Thursday, November 30, 2006

Stolen goods

I stole this meme at Cali's urging. If you haven't already, you are welcome to steal it, too. I don't think she'd mind. She's nice that way. Be advised, those fill-in-the blank questions are HARD.


1) If somebody said you were like a breakfast cereal, which one would you be and why?

Honeycombs, because I am multi-faceted and VERY sweet.

2) How do you take your coffee/tea?

Regular coffee hot and black, but I prefer an extra-hot latte made with 2% milk.
When drinking tea I prefer Earl Grey, and I like it with half a packet of Splenda.

3) Your bedroom is on fire. You can only reach in & grab ONE thing. Do you grab your photo album or your journals?

I'm going to exercise my rights as a recent fire survivor to not answer this question.

4) When I see Peanut M&Ms and Diet Coke I wish I could inhale them so that everyone else would know what a myth my reputation as a health nut really is.

5) Got porn?

I'm WAAAAYYY too vanilla for porn.

6) If I could meet with my college roomate and explain why I think she is a coward hiding behind her religion for ceasing to be my friend I would never think about our lost friendship again.

7) What is the worst pet name in the history of your family?

Once we had a dachshund named Feller, whose nickname was Pooter. Take. Your. Pick.

Unless, of course, you are talking about pet names as in a cutesy little name you call a family member or significant other. In that case, again, take your pick: my childhood pediatrician called me Hee-Ho (sadly, it stuck); my mom's childhood nickname was BaBo; and I called (okay, sometimes still call) my Aunt Karen Kar-Kar.

8) I would eat a bowl of OATMEAL for free, but if you want me to eat a bowl of GRITS you'd have to pay me THE COST OF A BOTTLE OF ABSOLUT, which is what I'd have to drink in order to eat the grits.

9) What 80's tv star would make you giggle like a school girl?

Duh! Tom Selleck! (And yes, friends, I KNOW he's a Republican AND a member of NRA. I choose to overlook these things.)

10) What age was your best and why?

I like now the best. 32. Maybe just the 30s in general. So far, so good.

Quick update

As I was assured by many of you, my baby does not have an enormous head. My doctor shared the radiologist's report with me yesterday, and everything is within completely normal range. The head measures about a week and a half ahead of the rest of the body, which the doctor said was nothing to worry about.

Thanks for all the encouraging comments.

For those of you playing along at home, I have 15 days of school remaining. If only I had the energy to do the dance of joy.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Well kids, things are definitely back to normal around here. I have given my slacker 1st block class an assignment, and most of them are doing it. Two of them, however, are sitting at the back of the cubicle (okay, so some things will never be normal) talking, laughing, glancing my way to make sure I'm not paying attention to them (Hello? News Flash! I'M NOT DEAF, dumbasses!). This is just like it used to be! I'm so thrilled I could hit them hard with a blunt object, because something else that's just like it used to be is THEY ARE GETTING ON MY NERVES. They must pass my class to earn a credit toward graduation. They must past the exam in my class to become 10th graders. Of these two boys who haven't even started their work, one has been in high school for four years and has earned six credits total (you can earn up to eight per year, if you're wondering); the other is taking 9th grade English for the third time. I'm thinking that all the care in the world on my part isn't going to make a damn bit of difference on theirs. That's why I'm talking to YOU instead.

Your assignment, and you'd better do it (see above re: blunt object) is to tell me one or all of the following things about yourselves:

1. What is the most outrageous gift you'd give someone for the holidays if you had unlimited funds?

2. What is the most outrageous gift you'd WANT from someone else?

3. What is your family's weirdest holiday tradition?

Friday, November 24, 2006

Not exactly the pregnancy update I promised

I went in for my weekly appointment today, and since my doctor is out of town for the holiday I saw another doctor in the practice. She told me my doctor had noted at my last visit that he wanted to "watch my height" because I was measuring "a little small." Today's measurement was apparently on the small side also, so she sent me to the hospital for an ultrasound. Naturally I freaked the hell out.

As it turns out, Chickie weighs between 5.5 and 6 lbs. Not on the small side if you ask me, but what do I know? Also, according to the U/S tech, Chickie's head is "larger than average." Given my preexisting fear that the kid will never in a million years fit through my hoo-ha, that it's simply not possible, this is not good news for me. Now, not only am I worried about the actual birth, but I'm also concerned about the size of the kid's head as it relates to potential health issues. Anybody ever hear this news at an ultrasound? Anybody want to assure me I'm not about birth Chicken Little or one of the Coneheads? Anybody with some sense and experience want to advise me on what awful (or not) condition might cause my child to have a larger than average noggin?

Please discuss.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Thanks

Due to the fire, our 9th and 10th grade students missed six regular school days and the 11th and 12th graders missed three. We are, of course, being required to make those days up because everyone knows if a child receives 174 days of instruction instead of 180, he or she will be scarred for life, will fail all standardized tests for the rest of time (oh no!), and will be doomed to a life of ignorance and ineptitude. Pardon me while I pry my tongue out of my cheek.

Anyway, today is one of those make-up days. We normally have a teacher workday the day before Thanksgiving, which means we come in for an hour, sign the book, go to lunch at 9:30 and never return. But today was officially declared a regular student day for us, and since I'm not really allowed to travel to my regular holiday destinations this year, it was no big deal for me. Apparently that was not the case for most of my students. My first class, which averages 9-10 out of 15 students, had 3 students today. Out of 19 in my next class I had a group of 11, my largest class of the day. And in my last class, normally my biggest group, I marked 17 absent, which left 7. I had a quiz scheduled for today. Silly me, I actually attempted to give said quiz to the middle group. It did not go well. Have I mentioned that my classroom has no doors and a shared ceiling space? What was I thinking?

So now I am sitting at my desk staring at my seven students, who are writing thank-you notes to the PTSA, local university, and fire departments for everything they have done on our behalf in the past three weeks, and it occurs to me that I should do the same.

***

Dear Mystery Hero,

In these emotionally harrowing weeks following the loss of our school building, I've heard countless stories of loss from my colleagues. Robin lost the hand-painted wooden murals her students have added to year after year. Kim lost the laptop her husband bought her for their anniversary less than two months ago. Tina lost the scrapbook she made as a high school junior when her basketball team won the national championship. Craig, Lisa, and Charlie lost over 20 years of teaching materials. Tim's small classroom zoo--Darwin the lizard, Monty the ball python, two other snakes, the turtle, several fish--probably suffocated before the flames reached them. Numerous people lost phones, purses, wallets, checkbooks, credit cards.

I was lucky enough not to be one of those people. Sure, I regret the loss of my teaching materials and the handful of personal books, videos and CDs I kept in my classroom. I will miss the posters I collected on my trip across the country 10 years ago, and that "Reserved Parking For Joan Baez Band and Crew" sign I took from a concert last fall. I'm a little wistful about my trophies from 6 years of coaching soccer, as well as that folder full of notes from students I've collected over the past decade. But the losses that were hardest for me to stomach--the ones that would have the biggest impact on me--were my jump drive and the school laptop I've been using for the past year. Five, almost six semesters of my life were on that jump drive, and almost every digital picture I've ever taken was saved on either the jump drive or the laptop. Ditto for everything I wrote for that creative writing class I took three years ago, as well as several assignments I created for my classes. For me, those were the toughest losses.

And then there was the brass bell. Mrs. Black, my 7th and 8th grade math teacher, gave me that bell when I "graduated" from junior high. She told me she knew I'd be a teacher someday, and that I could keep that bell on my desk and use it with my own students. It sat on my desk for about one month before I got tired of every hyperactive 9th grader ringing it as they walked by, so I put it in my top drawer. It served the same purpose there, though--to remind me that someone, once upon a time, believed that I had the potential to do this job well.

You had no way of knowing any of this when you went into my room last week, even though the fire marshall and the police deparment have condemned the building and threatened arrest to anyone who enters. You could have picked up any number of things, or nothing at all, for that matter, but you looked around my room and decided to salvage a few items. One of them was the school laptop. Another was my bag, and inside was my jump drive. And the other was my brass bell. When I walked into my classroom last Friday and saw the black trash bag next to my desk containing these blackened, smoky, soggy things, I couldn't have been happier if Santa himself had walked in and handed me a new car and a million bucks.

I know I'm not really allowed to know who you are, because my knowing your identity could get you into some serious trouble. So I can't thank you personally, but I send my thanks out into the Universe and hope they reach you somehow, in some cosmic way. I'll miss those other things left behind in my room, and I'll be eternally grateful for the things that you rescued, but mostly I am thankful for your willingness to put yourself on the line for me, and for many of my colleagues who also found mysterious bags next to their desks last week. Many heroes have emerged in the past few weeks, but today, you are mine.

Apparently, normal is further away than I thought

In my last post I attempted an allusion, but I royally screwed it up. Not once but twice. The word I was actually looking for was SLOUCHING. This is what I was TRYING to allude to:

Slouching Towards Bethlehem
W.B Yeats

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in the sands of the desert

A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Stumbling** towards normal* (With minor editing)

1. Note to self: a DiGiorn0 thin crust pizza comes with a very thin piece of cardboard under it. You should NOT put the pizza in the oven WITH the cardboard under it. Bad things could happen, and you are damn lucky they didn't.

2. What's all this hype about Blogger Beta? Do I want to convert? Pros and cons, please, because that little "You can't go back!" warning scares me.

3. Today is Tuesday. It's 8:29. My final paper of the semester is due next Thursday. I have most of the research and none of the writing done, and I am now on my way to bed. Pray for me. I've come too far to blow it all by not getting my paper written because I'm so worthless when I come home that I watch an hour of "Friends," eat a bunch of M&Ms, and collapse into bed wearing my glasses, a t-shirt and no pants.

4. Note to Feeny: Um, NO, the school did not purchase this magnificent laptop for me. You're funny.

5. Note to Bri: KFC's chicken/potato/cheese bowls? If Wes leaves you for eating one he can always come live with me. I have actually TURNED THE CHANNEL to avoid seeing ads for them. I can handle my food touching, but that kind of intermingling of substances is just WRONG. Sick and wrong.

6. Logic question: I usually stop at St@rbucks on Friday mornings on my way to work for a latte and a pumpkin cream cheese muffin. Tomorrow is Wednesday, but I don't have to work Thursday and Friday, so technically, tomorrow is like Friday. Therefore, shouldn't tomorrow be latte/pumpkin cream cheese muffin day? I just knew you would agree.

*Allusion, anyone?
**I meant to type "stumbling." STUMBLING Towards Normalcy.

The kindness of [people who aren't really] strangers

Friday, November 10th was not one of my better days. I had spent the week in chaotic staff meetings, at other schools, or in public places with wireless internet access, desperately trying to resume some semblance of normalcy in my professional life. It wasn't going well. I was tired, and the images of what used to be my lovely classroom (I complained, yes, but I never mentioned here that my classroom was pleasant, colorful, a happy place to go even when I wasn't happy to be in the building) kept crowding my thoughts. People kept asking me if I was enjoying my time off, or what I thought about my "new" school, or if it wasn't about time for me to have that baby. I was on the verge of something--tears, a tantrum, an ass-kicking--and I was ready for something pleasant, something unrelated to school, to occur.

It did. When I arrived home that afternoon there was a package on my front step. I was afraid I had (once again) forgotten to return the "no, I don't want anything this month" slip to my book club, but when I glanced at the return address I saw a familiar handwritten name. I sat down on the floor and opened the package eagerly. Never in my wildest dreams did I imagine how wonderful its contents could be. There were chocolate pretzels. Gum drops. Gummy things. Blue corn chips (my favorite!). Homemade cookies. There were cool magnets and a personalized t-shirt. There were fun handwritten things. There was music. Mostly there was sincere thought and a show of friendship I have been grateful for for many, many months but have never found the right words to express.

After hearing me refer to "one of my blog girls" recently, an in-real-life friend asked me if I actually knew any of the people whose blogs I read regularly, if I had ever met any of you. When I replied, "no," she asked me, "How can you say they are your friends, and how can you share so much about your personal life with complete strangers?" I think most people who do not have a support group like the one that exists here in these blogs would have the same question, but even if I attempted to explain it, they wouldn't understand. Many of you have said this more eloquently than I am about to say it, but there is definitley some connection here, some unique likeness that bonds us all together. I knew it without a doubt before, and after reading about the "convention" that occurred in NYC a few weeks ago, and after being a part of said convention even though I wasn't actually there, I knew it even more deeply. Not only have we basked in the safety of the written word, but we have also opened our "real" selves up for each other, put our faces and bodies and hearts out there for others to see. If that's not friendship I don't know what is.

So thank you, my friends--thanks for the goodies and momentos, and most of all, the thoughts and the peace you sent me. You'll never know how dramatically the course of my day shifted with the discovery of that box and all the goodness it contained.

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Out of the fire, into the frying pan

Now that I have this in my possession you'll be hearing more from me. My brain is practically exploding. Make yourselves comfortable.



I.

In 11 years as a classroom teacher, I have asked the following journal reflection question close to 70 times: "If your house was on fire and you had the chance to go back in and retrieve one item, what would you take and why?" The answers are often the same: photo albums, scrapbooks, televisions, x-boxes (remember, I teach 9th grade). But now, having watched--literally--the place where I have "lived" professionally for the last decade go up, and then down, in flames, I see the futility of attempting to answer this question.

Quickly, right now, close your eyes. Do you know what's in your desk? On it? What's hanging on your walls, resting on your book shelves, stored in your file cabinets and closets? What have you been carrying around in your purse or bag? Where are your keys? Your wallet? Your cell phone? Think about it. I'll wait.

The truth is, unless you exit the building while it is actively engulfed in flames, you really have no grasp on the possibility that you might never go back inside. You hear the fire alarm and assume you are going out for a drill, or that someone activated the alarm by mistake, and that in minutes you will be back to your daily routine. That's what you tell yourself until you actually smell and see the smoke. Then the internal monologue begins to shift. You are certain they will douse it (it looks small and contained, doesn't it?). You tell the person next to you, "The rest of the day is probably shot." When the smoke turns black and begins to billow, when threads of smoke begin pouring from the roof vents 20 feet from the actual fire, when the glass between you and the fire appears to melt like candle wax, you say aloud, "We might not be working tomorrow." When the evacuation begins and students and staff alike are being herded onto activity buses, you are silent, but inside you are trying to convince yourself that you will eventually be allowed back into the building when this is all over. You tell yourself you will start keeping your cell phone in your pocket. You try not to shake visibly.

Hours later at a friend's house, you watch on television with the rest of the general public as flames engulf the center of the building. You have given up hope of ever seeing your stuff again, and you try to block out the image of eleven years of work burning to black ash. Your car is still in the parking lot, and friends have gone back for it on your behalf. Later you'll learn that they lied their way into the parking lot and were unlocking your car doors just as the roof of the building collapsed and flames shot 100 feet into the air. You watch this happen on TV, and you are scared for them, cursing yourself for insisting that you have your car tonight.

It occurs to you that you can still check your voicemail, and you have 15 new messages. Four are from district relations, left at various times throughout the afternoon, informing you that your workplace is on fire; the rest are from worried friends and relatives telling you to call them. You want to call someone, but you can't remember any telephone numbers--they are all stored in your cell phone. You are relieved when your friends and your car return safely, and the relief you feel when you sit down behind the wheel of your own vehicle is immense. It is only then that you begin to remember certain details, like the nine-page paper that's due next week saved on the school laptop, which is sitting on your desk (that'll teach you to do things weeks ahead of time), or the jump drive containing three years of graduate work, not to mention countless digital pictures you never bothered to print. You tell yourself to focus on the task at hand--driving to Veriz0n for a new phone, since your cell is the only phone you have. Maybe they will not make you pay for a new phone. Maybe you printed a copy of that paper. Maybe your classroom is not burning after all.

In fact, it didn't. It is in one of the only parts of the building left intact, not damaged at all by the fire, maybe some water on the floor and of course, smoke, but everything inside is safe. Except for one small problem: the second floor has started to collapse and no one will be allowed in, ever again. You will be torn between relief and anger over this, and you will not sleep well for the next several nights. You will be haunted by what could have been, and you will be haunted by what is. You will not be able to stop picturing your desk, your posters and pictures, your books. You will sit glued to the television, flipping between all the local channels, watching images of your colleagues and students in front of the ubiquitous cameras. You will see your classroom window on a news broadcast, the giant Lilo and Stitch window cling you got from the movie theater still affixed to the glass. You will cry a lot, and you will feel lost, and you will, for the first time in a long time, look forward to a Monday staff meeting, the first gathering of your colleagues since the fire alarm sounded days ago.

You will not know it then, but the trouble has only just begun.

II.

It took two days for the school board to find suitable accommodations for 1,046 students, 73 teachers, and 40 cafeteria, office, and janitorial staff. At least they seemed suitable at the time. It was decided that the 11th and 12th grade students would resume classes the following Wednesday--one week after the fire--at a branch of our local community college. One week after that, the 9th and 10th graders would start the second quarter at a state-owned former school for deaf students, a campus with multiple buildings, only a few of which are currently being used by a local university. I teach 9th grade, and I was relieved to be going to a "real" school. I was present for the first day of class for juniors and seniors, and the chaos was overwhelming. Space was limited, student schedules were completely altered, the school day had been extended until 6 p.m. (students would begin their day at noon). My half of the student body surely had the better end of the deal, with only minor schedule changes and a fairly normal school day (9:15-3:55; our original day started at 8:50 and ended at 3:50).

In the days just after the fire I harbored no ill feelings toward Principal. She handled herself well, was a pillar of strength for the community, and reassured us all, through e-mail, phone calls, and news interviews, that everything would be okay. It took four days for the shine to wear off, and the return of my absolute disgust with her failings as a leader were almost comforting, so normal were they amidst the abnormality. She insisted on doing everything herself, even when there were people standing by to help her. She blatantly refused assistance with tasks she was never good at to begin with, opting instead to stay up all night and create bigger and bigger messes. By the day the juniors and seniors returned to class, she was starting meetings by telling us how much sleep she'd gotten (or not gotten), and by then we were beyond caring, because it was clear that the loss of our building was only a temporary condition. We were stuck with her for the duration.


III.

We were allowed to visit our classrooms the night before 9th and 10th graders were to resume classes. We assumed this would be an opportunity to actually set up our respective spaces, haul in the mass quantities of supplies we'd been given by the community, the school system, other schools, and the Parent/Teacher Association, and generally prepare ourselves for the arrival of our students. What were we thinking? The campus was still under renovation; workers were everywhere, furniture was being delivered, and the sounds of sawing and hammering echoed between the three buildings we were set to occupy in less than 24 hours. The superintendent was there, walking the sidewalks, halls and classrooms with Principal, stopping to make small talk with teachers and ask how we were doing. It was hard not to be honest with him, but we smiled to his face, and then we retreated to the parking lot and stood around our cars silently, trying to reconcile what we had just seen.

My classroom, which is part of what was once a large common area, has no doors and a shared ceiling. Four classrooms and a hallway were created by the installation of sheetrock; apparently, erecting the sheetrock all the way to the vaulted ceiling was against fire code. Thus, I am now attempting to conduct class in a cubicle that holds 25 people--uncomfortably. Three other teachers and I can talk with each other and never leave our desks, and the students in the room next to mine can see and have conversations with my students. There are no bells--Principal walks around the campus at class change with an air horn--and in my cube there are no windows or air vents. It is 76 degrees when I arrive, and by the final class of the day the temperature has exceeded 80.

On the bright side, there is a bathroom in my classroom, as well as a sink. We have been issued school laptops, and the network is almost up and running. The campus is beautiful, surrounded by trees and a large creek, and it is only 7 miles from my house, compared to the almost 17 I was driving before. Students and teachers alike want for nothing--books are delivered daily, supplies pour in from all over the state, and we receive constant offers of help. It is humbling to me, almost uncomfortably so, but I am grateful for the generosity. Most of all I am grateful for the one element of normalcy that not even Principal can disrupt: the students. I have most of my original students, and remarkably, we are actually going on with our school lives in spite of all that's happened. They joke with me about my "pig nose" belly button and tell me how fat I'm getting. They remember things I taught them before the fire. They ask questions, and they answer questions, and most of them do their homework. Some of them behave like humans, and some of them are jackasses, and in four days I have already sent a few to the office. This is as it was before, and as it will always be.

Yeah, a lot of things suck right now, but I'll take the frying pan over the fire any day of the week.



Next:
My "blogger convention in a box"
An update on the "stuff" in my classroom
Pregnancy updates
Cali's cool meme

Thursday, November 02, 2006

I used to work there

http://webcache.news-record.com/legacy/indepth/06/eastern_guilford/index.html

Since the laptop I've been using for all of my internet access was in my classroom, I have to resort to my antique desktop, which sometimes freezes mid-sentence. I can only take the slowness for so long, so until I have replaced the laptop my posts will be short and most likley infrequent.

So yesterday my school burned down. The fire alarm went off at 2:10, at the very end of the lunch period, and since we never have fire drills during lunch, the Jaded Me told my kids some knucklehead had pulled the alarm and we'd be back in just in time to start our last class of the day. When I saw the athletic director's frantic expression as he urged us to hurry, I should have gone back for my computer and phone, which at that time were only steps away. Who knew what the rest of the day held?

It started in a chemistry lab, which was empty at the time; the chemicals caught fire and went straight into the common attic, which was filled with junk and dust and such, and within 20 minutes the entire upstairs was ablaze. When the black smoke starting pouring out of the exhaust vents they evacuated the campus.

I am fine. My purse was in my car, although my cell phone, the aforementioned laptop, and my jump drive with 3 years of graduate work was in my classroom. According to my assistant principal, the hall where my room is located was the least damaged part of the building, and this morning after gathering what could be salvaged from the front office, the firemen went into classrooms and took whatever appeared to be a bag, briefcase or purse. There is a slight chance that my jump drive is safe in that bag somewhere. That's the good news (other than the obvious--that no one was hurt).

The bad news is that there really is no news. No one is quite sure where we will go. A decision is to be reached by tomorrow, and then we'll pick up and go on. Can anyone say "surreal"?