Yesterday, at Grandma's,
the cousins ran willy-nilly
around the
living room-kitchen-family room-foyer
circle
They shrieked and then laughed
shrieked and then laughed
Grant's little steps took him
just a smidgeon right of the loop and
he met the kitchen desk's
bossy corner
POW
I saw the head-on collision
yet I could barely focus in for a closer look
at my shocked little guy
quiet on the kitchen floor
The top point had bullied his eye brow
the bottom edge had pressed into his
supple cheek
two instant purplish signatures
and a growing goose-egg
YOOOOOOOWWWWW
he started crying after what seemed like an eternity
"Mommy, kiss it. Kiss it."
Today, at home,
the little rode the play firetruck
with reckless abandon
and when that grew old
he transitioned into
pushing the Fisher-Price school bus
like a cheetah chasing prey
He powered down the foyer hallway
(its wood floor is fast)
and then hung a right into the carpeted dining room
What he didn't plan for was the new roadblock
-- me --
kneeling beside the buffet
reading
BANG
He saw the head-on collision
this time before I did
the bus, my tender right knee
{an imagined YOOOOOOOWWWWWW, followed by a gasp}
"Grant, the bus hurt my knee. Can you tell Mommy 'sorry'?"
"Mommy, I kiss it. I make it all better. The bus make it better. See?"
{Be still, my heart.}
The power of a kiss...
Write on,
b
Post-script: Today marks the end of 2015's March Slice of Life Story Challenge...and while some stories have been big, and some stories have been silly, your comments have kissed their words and made them better. I appreciate the way you've invested in my writing life this month, dear Reader. From you I've learned, I've laughed, and I've grown. May we meet back on Tuesdays, maybe even Saturdays, but definitely every March. Until then...
Showing posts with label SOLSC 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SOLSC 2015. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Monday, March 30, 2015
30: The one and only...
Her wispy, sable curls
sometimes cover her chocolate eyes
She wipes them away
with emphasis
and moves along to find the next
target
She always does this
like during dinner or
in the car or
at a ballgame or
when she wants more orange juice
in her girly-colored sippy cup
with a straw
Tonight, she picked me to target
Her newly three-year-old self
strides in and catches me
kneeling beside the giant tub
in Grandpa and Grandma's bathroom
as the smaller little 'swims'
She finds a spot to perch
surveying the situation
I know she's up to something
She always is
Me: Do you want to take a bath, too, Emmie? You can hop in. There's plenty of room.
Emmie: Well, it's not up to me.
Me: What do you mean?
Emmie: 'Is he your kid?' she points at the little's tiny ear half-covered by white-blonde curls.
Me: Yes, he's my kid.
Emmie: I have a booster seat. Wanna see it?
Me: Hop in the tub. Taking a bath now will help Mommy and Daddy.
Emmie: But I don't want to get clean.
Me: You can play, though, and that's fun. Here are some cups.
(She undresses, first tentatively, and then climbs into the tub like the whole exercise was her idea.)
Emmie: But I don't want to wash my hair. Grandmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. Grandma has to take me a bath.
(We wait, with baited breath, for Grandma's swift arrival.)
Me: Emmie wants you to 'take her a bath.' I hear you are the best at baths.
Emmie: Grandmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. I don't want to take a bath.
Grandma: But you already are, Emmie. And taking a bath is a good thing.
(Emmie's mom and baby sister open the pocket door and slide into the bathroom too.)
Emmie's mom: Emmie, you're taking a bath!
Emmie: No, I'm not. I don't want to take a bath.
(Sheesh. Girl, you're in the tub. Quit.)
Emmie: But I won't wash my hair.
Emmie's mom: Yes, you will -- that way you won't have to wash it tomorrow night.
Grandma: Let's play beauty shop! Here's the special shampoo...
Emmie: But I won't get it wet...
Me: Alright, little guy -- let's hop out and dry off.
Emmie: But I don't want to get out...
And so it goes
just as it always does
with the one and only
Write on,
b
sometimes cover her chocolate eyes
She wipes them away
with emphasis
and moves along to find the next
target
She always does this
like during dinner or
in the car or
at a ballgame or
when she wants more orange juice
in her girly-colored sippy cup
with a straw
Tonight, she picked me to target
Her newly three-year-old self
strides in and catches me
kneeling beside the giant tub
in Grandpa and Grandma's bathroom
as the smaller little 'swims'
She finds a spot to perch
surveying the situation
I know she's up to something
She always is
Me: Do you want to take a bath, too, Emmie? You can hop in. There's plenty of room.
Emmie: Well, it's not up to me.
Me: What do you mean?
Emmie: 'Is he your kid?' she points at the little's tiny ear half-covered by white-blonde curls.
Me: Yes, he's my kid.
Emmie: I have a booster seat. Wanna see it?
Me: Hop in the tub. Taking a bath now will help Mommy and Daddy.
Emmie: But I don't want to get clean.
Me: You can play, though, and that's fun. Here are some cups.
(She undresses, first tentatively, and then climbs into the tub like the whole exercise was her idea.)
Emmie: But I don't want to wash my hair. Grandmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. Grandma has to take me a bath.
(We wait, with baited breath, for Grandma's swift arrival.)
Me: Emmie wants you to 'take her a bath.' I hear you are the best at baths.
Emmie: Grandmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. I don't want to take a bath.
Grandma: But you already are, Emmie. And taking a bath is a good thing.
(Emmie's mom and baby sister open the pocket door and slide into the bathroom too.)
Emmie's mom: Emmie, you're taking a bath!
Emmie: No, I'm not. I don't want to take a bath.
(Sheesh. Girl, you're in the tub. Quit.)
Emmie: But I won't wash my hair.
Emmie's mom: Yes, you will -- that way you won't have to wash it tomorrow night.
Grandma: Let's play beauty shop! Here's the special shampoo...
Emmie: But I won't get it wet...
Me: Alright, little guy -- let's hop out and dry off.
Emmie: But I don't want to get out...
And so it goes
just as it always does
with the one and only
Write on,
b
Sunday, March 29, 2015
29: This blank page...
everything that was
and could
be
escapes me
now as I sit down to
type
I
go back to
my favorite topics
stories I'd like to tell
people I love
places I've been
and
there
is
nothing
but
this blank page
and the
will
to try again tomorrow
Write on,
b
Saturday, March 28, 2015
28: On becoming a writer who teaches...
Here's my first attempt at a spine poem!
In retrospect, it is a nod to this week's slice on writing mentors.
Write on,
b
Friday, March 27, 2015
27: The running joke...
My friend and I have this running joke
it pops up anytime someone asks,
"So, how do you know each other?"
She usually starts with something like,
"Well, she came to my house trick-or-treating the night before her second son was born. We were both big and pregnant with our little guys. And it was warm that night, so we both had pancake feet." She qualifies, "You looked cute in your little jeans and ballet flats; I, on the other hand..."
And rolls into,
"And then when we talked a little more the next summer when we were out for a walk in the neighborhood, she was trying to figure out which house I live in on our street...so I told her..." She reminds, "I wanted to meet you again, so we took walks until you and your boys were outside playing."
And ends with,
"Yeah, then she said, 'Oh, I know where you live. I drove by a few days ago in the afternoon and saw a little girl standing naked on the living room windowsill.'"
She always blushes,
"I was mortified the day you told me that, B. Like, who lets their kids stand in front of the biggest window in the house with no clothes on? I looked like such a bad mom!"
I always laugh, too.
"Who cares? It was so funny! And I thought nothing of it. I mean, little kids are little kids, right?"
****
One afternoon this week, the winds were just warm enough and the sun was just shiny enough to beckon kids and their parents outside for an after-school playdate. Driving home from school, I slowed down to say, "Hi" as she and her littles spread out from the sidewalk and into the grass.
"B, did you see Clark?!?"
I hadn't. My eyes scanned the greening lawns...
"BINGO!"
On tiny, little toddler legs, Clark cleared each blade of grass with big-boy underwear draping from his smallish rear-end. Over the top fell an even smaller t-shirt.
I doubled over my steering wheel, laughing.
Evidently, that theory holds true.
Write on,
b
it pops up anytime someone asks,
"So, how do you know each other?"
She usually starts with something like,
"Well, she came to my house trick-or-treating the night before her second son was born. We were both big and pregnant with our little guys. And it was warm that night, so we both had pancake feet." She qualifies, "You looked cute in your little jeans and ballet flats; I, on the other hand..."
And rolls into,
"And then when we talked a little more the next summer when we were out for a walk in the neighborhood, she was trying to figure out which house I live in on our street...so I told her..." She reminds, "I wanted to meet you again, so we took walks until you and your boys were outside playing."
And ends with,
"Yeah, then she said, 'Oh, I know where you live. I drove by a few days ago in the afternoon and saw a little girl standing naked on the living room windowsill.'"
She always blushes,
"I was mortified the day you told me that, B. Like, who lets their kids stand in front of the biggest window in the house with no clothes on? I looked like such a bad mom!"
I always laugh, too.
"Who cares? It was so funny! And I thought nothing of it. I mean, little kids are little kids, right?"
****
One afternoon this week, the winds were just warm enough and the sun was just shiny enough to beckon kids and their parents outside for an after-school playdate. Driving home from school, I slowed down to say, "Hi" as she and her littles spread out from the sidewalk and into the grass.
"B, did you see Clark?!?"
I hadn't. My eyes scanned the greening lawns...
"BINGO!"
On tiny, little toddler legs, Clark cleared each blade of grass with big-boy underwear draping from his smallish rear-end. Over the top fell an even smaller t-shirt.
I doubled over my steering wheel, laughing.
Evidently, that theory holds true.
Write on,
b
Labels:
SOLSC 2015
Thursday, March 26, 2015
26: The last Saturday afternoon date...
We bundled up as the golden leaves blew
across the front yard and into the drive
I knew I should go
as if my heart foretold the end
that Saturday afternoon
Grant nestled in the carseat
and I in the front
We headed north, toward the place
that's one stop closer to heaven
In the parking lot I unhooked his latches
he wiggled out and into my arms
The wind still blew
and the leaves still danced majestic in the autumn sky
and the tears still formed
waiting
knowing
and then falling
and then stopping
the brave face
I put on to go through the
first set of double doors past the nurses
and then the next set into her wing
and finally the single door into her room
that opened like a treasure trove
full of the people I love
all sitting there
all waiting
for the next breath
in the center
Grandma laying
her cornflower eyes hidden
her crown of soft, white curls
danced as she gasped toward
her next breath
I looked in
my heart
buoyed only in knowing
soon she'd find
the bright space,
the perfect place,
her Savior
and
my grandpa
her mother
her father
her brother
her sisters
again
I shared Grant and padded in toward the bedside seat
I held her familiar hand and
I nuzzled her wrinkly cheek
Grandma, I love you
years of memories rolled across my heart
as I sat
smiling
at the thought of heaven
tearing up
at the thought of this world without her
that my boys would never truly know
the woman
who steadied my slippery baby body
in my parents' kitchen sink that first bath
who lavishly loved her family
who chose to laugh in all circumstances
with determination and moxie
a woman
after whom my heart is fashioned
We bundled up as the golden leaves blew
majestic against the blue sky outside her window
I couldn't stay
yet I lingered
knowing this would be
the last Saturday afternoon date
We held hands
three generations
linked
I kissed her forehead
I'll see you there...
Write on,
b
across the front yard and into the drive
I knew I should go
as if my heart foretold the end
that Saturday afternoon
Grant nestled in the carseat
and I in the front
We headed north, toward the place
that's one stop closer to heaven
In the parking lot I unhooked his latches
he wiggled out and into my arms
The wind still blew
and the leaves still danced majestic in the autumn sky
and the tears still formed
waiting
knowing
and then falling
and then stopping
the brave face
I put on to go through the
first set of double doors past the nurses
and then the next set into her wing
and finally the single door into her room
that opened like a treasure trove
full of the people I love
all sitting there
all waiting
for the next breath
in the center
Grandma laying
her cornflower eyes hidden
her crown of soft, white curls
danced as she gasped toward
her next breath
I looked in
my heart
buoyed only in knowing
soon she'd find
the bright space,
the perfect place,
her Savior
and
my grandpa
her mother
her father
her brother
her sisters
again
I shared Grant and padded in toward the bedside seat
I held her familiar hand and
I nuzzled her wrinkly cheek
Grandma, I love you
years of memories rolled across my heart
as I sat
smiling
at the thought of heaven
tearing up
at the thought of this world without her
that my boys would never truly know
the woman
who steadied my slippery baby body
in my parents' kitchen sink that first bath
who lavishly loved her family
who chose to laugh in all circumstances
with determination and moxie
a woman
after whom my heart is fashioned
We bundled up as the golden leaves blew
majestic against the blue sky outside her window
I couldn't stay
yet I lingered
knowing this would be
the last Saturday afternoon date
We held hands
three generations
linked
I kissed her forehead
I'll see you there...
Write on,
b
Labels:
Family,
grandma,
Loss,
Poetry,
SOLSC 2015
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
25: The upside of Wednesday...
4:00 Grant pick-up
Extra time for a trip to Target
Pick up cake pops at Starbucks
Prepare dinner early
Clean up dinner before bedtime
4:00 Grant pick-up
More time to work-out
Start a load of laundry
Sweep the floor
Finish that extra project
Go to bed early
The upside of Wednesday...
Write on,
b
Extra time for a trip to Target
Pick up cake pops at Starbucks
Prepare dinner early
Clean up dinner before bedtime
4:00 Grant pick-up
More time to work-out
Start a load of laundry
Sweep the floor
Finish that extra project
Go to bed early
The upside of Wednesday...
Write on,
b
Labels:
SOLSC 2015
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
24: Mentors...
I began today's professional development session on mentor texts
with this quote and after reading it aloud inquired
"How do Cynthia Rylant's words strike you?"
There was a buzz that hushed only when I pulled out this excerpt
from "The Book Thief"
letting its words swirl and swing
hang and dance
fall heavy
and then rise up again
![]() |
Getting to know Hans Hubermann in Markus Zusak's "The Book Thief," page 36. |
Those five months were definitely the hardest.
Every night, Leisel would nightmare.
Her brother's face.
Staring at the floor.
She would wake up swimming in her bed...
drowning in the flood of sheets...
the bed that was meant for her brother floated boatlike in the darkness...
it sank, seemingly into the floor...
He came in every night...
a stranger to kill the aloneness...
Trust accumulated quickly, due primarily to the brute strength
of the man's gentleness, his thereness.
Teachers' eyes,
their hearts
connected
with this text
its song
and basked in the brilliance of Markus Zusak's construction
I said, "When I read this book, my writing made sense:
the sentence fragments
the long sentences
the way I may 'break the rules'
the way I try to fashion word pictures"
I said, "When I write every day on my blog, it's his writing I hear"
And he's my mentor
He shows me what good writing sounds like
He helps me envision what's possible
He empowers me to take risks
He invites me to use my voice to tell these tales
Some of them
I could see it in their eyes
immediately felt the text that had changed their writing landscape
they saw it and remembered it and connected with it
all over again
I said, "I could teach craft moves with so many books
but what is special is that this book has my heart; it is mine
I get it; I love it"
And now they love it too
because of our common experience
because of my excitement
because of its lyrical qualities
because of its blessing
because of its possibility for writers
Write on,
b
Labels:
Craft moves,
Markus Zusak,
Mentor texts,
PD,
SOLSC 2015,
Writing
Monday, March 23, 2015
23: Drip, drip, drip...
This afternoon the plink, plink, plink
of the persistent sleet pelted anything that stood still
My spring disposition led me to
black pumps with dress pants
no tights, no trouser socks
Walking into the kitchen tonight
I noticed first thing
the Keurig's stare
and I let it make eyes at me
on account of the
four hours mine
were
shut
last
night
and
that
they
are
barely
open
right
now
and that my toes are frozen
Tonight the drip, drip, drip
of its comforting brew is my pre-dinner lullaby
Write on,
b
Labels:
Coffee,
Onomotapoeia,
Poetry,
SOLSC 2015,
Structure
Sunday, March 22, 2015
22: Like a trip...
Sometimes it feels like I'm going on a trip
not like San Diego
rather more like a conference
or a project
or a study group
I made sure to pack extra markers
post-it notes
highlighters
copied handouts in 10 stacks
small group sets of readers
leveled L through P
guided reading lesson plans
Teaching for Comprehension and Fluency
the Continuum for Literacy Learning
A Guide to the Common Core Writing Workshop
Day by Day
glue sticks and scissors
chart paper
red napkins for the blueberry bread
I'll lay across the stacks of materials
when I am done packing
for the meeting tomorrow
No one wants smooshy breakfast treats
All will be safe in the backseat of the Jeep though
while we sleep for the few hours before its time
wondering about how all the details will play out
Sometimes it feels like I'm going on a trip
Write on,
b
Saturday, March 21, 2015
21: I almost forgot...
Lunch
check
thank-you note
medicine
car keys
hat
laundry in the washer
grocery list
ingredient
zip drive
promise
lunch money
file folder
mileage
earrings
birthday card
charger
laundry in the dryer
permission slip
necklace
show-n-tell tub
wallet
after-school meeting
ear buds
mittens
presentation remote
scarf
handout
this slice
Write on,
b
Friday, March 20, 2015
20: Surprise and delight...
When I picked up Grant tonight
he ran, he smiled, he gurgled
and as we got into the car
he asked for a "lollipop"
which is really a cakepop
from Starbucks
I'm not sure where he gets that...
We headed south
toward our usual coffee shop stop
but turned one light too early
the screams from the backseat
could've woken a sleeping
baby four houses down
Through our small town
on the way to an errand
we passed yet another
Starbucks on the roadside
like a shiny penny
just begging to be noticed
"Mama! Coffee shop!"
I'm reticent to support two coffee shop habits...we keep driving
On the way back home
we drove past again
Feeling tired and charitable
I pulled in
"Mama! Lollipop! Let's get out!"
So we walk the few steps into the
shop crowded with ten-year-olds
'having a coffee break' after school
We wait in line behind them
Flags of indecision waving wildly
above their mussed hair-dos
I spy the menu of monthly deals
Today! Free pastry with purchase of handcrafted beverage
I'm persuaded -- one afternoon chai latte
one FREE pink birthday cake pop
I order
"Ma'am, I'm so sorry. Today isn't March 23. That deal is for March 23 only."
More rosy than red, I apologize
and pull out a couple extra bills
tucked neatly inside my wallet
He bags the cake pop
the other barista prepares the chai
"You know what?"
My eyes chase his
"You're not expecting a deal, but I'm going to give you one"
Oh yeah?
"I'm going to charge you $3.80."
Nice --- the total should be over $5
"And, as a bonus, here are two cake pops instead of one."
Wow. And that is why in the book, "The Starbucks Experience" by Joseph Michelli, there is an entire chapter dedicated to one of their chief operating principles, SURPRISE AND DELIGHT.
Write on,
b
he ran, he smiled, he gurgled
and as we got into the car
he asked for a "lollipop"
which is really a cakepop
from Starbucks
I'm not sure where he gets that...
We headed south
toward our usual coffee shop stop
but turned one light too early
the screams from the backseat
could've woken a sleeping
baby four houses down
Through our small town
on the way to an errand
we passed yet another
Starbucks on the roadside
like a shiny penny
just begging to be noticed
"Mama! Coffee shop!"
I'm reticent to support two coffee shop habits...we keep driving
On the way back home
we drove past again
Feeling tired and charitable
I pulled in
"Mama! Lollipop! Let's get out!"
So we walk the few steps into the
shop crowded with ten-year-olds
'having a coffee break' after school
We wait in line behind them
Flags of indecision waving wildly
above their mussed hair-dos
I spy the menu of monthly deals
Today! Free pastry with purchase of handcrafted beverage
I'm persuaded -- one afternoon chai latte
one FREE pink birthday cake pop
I order
"Ma'am, I'm so sorry. Today isn't March 23. That deal is for March 23 only."
More rosy than red, I apologize
and pull out a couple extra bills
tucked neatly inside my wallet
He bags the cake pop
the other barista prepares the chai
"You know what?"
My eyes chase his
"You're not expecting a deal, but I'm going to give you one"
Oh yeah?
"I'm going to charge you $3.80."
Nice --- the total should be over $5
"And, as a bonus, here are two cake pops instead of one."
Wow. And that is why in the book, "The Starbucks Experience" by Joseph Michelli, there is an entire chapter dedicated to one of their chief operating principles, SURPRISE AND DELIGHT.
Write on,
b
Thursday, March 19, 2015
19: Like clockwork...
I pull up into her driveway
and leave the car running
the twenty steps I make to the front door
successively speed up because
I know who is on the other side
waiting on me
to come
like
clockwork
when the nap is over and
school is done and
the sun is shining
I knock on the weathered brown door
because a little scotch tape and a little piece of paper
cover the doorbell to keep morning drop-offs at a whisper
Afternoon pick-ups, though, come with a shriek
"I do it!!!"
as little feet sprint down the wooden hallway
and little hands swing open the door
I bend down
and he runs, blue eyes blazing
into my arms
again
like clockwork
"Mama!!!!"
I kiss his ear
and my arms squeeze his tiny trunk in
the hug I've been waiting on
"How was today?"
"He was super; took a good nap; ate a good lunch. Even green beans."
"See you tomorrow, little guy. I love you."
I reach the doorknob
and he wiggles out of my arms
"I do it!!!"
and he does I follow him
out to the purring car and
around to the back passenger side
where he waits by his door
"Mama, help please!!!"
I lift him up, nuzzle him close and
launch into a story to steal his attention
away from the car seat buckles
"Nose kiss, Mama?"
We lean toward each other and gently rub ours before
I walk on air back around the car
and buckle myself in
We pull out of the driveway
together
Write on,
b
Labels:
Grant,
Poetry,
SOLSC 2015
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
18: Give in...
The hodge-podge of plastic placemats
decorated our dinner table like a patchwork quilt
Remainded plates, cups, forks, and pizza crust stubs
were scattered like haphazard jewelry
I sat, in my chair, watching
the littles run around the kitchen yelling
my husband begin to clean up our meal
After a while
it all
became
white noise
my thoughts
became
sluggish
my eyelids
became
droopy
and I knew
despite all propriety
that the only
course of action
for me
at that minute
was to
push the placemat
to the side and
cross my arms
on top of the
table and rest
my head and
my head and
close my
eyes
and
give
in
Write on,
b
Labels:
Poetry,
SOLSC 2015
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
17: Before the sun...
Before the sun
we fly
farther
darker
sleepy
quiet
beverage carts
bump
clank
squeeze
we gaze outside
the moon high
like a diamond
the sun peeking
dusky orange behind
gracing home
making a day
new
we fly
west
toward
dry desert
shadowy mountains
Sky Harbor and
then the place
nestled
between the
cerulean Pacific
and the
bordering Lagunas
Before the sun
we fly
Five hours
change
every
thing
Write on,
b
Monday, March 16, 2015
16: The gift...
A typical Thursday
I took my place at the table
across from my supervisor
draft documents
pacing guides
laptops
blanketed our workspace
"Before we get started with our agenda, I have a favor to ask you."
"I received an invitation to a conference in a couple weeks and with my schedule, it simply isn't possible to attend. I would like it if you could go."
And somehow despite the gigantic question mark that
chaperoned the party called Details
like missing home, missing work, missing meetings
I knew -- I knew -- they would all fit together
"Where is the conference?"
"San Diego."
Detail #1: I love San Diego. And that may be selling my feelings short.
Detail #2: I need the sun's warmth. Call it SAD; I'm running in the red.
Detail #3: I need to feel the beach's soothing sand as my toes dig and emerge; dig and emerge.
Detail #4: I covet the space to breath, learn, dream.
Detail #5: Palm trees. The midwesterner's bellwether indicator of change.
Strike that --- I knew they would fit into the timeliest blessing
"Yes. I'd be happy to go..."
The perfect gift.
Write on,
b
I took my place at the table
across from my supervisor
draft documents
pacing guides
laptops
blanketed our workspace
"Before we get started with our agenda, I have a favor to ask you."
"I received an invitation to a conference in a couple weeks and with my schedule, it simply isn't possible to attend. I would like it if you could go."
And somehow despite the gigantic question mark that
chaperoned the party called Details
like missing home, missing work, missing meetings
I knew -- I knew -- they would all fit together
"Where is the conference?"
"San Diego."
Detail #1: I love San Diego. And that may be selling my feelings short.
Detail #2: I need the sun's warmth. Call it SAD; I'm running in the red.
Detail #3: I need to feel the beach's soothing sand as my toes dig and emerge; dig and emerge.
Detail #4: I covet the space to breath, learn, dream.
Detail #5: Palm trees. The midwesterner's bellwether indicator of change.
Strike that --- I knew they would fit into the timeliest blessing
"Yes. I'd be happy to go..."
The perfect gift.
Write on,
b
Labels:
Blessing,
Conferences,
SOLSC 2015,
Travel
Sunday, March 15, 2015
15: Stuck on the Stickies...
I love binders and folders and colored tabs,
but my desk is a mess.
I love building PowerPoints that take into account every variable known to man,
but I do not store them in tidy session folders on my computer.
I love stylish storage crates that fit into my Ikea shelving units,
but the contents spill out over the top and sometimes puddle on the floor because
what I really don't want is to give up another cubical that could be used for professional books for a basket that turns into a catch-all when I'm cleaning.
I love organizing the clothing that hangs in the master closet by color,
but there are remainded shoes, missing their soulmates,
sprinkled around the periphery of my smallish kingdom.
I love curating my favorite resources in topical folders on Chome and Evernote,
but at any given time I have no fewer than 30 of them open. Why?
I love keeping my Outlook calendar too,
but my flagged items never get touched
once they make it over to the 'To-Do List.'
Because I've yet to find the system that makes my heart sing.
All the time.
So today I discovered this new-to-me Mac Airbook
has an app I've yet to try: Stickies.
A NEW way to organize.
And I can color code: red for urgent tasks, yellow for middle-of-the-road.
And the notes can stay on my desktop until I remove them
And I can quickly revise items, deleting accomplishments
like Pavlov's dog.
Will this new feature keep me, well, organized?
Or, will it be the current intervention for all my other organizational schemes?
Only time will tell; but, for now, it is keeping me focused
on zipping through my now color-coded to-do list...
Write on,
b
but my desk is a mess.
I love building PowerPoints that take into account every variable known to man,
but I do not store them in tidy session folders on my computer.
I love stylish storage crates that fit into my Ikea shelving units,
but the contents spill out over the top and sometimes puddle on the floor because
what I really don't want is to give up another cubical that could be used for professional books for a basket that turns into a catch-all when I'm cleaning.
I love organizing the clothing that hangs in the master closet by color,
but there are remainded shoes, missing their soulmates,
sprinkled around the periphery of my smallish kingdom.
I love curating my favorite resources in topical folders on Chome and Evernote,
but at any given time I have no fewer than 30 of them open. Why?
I love keeping my Outlook calendar too,
but my flagged items never get touched
once they make it over to the 'To-Do List.'
Because I've yet to find the system that makes my heart sing.
All the time.
So today I discovered this new-to-me Mac Airbook
has an app I've yet to try: Stickies.
A NEW way to organize.
And I can color code: red for urgent tasks, yellow for middle-of-the-road.
And the notes can stay on my desktop until I remove them
And I can quickly revise items, deleting accomplishments
like Pavlov's dog.
Will this new feature keep me, well, organized?
Or, will it be the current intervention for all my other organizational schemes?
Only time will tell; but, for now, it is keeping me focused
on zipping through my now color-coded to-do list...
Write on,
b
Saturday, March 14, 2015
14: Learning how to write...
My brother is a baseball coach who has decided that this year, my hometown's annual summer festival deserves an update --- an outdoor market for vendors who sell antiques and collectibles, as well as homemade arts and crafts. He would like this to become an annual fundraising event for his team, which is timely because they are in the process of a massive capital campaign to improve the local baseball facility. And he would like for vendors who are the best of the best to rent space for the one-day event in July.
So he must invite them. By mail. Soon. With a flier. And legal information. And details that entice.
Which is where I come into this slice.
I've spent the bulk of my writing time today working for my brother...on this very letter, employing what I know about argument and persuasion. About how words work together to paint a picture bigger than the sum of their parts. About presentation and adding text features. About negative space and its role in this type of publication. About which details are most important to this specific audience. An audience of which I have never been a part.
Which makes me pause and return to this question -- the one that has haunted me since starting on my writing workshop journey six years ago -- How did I learn how to write?
Honestly, I'm not sure I ever did. At least not like students who are lucky enough to be in writing workshops now do.
When I think of writing, I don't think of elementary school, save penmanship and the all-important cursive lessons of second-grade.
When I think of writing, I don't of Mrs. Cook and the Advanced Composition course I took for two semesters during high school. I remember the course workbooks, pluperfect subjective, sentence diagramming, and the weekly vocabulary quiz, albeit I don't remember any actual composition.
I don't think of Mrs. Minch, either, and the (what I thought was gigantic and arduous) term paper I had to successfully construct before heading off to college. The research -- microfiche, Encyclopedias, and books (real, physical books I checked out at my alma mater) -- that fed the neat, little stack of index cards I used to organize my paper (before my accounting teacher's daughter-in-law typed it) seemed archaic. And unsustainable. I wondered, Is this what real writing is? How many pages did you say it has to be...ten?
I don't think of the responses written for lower-level literature classes, and how when I took risks, my teacher asked me to revisit standard text conventions, even when I had top-drawer reasons in support of these decisions. (Close reading wasn't en vogue back then...)
I do think, though, of Heather my English Composition 111 instructor at Miami University my freshman year. I knew I didn't know 'how' to write. First semester, my best strategy was fake it until I make it and this 'faking' included the use of a thesaurus. Multiple times. Multiple papers. On one graded piece, she circled paradigm and wrote in the margin, "Do you know what this means? It doesn't really fit here..." The thing is, I didn't know. It was the fanciest synonym listed. And sometimes when you're faking it to make it, you resort to drastic measures. My deficits were so transparent; my voice so absent. She was so learned; I knew this about her. I wrote to her, or at least I attempted to. But when you use a word like paradigm and when you're typing it in you say, para-DIG-m, you have no business including it in your paper. By the end of semester one, I knew this too, and I was ready for a new strategy: write real.
I do think, then, of Judith my English Composition 112 instructor. We studied authors like Toni Morrison and Sylvia Plathe, Langston Hughes and Maya Angelou. We analyzed their craft moves and then tried them out in our own work. She encouraged us, as authors, to find our voice. To say what matters. And so I wrote...about my almost-eating disorder in high school and how I ended up the smallest version of myself in so many ways. I took risks in transparency and the pieces I birthed that semester were of my life in my words in my choice format. I remember getting one paper back with her comments at the top --- "You should submit this to our campus paper. Will you consider sharing?" My heart swelled; I was flattered. But I didn't do it. I didn't think I could. That's a lot of people; a lot of truth. And what if they turn down my submission?
When I think about learning how to write, I think about reading...as I've always been naturally drawn to "the swirl and swing of words," as James Michener so eloquently describes. And, I think about listening to people talk...about what words are said, and the ones that lie beneath, unsaid but felt. I think about reading "The Art of Teaching Writing" by Lucy Calkins at the advice of my new principal six years ago, and how the type of writing instruction she described seemed so real, so Judith from Comp 112, that I could actually pour out what I could do...but couldn't name...into an instructional experience that would've so satisfied my younger self...
And ever since, it hasn't been enough to know, in theory, how to write or even how to teach writing. Learning about writing has become my life's work, and I'm the luckiest girl for it.
But, honestly, it is a messy project...and is rarely cinched with tight and perfect stitches.
What I've learned about writing is what follows: it requires voice and is best when it's true; it requires community that's the sort to encourage and extend; it requires grace for our own work and that of others; it is worth teaching and worth knowing, inside and out.
Because real-life would say that someday there will be a flier you just have to compose, but the truth is that by now, I know otherwise --- there is real-life to document. To declare significant.
Writing is its own playground.
It doesn't matter how you get there.
Write on,
b
So he must invite them. By mail. Soon. With a flier. And legal information. And details that entice.
Which is where I come into this slice.
I've spent the bulk of my writing time today working for my brother...on this very letter, employing what I know about argument and persuasion. About how words work together to paint a picture bigger than the sum of their parts. About presentation and adding text features. About negative space and its role in this type of publication. About which details are most important to this specific audience. An audience of which I have never been a part.
Which makes me pause and return to this question -- the one that has haunted me since starting on my writing workshop journey six years ago -- How did I learn how to write?
Honestly, I'm not sure I ever did. At least not like students who are lucky enough to be in writing workshops now do.
When I think of writing, I don't think of elementary school, save penmanship and the all-important cursive lessons of second-grade.
When I think of writing, I don't of Mrs. Cook and the Advanced Composition course I took for two semesters during high school. I remember the course workbooks, pluperfect subjective, sentence diagramming, and the weekly vocabulary quiz, albeit I don't remember any actual composition.
I don't think of Mrs. Minch, either, and the (what I thought was gigantic and arduous) term paper I had to successfully construct before heading off to college. The research -- microfiche, Encyclopedias, and books (real, physical books I checked out at my alma mater) -- that fed the neat, little stack of index cards I used to organize my paper (before my accounting teacher's daughter-in-law typed it) seemed archaic. And unsustainable. I wondered, Is this what real writing is? How many pages did you say it has to be...ten?
I don't think of the responses written for lower-level literature classes, and how when I took risks, my teacher asked me to revisit standard text conventions, even when I had top-drawer reasons in support of these decisions. (Close reading wasn't en vogue back then...)
I do think, though, of Heather my English Composition 111 instructor at Miami University my freshman year. I knew I didn't know 'how' to write. First semester, my best strategy was fake it until I make it and this 'faking' included the use of a thesaurus. Multiple times. Multiple papers. On one graded piece, she circled paradigm and wrote in the margin, "Do you know what this means? It doesn't really fit here..." The thing is, I didn't know. It was the fanciest synonym listed. And sometimes when you're faking it to make it, you resort to drastic measures. My deficits were so transparent; my voice so absent. She was so learned; I knew this about her. I wrote to her, or at least I attempted to. But when you use a word like paradigm and when you're typing it in you say, para-DIG-m, you have no business including it in your paper. By the end of semester one, I knew this too, and I was ready for a new strategy: write real.
I do think, then, of Judith my English Composition 112 instructor. We studied authors like Toni Morrison and Sylvia Plathe, Langston Hughes and Maya Angelou. We analyzed their craft moves and then tried them out in our own work. She encouraged us, as authors, to find our voice. To say what matters. And so I wrote...about my almost-eating disorder in high school and how I ended up the smallest version of myself in so many ways. I took risks in transparency and the pieces I birthed that semester were of my life in my words in my choice format. I remember getting one paper back with her comments at the top --- "You should submit this to our campus paper. Will you consider sharing?" My heart swelled; I was flattered. But I didn't do it. I didn't think I could. That's a lot of people; a lot of truth. And what if they turn down my submission?
When I think about learning how to write, I think about reading...as I've always been naturally drawn to "the swirl and swing of words," as James Michener so eloquently describes. And, I think about listening to people talk...about what words are said, and the ones that lie beneath, unsaid but felt. I think about reading "The Art of Teaching Writing" by Lucy Calkins at the advice of my new principal six years ago, and how the type of writing instruction she described seemed so real, so Judith from Comp 112, that I could actually pour out what I could do...but couldn't name...into an instructional experience that would've so satisfied my younger self...
And ever since, it hasn't been enough to know, in theory, how to write or even how to teach writing. Learning about writing has become my life's work, and I'm the luckiest girl for it.
But, honestly, it is a messy project...and is rarely cinched with tight and perfect stitches.
What I've learned about writing is what follows: it requires voice and is best when it's true; it requires community that's the sort to encourage and extend; it requires grace for our own work and that of others; it is worth teaching and worth knowing, inside and out.
Because real-life would say that someday there will be a flier you just have to compose, but the truth is that by now, I know otherwise --- there is real-life to document. To declare significant.
Writing is its own playground.
It doesn't matter how you get there.
Write on,
b
Friday, March 13, 2015
13: The splinter and the plank...
On using your linguistic prowess for good in all cases, in all places...
While the sickly smaller little napped restlessly upstairs yesterday, I sat in the kitchen beside french doors. The sun cascaded through, bathing my toes in warmth. Perched on a chair at the table's end, my fingers pranced from key to key as email after email took shape. As new messages popped up, I peeked at content. One conversation between a school secretary and her coworkers diverted my attention like a neon "They're hot!" sign flashing in front of a Krispy Kreme donut shop.
To: Staff
Subject: geral notice
To the diligent person who made all the laminated little colored signs/passes: The ones that say 'inquirer' are misspelled. Sorry, my spelling gene sometimes overtakes my self-preservation one.
Two minutes later...
To: Staff
Subject: omg
"General! GENERAL!"
So remember writers, when offering friends feedback today, be gracious by offering compliments and constructive by offering suggestions that will help your partner become a better writer. None of us has it all figured out -- the more we write and the more we work together to look at our writing, the better we'll get. Now off you go...
Write on,
b
While the sickly smaller little napped restlessly upstairs yesterday, I sat in the kitchen beside french doors. The sun cascaded through, bathing my toes in warmth. Perched on a chair at the table's end, my fingers pranced from key to key as email after email took shape. As new messages popped up, I peeked at content. One conversation between a school secretary and her coworkers diverted my attention like a neon "They're hot!" sign flashing in front of a Krispy Kreme donut shop.
MESSAGE ONE
From: SallyTo: Staff
Subject: geral notice
To the diligent person who made all the laminated little colored signs/passes: The ones that say 'inquirer' are misspelled. Sorry, my spelling gene sometimes overtakes my self-preservation one.
Two minutes later...
MESSAGE TWO
From: SallyTo: Staff
Subject: omg
"General! GENERAL!"
So remember writers, when offering friends feedback today, be gracious by offering compliments and constructive by offering suggestions that will help your partner become a better writer. None of us has it all figured out -- the more we write and the more we work together to look at our writing, the better we'll get. Now off you go...
Write on,
b
Thursday, March 12, 2015
12: Summer-tired...
This afternoon
our street
wiggled
with kids
running
biking
screaming
playing chase
picking up the little chunks of stubborn snow
giggling
throwing
pushing
skipping
jumping
diving
driving the toys they desperately missed
over the long, cold winter months
This afternoon
our street
bursted
with moms
pushing strollers
congregating in yards
chatting with neighbors
watching kids lessen energy stores
putting off dinner prep
running around the block
driving with the windows down
sporting the sunglasses, flip-flops they desperately missed
over the long, cold winter months
Everyone
drinking in the warmth
all 67 degrees
basking in the sun
delighting in the breeze's promise
of more days full of -ing to come
eating late
heading to bed
summer-tired
Write on,
b
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