel right at home. I mostly write personal essays, wherein I recollect traumatic memories of my past, keenly observe my present, and contemplate the future, one that I dream is healthy, happy, and healed. I want to further my education because I want to sharpen my craft, to grow the seed, and to create what I believe I’m intended to create. In undergraduate and graduate school, I studied literature and composition. From dissecting prose and poetry to formulating a unit plan for the middle school English language arts classroom, I spent years trying to understand writers’ style, technique, and purpose. Now, I feel it is time to put that knowledge to the test, to play around with words, and to see what manifests. After I gave birth to my oldest child at the height of COVID (April 2020) in NYC, I said goodbye to the old me and hello to the new me. I was the proud mother of a beautiful daughter and also a broken human being. I struggled with postpartum depression and anxiety, and I was still grieving the tragic loss of my fourteen-year-old brother to suicide as well as the end of my parents’ thirty-year marriage. To say the time was intense would be an understatement. I desperately searched for literature—from personal essays to science journal articles—hoping to find help, hoping to find answers, hoping to find healing. And though I found encouraging and uplifting stories, I felt like there was a voice missing: my own. Evelyn, I am so inspired by you, your story, and your generosity. My hope is that you see in me what you saw in yourself and that you choose me for this mid-career scholarship. I promise your funds will not go to waste. I am eager to give myself a chance, to bet on myself, and to show you and the world that I’m not a case of beginner’s luck: I’m the real deal. Thank you.
Khanh Mi Meadows
George Mason UniversityOakton, VA
I became addicted to words the moment I realized they could move people. My childhood, marked by turbulence, quickly became my first source of inspiration. I was the eldest daughter of war refugees, who foisted their expectations of strength and stoicism onto a sensitive spirit. Initially, I wrote to process the chaos around me, my words—scaffolding—in a shaky home. But when I began writing for an audience, I experienced a profound shift: I finally felt seen and understood. As a reader, I remember the first time I saw my thoughts reflected on the page. Somehow, somewhere, an author had read my mind and printed it all official-like in a book. To a lonely kid, seeing proof that someone else thought like me meant everything. As a writer (unpaid creative essays and fanfiction) it was soul-level satisfying to hear that either my story or my storytelling resonated with someone. I think both are important because I imbue myself in the stories and words chosen and not chosen. For me, writing is a practice in authenticity. Through writing, I learned you can reach across generations and all other striations in identity. Beyond connecting with people, I also just love words. For over a decade, my professional world was crunching data and writing dry technical documents for software, but in the margins of my life, I never stopped annotating books. This year, the phrase that has haunted my thoughts is Frank Herbert’s “terrible purpose” from Dune. The phrase does many things in the book, but mainly, it captures Paul Atreides’ psychic awareness of the dark plot encircling him. To me, “terrible purpose” feels like the shuddering bass of giant footsteps drawing near, evoking tension while foreshadowing the orchestrated violence that crashes down on his family. Its potency was so profound that it reverberated in the movie score and scenes translated by director Denis Villeneuve. How do you write something so palpable that isn’t composed of sight, sound, touch, taste, or smell? Questions like these are the kindling that fuels my passion for writing. While my only formal education in writing was a 60s lit class in college, I’ve taught myself by studying prose that resonates with me—like Brandon Sanderson’s multilayered character development and worldbuilding in The Stormlight Archive. However, being self-taught has its limits; I often write based on what feels right without fully understanding why it works. I know many accomplished writers succeed without an MFA, but I want to go beyond intuition to become an effective writer. To reach my goals, I’m looking for an education that balances hands-on practice with a deep understanding of the craft. It’s also important to me that programs encourage creativity and exploration over prescribing a single “right” way to write, allowing me to develop my voice. It’s been my lifelong dream to connect with people through words for a living—to be the proud author of poignant scenes that lasso tears from the most unwilling eyes or wring ragged breaths from those eagerly awaiting the next installment in a series. For me, writing is more than a trade; it’s a way to find common ground, to reach into another person’s world, and to share something raw and honest. When we are touched by words, we tap into the shared human experience. Those moments of breathlessness—when a book or story resonates so deeply it feels like it was written just for you—remind us of life’s interconnectedness. That is the power of art, and art is the stuff in the margins that makes life worth living.

FAQ

When is the scholarship application deadline?

The application deadline is Dec 31, 2024. Winners will be announced on Jan 31, 2025.