Last week, two days after finishing the credential program
and the busiest, most insane ten months of my life, I cleaned off my desktop.
The reason I failed to clean off my desktop my first day of freedom was because
I was busy cleaning out the piles (and piles, and piles) of papers in my living
room that threatened to either collapse this old house entirely, or at least start
a really amazing bonfire. The papers gone…mostly…I tackled my computer. And woven
in amidst the unused lesson plan ideas, and forgotten clipart, and endless teaching
reflections, and recipes-I-never-had-time-to-try, I came across the other
remnants of my past ten months: the bits of thoughts an anxiously eager girl in a new place had about her
whirlwind life and the world at large.
Here is what I found:
- Commentary on the Hunger Games series minutes after I finished reading it…and on sadness
- Commentary on magic and McKinley Park
- Thoughts about geese
- Thoughts about bums
- Revelations about dirt
- Revelations after a day of sickness
My days this year, much like my 86 students, have been
inconsistent, unpredictable, simultaneously exhausting and invigorating,
changing, …thoroughly wonderful. The thematic randomness of these forgotten
posts is only a smattering of the randomness of my year. I’m posting them here
because, besides my teaching, they are the best I have to show for my year. The
only proof, really, that a writer still exists somewhere inside of me. And
because they remind me of myself. And of the blessed, bountiful, beauty of the
year I just had in all its shining, terrible, exhilarating newness.
The Hunger Games and sadness – January
I finished The Hunger
Games today and now my heart lies in pieces in the pit of my stomach. I
haven’t been this sad since the dog died in Misty
and Me. I remember sitting upstairs at the Ironwood house, leaning against
that old lacquer dresser of my parents. I had just gotten out of the shower and
my hair was all wrapped up in a towel (because even then it was perpetually
unmanageable) and I was about midway through the book. Everyone else was
downstairs, but I couldn’t imagine company…I just wanted to read the book with
the sweet Beagle on the cover (because I lived and breathed dogs). And I sat up
there as an hour passed and then another, as the impending doom filled me from
the tips of my toes to my overflowing eyes. I admit I was an imaginative kid,
emotional, maybe even internally melodramatic in a quiet way…and I took stories
much too seriously, even then. But I’ll never forget the kind of sadness I felt
when that book ended. And for the the first time since I was ten, today, all
grown up, I felt that same impending doom, and the tortuous, unstoppable
breaking of my heart that I thought belonged only to childhood. I’m so torn up,
my mind is only making feeble attempts at evaluating the quality of the book,
my usual pastime for the first three hours after finishing.
When I was young, I didn’t like sad endings, but I also
didn’t believe them. I knew that stories don’t really have an end…and I was
quite adept at turning sadness into happiness just around the corner, around
the last turning of the last page. It’s
sad now I could tell myself, but it
will get better. And there’s still a weird part of me that believes those
stories did get better…because I believed they would. Misty and Me hit me like a ton of bricks because I couldn’t finish
the story. She was dead. I knew that dogs die. I knew what it felt like to lose
a pet. And to my overworked heart, there was no single happiness that came of
it. If the author said the dog was dead, there could be no happiness on the
other side of the ending.
And now I don’t like sad endings because, too often, I do
believe them. My brain and my heart have accepted complexity, indeed banished
simplicity, in a way my ten year old self would never have been able, or
wanted, to do. Black and white have shrunk and grey expanded. Conviction
remains, but no longer in straightforward self-righteousness; it exists instead
with a reluctant acceptance of unclarity and an unsettling suspicion that hypocrisy
is inevitable. And Mockingjay, too,
surpasses the simplicity of the grave sadness in Misty and Me. A convoluted twisting of plot and character
development. Strikingly realistic commentary on war and government and love.
And much too close to home for my comfort. And I am sad and angry and not even
entirely convinced that it was great, which makes me only more sad and more
angry. And I feel, somehow, tired for the whole darn world...
Magic and McKinley
Park – September
In the first brief hours of early afternoon I’ve had since I
moved here, I decided to take a walk down to McKinley Park, a few blocks from
my house, and take a moment to read by the pond and perhaps, if I was very
lucky, to catch my breath. The tiny McKinley library was open and because I
can’t resist open libraries and also had the mildest hope of finding something
to write about myself in there, I went in and climbed the tiny flight of stairs
to the loft, which is probably the most romantic, charming place I’ve found in
Sacramento thus far.
Last time I was in McKinley Library, I stumbled across a
book by famed fantasy writer Terry Brooks – a book he had written about
writing. The book had utterly drawn me in and since then, in my mind, the
indelible magic of that book and the charm of the library loft had been one and
the same. Memory served me well and by one of the narrow windows, in a narrow
aisle of the loft, I found the book: Sometimes
the Magic Works. Magic. I thought then – and still think now – is exactly
what I need most right now. I grabbed, also, a book of collected writings of
California – oh what ahold this state has on me – and checked out - at the desk, with the librarian – not at
those new-fangled self check-outs they have at this little old library. Call me
Grandma if you will, but some things in this world are just out of place.
(Whether in this case that thing is self check-outs, or me, I’ll leave to your
discretion. Please do not email me your opinion. I’m sure I don’t want to
know.)
When I went to check out my books, Magic was not in the system. Magic again. It was starting. I took
it as a good sign. The librarian let me check it out anyway, even though I was
really just taking it. On the honor system. Magic, in this day and age, I
think. Another reason I love libraries.
I took a walk around the pond to find a spot to rest my
curious soul. A small boy and his young friend stood at the water’s edge,
spying turtles. He saw me pass and waved. His friend turned and waved too. When
do kids lose that unprejudiced friendliness? Where, oh where, can I find it in
my high school students – remind them that it’s there and draw it out? Is the
world at large or parents in particular to blame for its loss? These are only a
few of my questions.
I chose a bench under the low hanging branches of a tree.
They swept down toward the water like a Weeping Willow and created a little
hollow in the air, shading half of the bench and draping over the shallow water
where a few Mallard ladies floated lazily. It was like my own little niche.
Carved out for me by a kind world. It smelled like duck poop...
Geese – September
I am afraid of geese. I pretend it’s not true, but every
time I pass one without a barricade of some sort between us, I have this
quickening of the heart – a reaction of my amygdala, I learned yesterday – that
sparks inside me an urge to run. I never run. Because geese will chase. The
fear stems from a memory which I do not actually think I have, but which is
vivid in my mind from the many times I have heard it. I was about two feet tall
and a goose bit me on the finger. That is all. It is the only reason I can
think of for my fear. I don’t even remember the pain. But I give geese a wide
birth.
Up until today, I did not think Canadian geese counted in my
amygdalar reaction (The scientists tell me amygdalar is not a word, but really
what do they know?). There is something profound and other-worldly about
Canadian geese that has something to do, I think, with the stark whiteness of
their cheeks against black necks and also the way I have seen them migrate East
and West coast, wise and confident world travelers. I suspect it also has
something to do with the geese in T.H. White’s Sword in the Stone – that chapter has always left me slightly in
awe.
In the mornings at the high school where I am student
teaching, when I pull into the parking lot next to the football field, Canadian
geese blanket the grass, dewy and peaceful; you can hear their gentle clucks
coming across the field and it always makes me still, reminds me of the bigger
picture. So I did not think Canadian geese counted in my irrational fear.
Lacking both bumpy orange beaks and any kind of crazy gaggle, they always
seemed a step apart. Today my amygdala informed me that they really are not.
I took the long way around the cluster of Canadian geese by
the water’s edge on my way to a bench. Still, the one in the path waggled his
beak at me. Innocent fellow was probably merely saying hello, or asking for
food. I have solidarity with that. But my childhood memory that I do not
actually remember got the better of me. He was big. All these Canadian geese
asking for food were big; and I know my fingers and toes look just like a tasty
morsel...
Bums - September
There are a lot of bums in Sacramento. I’m not complaining.
They were here long before I was. And they know the city in ways that most of
us current non-bums probably never will. Maybe cities everywhere really belong
to the vagabonds and wanderers on the street corners and curled up under
bridges with their shopping carts parked nearby. They see the things we don’t
even know exist – and probably don’t want to.
I don’t know what the politically correct word for bum is. I
don’t know if you’re supposed to differentiate between the ones who want to be
there, living a bohemian life, and the ones with mental illness, and the
freeloaders who really live in a fab forties house in East Sac. I have no ill
will toward them so I suppose it doesn’t matter what I’m “supposed” to call
them. Anyway, the only way to know would be to ask and I’m not that brave yet.
I have always wondered what makes a city a good place for a
bum. New York City in January was teaming with them and I couldn’t help but
keep thinking that if I had the difficult lot of becoming a bum in New York, I
would save up every quarter I got and go south quickly. If I got no quarters, I’d
start walking. Every step farther south would mean one step farther from NYC in
the winter. But the subways and terminals were full of them. Maybe the spirit
of New York was in their hearts and they couldn’t bear to leave it. I once
heard that in Hawaii, you’re allowed to sleep on all public beaches. Just pitch
a tent and sink your toes in. That’s where I’d go if I became a bum. Crossing
the Pacific might prove tricky on a bum’s income, but at least one thing I
wouldn’t be short on would be time to figure it out. Maybe they don’t tolerate
bums in Hawaii. Maybe I’d get all the way there after twenty five years of
careful bum planning and I’d arrive on the shores of Hawaii fatigued and chilly
with visions of tender sleep on a warm sandy beach only to learn that I am not
welcome. There I’d be with the full knowledge that it would take me another 25
years to figure out how to re-cross the Pacific. That would be a real low. I
suppose sometimes we stick with what we know because no matter how crappy it may
seem, it’s a crappy we know. We have the luxury of thinking, “it could be
worse.” The alternative, the unknown, well, it could be Hawaii at sunset, but
then again, it could be 25 years wasted and a shattered dream. It could be the worst. Hence bums in New York in
January? I suspect my reasoning is flawed somewhere, but I can’t yet say where...
Dirt - May
When I grow up, I want to be a farmer. Today I planted one
forlorn onion chive and six forlorn onion plants. It was the triumph of my
week. I never feel closer to my God or myself than when I am touching dirt.
Literally. With my fingers or my hands…laying straight in it works too...
Sickness - December
I spent today laying on the couch. Actually, I spent the day
twisting and turning and tossing and rolling and mostly sitting upright on the
couch to counter the post-nasal drippage occurring somewhere in the annals of
my throat or sinuses or chest. It was miserable and though I told myself a
dozen times to knock it off, I was wallowing in self-pity. How dry and inflamed
and sore my throat felt, how fiery and fluidy my chest, how pressured and
exhausted my head and eyes and sinuses. I was a train wreck and I couldn’t stop
thinking about how exuberant I have been for this day to come for the entire
past week.
This was to be my first weekend since moving to Sacramento
that I have had entirely to relax up here, in my little apartment, in this new
city, I was going to bask in my front window and explore my world and not have
a single thing on my plate except maybe laundry which was not pressing or
concerning. With the quarter nearly done and next week a relative snail’s pace
compared to what is behind and ahead of me, I was to sleep in this morning and
wake up with two whole days to rediscover my own life. It was good that I at
least got the anticipation of it because the day was nothing like I’d dreamed.
I knew I would be getting sick more often when I began
working with students, but I didn’t realize the germs they were going to so
casually pass me would be some kind of mega, evil, Decepticon germs that would
knock me flat with levels of tenacious and unyielding discomforts I have never
experienced before. These are not colds that I am getting, these are
C-O-L-D-S!!! Hence today, laying on the couch in varying degrees of hazy-eyed,
muddled pain and the constantly renewing disappointment in this day, of all
days, so thoroughly lost to me. Which is where the pity came in. I know I am
alive and that is a blessing. I know that I have a roof over my head, food, and
the greatest family that ever lived. I know that happiness is mine. I know that
tragic things happen to people who don’t deserve it on a daily basis and that a
really bad cold is no tragedy. But laying uncomfortably on a couch amidst
mounds of tissues is not the greatest place for acquiring – or maintaining –
perspective. And let’s face it, by the time the sun went down, I was sick of
myself and this day, and feeling very poor indeed.
Running through my head all day were bits and pieces of the
chick flick I watched this morning to try to get my mind off my misery, and
thoughts of what I had wanted this day to be like. I’m thankful for the chick
flick because it was those thoughts that kept me going until Jason got here to
take me out for pho, which required me to get up, put on something less
amoebic, brush my hair, and look like a semblance of a human being so that the
restaurant would let us in the door. Then the broth and that crazy Sriracha
sauce cleared my head, along with good conversation replacing my own incessant
and exhausting thoughts. And now I’m home, my C-O-L-D still with me, the day
gone, back in my jammies and my own thoughts, and yet I find that that wise and
beautiful emotion Gratitude is mine again and I know new things about this day.
These are the good things a girl all caught up in being sick
can miss:
- the joy of watching chick flicks, time, after time, after time.
- the beauty of getting a half a dozen texts from people worried about how you’re feeling
- knowing that there are pockets all over the world made up of people who love you
- the healing powers of pho and the even greater healing power of realizing how good the guy you love is at taking care of you
- blankets, and Bartholomew Cozy, the great brown heating machine
- Christmas lights twinkling through the cold
- magazines and good books
- endless boxes of tissues
- lemon juice in water
- the blessing of being mostly healthy most of the time
- memories of the good time you had last night with new friends
- knowing that you’re in a really wonderful place in your life
Okay, so the G-E-R-M-S are still kicking my butt! But heaven
knows it could be so much worse. I find myself strangely comforted by this
thought on a semi-regular basis in recent years. It’s depressing, when I think
about it, to find that I gain inspiration from thinking of how much worse
things could be. But it’s not a case of misery loves company. It doesn’t
comfort me to think that other people have bigger problems than I do. It
doesn’t make me think of how lucky I am in comparison to those people. It only
somehow makes me see my own life in a different light. A clearer light. The
kind that makes my eyes open round from my sometimes narrow-gazed view of this
moment and realize the vastness that is my own life, for all that we’re always
telling ourselves we’re just very small in the grand scheme of things. Life,
even just one small girl’s life, is powerful and vibrant and thorough and great,
and it’s not unreasonable, I don’t think, to mourn the loss of even a single
day spent living it. So I’m not going to be colossally hard on myself, for my
overbearing frustration at this day passing in a fit of feeling thoroughly
lousy. Still, there are a good many things a girl should think about, before
she writes off a day entirely. And just because this day was no great deal,
doesn’t mean there was nothing in it to cherish...
Which brings me to the
end
And the beginning. I christened my newfound freedom today
with a visit to R.E.I. and it was afterward, as I tossed my new tent into my
trunk in Sacramento’s 100 degree weather, that I knew Summer had really begun. Four
days after graduation and finally growing accustomed to the fact that I have
nothing to do (barring checking EdJoin for new job postings twenty five times a
day). And dreaming, again, of becoming a writer.
-R.E.A.
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