Monday, January 31, 2022

30. The Web of Trust

 #66Challenge

 


 

Last week, in preparation for a story we will be reading, I had the kids sign up to define and write sentences for 2 out of the 12 words that will be in the story. Usually we just do them together as a class, but instead I made this a mission with "mission commanders" for each set of words. They had 8 minutes to get their definitions and sample sentences together.

The next step was a treasure hunt. They needed to take their workshop books and go to other learners and get the words they did not have. I figured this would be a good way to let them walk around, talk, have a bit more engagement.

And it worked...mostly.

During 3rd period, a learner had just finished gathering a couple of words, and he looked up at me and said, "Miss, I hate this."  

 I said, "You aren't enjoying the activity?" 

And he said, "No, I kind of love it. I have a love/hate relationship with it."

During 5th period, an exasperated girl looked at me and said, "I'm tired of these kids."

9th went fine. There was one boy who is new to the class who would not participate. He indicated he didn't like the kids in the class.

But it was 11th that really caught my attention. When it came time to go on the treasure hunt, the response was not immediate. Learners were looking all the words up themselves rather than go to another table and retrieve the definitions. Others, who wanted to do it, were reluctant to approach certain people for the answers. It was totally hit or miss -- some kids participating fully, some kids on the edge, and some kids just doing all the work themselves. 

I was not happy at all with what I witnessed, even as understood some of the dynamics at play.

Over the weekend, Parker Palmer (the author of The Courage to Teach) sent out a list of podcasts he was recently on. I found one on "Relational Trust" and listened. The host was Nat Damon, and educator who has a book called Time to Teacher, Time to Reach, and he has a podcast called "Reach, Teach, Talk."  The discussion they had helped me see that there is a gap in relational trust in the classroom. I am aware of some of the reasons for this, but I have also done little to repair it. I feel like I just recently got a handle on how to teach the curriculum in a way that works for all, so the relationship building has gotten short shrift.  

The classroom is a delicate web, and I am actively looking for ways to help it be stronger for the benefit of all. I know I cannot repair a lot of the issues middle-schoolers have with each other...that just goes with the territory. But I think there may be a few small fixes that will help.

I've ordered Damon's book, and will take it from there. Meanwhile, I'm going to continue to implement some of my most engaging practices and do my best to enjoy each day. My learners deserve no less.


 

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Lovely Days (7 Lines/7 Days #89)

 #108Weeks

January 23-29, 2022

 


 

A visit to Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary got the week off to a good start.

I'm beginning to understand that the underlying feeling in everything these days is grief.

Daily WORDLE is so much fun!

I wrote a referral on a disrupting student, only later to find out his family is currently living in their car. :-(

I've suddenly become a big Bill Withers fan.

Pulling out a lot of favorite activities in class I haven't used in ages. This is the best I've felt in 2 years.

It was a good week. :-)

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Corkscrew Haiku

 


The anhinga fluffs
 and puffs himself up to stay
warm on a Sunday morn



The strangler fig grows
down the center of a tree
creative living



Beauty berries grow
Mini bunches on a stalk
Purple color blast


Who cannot smile when
you are in the Swamp with friends
enjoying the day?

Saturday, January 22, 2022

BREATHE (7 Lines, 7 Days #88)

 #108Weeks

January 16-22, 2022



Best movie in a long time: The Tender Bar.

Real laughter is the best way to breathe (Thanks, Natalie).

Everything out of order with my classes is mind-boggling. Glad they’re now back on track.

And reading out loud to them is so fulfilling!

Thich Nhat Hanh, who taught me so much about BREATHING, has left the planet. His teachings will never die, as they are vital to our existence.

Happy surprise when a few changes made one class take off— and on a Friday, no less!

Every morning Wordle gives me a great challenge. Love it!




Sunday, January 16, 2022

29. Window, Mirror, Sliding Glass Door

 #66Challenge




As a reading teacher, I'm often put directly in touch with something I teach to my students. Anytime I  choose a book or come across a piece of writing that rings true for me, I think of my young readers and wonder how I can make those kinds of experiences real for them. Of course, it is a bit of an impossible task as it is totally experiential and up to the individual. Still, I look to at least introduce the idea of reading as a way to change and grow.

In recent years, the idea of books being a window, a mirror, or a sliding glass door has come into vogue. The simple explanation is that books can provide a window into another life unlike your own. A mirror is when the text reflects you back to yourself. And the sliding glass door is when you are able to practically walk inside the book and be there. This is a concept I haven't spent much time talking about with my readers, mostly because I haven't put enough thought into how to explain it and provide examples.

Saturday provided with all I need.

Window

Jim and I attended our jam session at Guitar Studio, 30 minutes we spend each week with a teacher playing a song together. This past weekend it was "Friend of the Devil," a slowed-down version in which I was learning how to do some improvisation on my mandolin.

While getting my scales and tremolo picking right, I was reminded of a memoir I recently read by Emma Johns called Wayfaring Stranger: A Musical Journey in the American South. Emma finds herself in Boone, North Carolina, far from her London home, with the intent to learn how to play bluegrass music. She is a trained classical violinist, and the improvisation and speed and lack of solid structure in the genre befuddles her throughout most of the book. 

But then she has an epiphany. She suddenly realizes that she was trying to make something up on the fly, thinking that was the meaning of improvisation. It finally gets through to her that musicians teach themselves all kinds of riffs and runs they practice over and over again so when it comes time to improvise, they have something to work with. Then they can scat off of that, as well as play of other musicians. This was a huge revelation to her, and changed everything about her experience. She went on to win a fiddle competition.

While at our session, I felt like Emma must have felt, as my teacher guided me in how to create these types of runs, to make them work for me, to help me find my voice with the instrument. I am not sure I would have gotten the joy I got out of the session if I hadn't been thinking of what I read in Emma's book. It seemed like it was a piece I needed to help me connect to what Tom was asking me to do.

A window into an English fiddler's life gave me something new to get excited about. It has changed how I see my relationship to my instrument. Most importantly, I actually see myself picking up my mandolin between sessions, something I haven't bothered to do much. I've been inspired!

Mirror

Before the music session, I read the first (and title poem) of Richard Blanco's poetry collection "Looking for the Gulf Motel." At first I was confused, as the opening line is:

There should be nothing here I don't remember.

I kept reading and learned that Richard was talking about family vacations taken at Marco Island, the poem full of details of the motel and the items they brought along and the activities they participated in. He was describing a Marco Island of the late 70s, early 80s.

Then the poem shifts as he explains that on a return to Marco Island years later, there is nothing there he remembers -- most significantly, the Gulf Motel. And suddenly the repeating line There should be nothing here I don't remember was about the consequence of change. His sadness about not being able to revisit his childhood was palatable.

And I knew what he was feeling, since this mirrored my own experience with Marco Island. Jim and I spent one night there in December 1989 when we attended conference for the direct mail marketing franchise I owned. We were already making a trip to Florida to see family and spend some time in the Everglades, and made a quick trip to Marco for the opening night of the conference. We stayed at the Radisson, and that evening a group of us went to the Olde Marco Island Inn, a historic Victorian-style inn which was the place to visit on Marco, according to people I knew at the conference. We had a wonderful dinner, lots of laughs, and made great memories.

The next day we left, and I remember a storm was brewing as we drove from the beach back to Tamiami Trail to make our way to the Everglades. I remember the wild lands of Marco, the views of the beach, and so much more. Sadly, I didn't take any pictures, but it was clear in my head.

In 2000, after I moved to Fort Myers, I decided it was time to revisit Marco Island. I was excited to return, and was not prepared for what I encountered.

Concrete. Lots of and lots of concrete. Homes. Shopping centers. High rises. No view of the beaches at all. No wild lands.

I stopped at the visitor's center and asked if there was a nature park or some kind of preserve to visit. The answer was no--just a fitness trail. I asked for a restaurant on the beach I could visit for lunch. I was directed to the only one they could advise: at a marina. They also told me I could go to the end of the island and perhaps spot some dolphins.

I drove around, sad and a bit disgusted at what I was seeing. The Radisson was still there, looking a bit shabby next to all the new places. It took a while, but I finally figured out I couldn't find the Olde Marco Inn because it was now totally surrounded by high rises, the lovely building sitting squat in the middle of concrete towers. 

It was sickening.

Richard's poem provided a mirror to my own experience, my own disappointment. The best I could do after lunch and an unsuccessful dolphin watch, was to stop at a bookstore. I don't even think I bought anything. 

The experience and poetry of a gay Cuban man gave my experience validity. And it made me sad for both of us -- that the island didn't hold its charm in some way, didn't know what it had, didn't know what we know: There should always be something left we can remember.

Sliding Glass Door

Saturday evening I opened up a newly published Jason Reynold's book called Ain't Burned Out All the Bright. This is a book written in a unique fashion. Jason Reynolds wrote the text in what he calls "3 Breaths," and Jason Griffin did the mostly abstract art. 

So it begins, and we're taken into the narrator's home, a worry wart of a child (never gender defined or named) during the 2020 COVID shutdown and protests. We do know from the artwork this is a black family, each struggling in their own way with the way things are happening (and not happening) around them. My immediate feeling was that this probably gives me a window into what some of my own learners experienced during the lockdown: remote or sick parents and perhaps siblings who weren't handling the situation in healthy ways. Fair enough.

But sometime during the 2nd Breath, the text spoke to me so loudly, I couldn't turn the page. The words spoke so deeply to my own personal experience as a 19-year-old in a family who had just lost its youngest member, that it was like a bomb dropped inside me. I suddenly walked through that sliding glass door and was the narrator. I knew exactly what they were feeling. The events and the time frame was totally different, but the experience was identical. We were all, in a word, suffocating.

I cannot remember when something hit me this hard. I don't know how long I stared at that page while my solar plexus did a dance of remembrance, and little pieces of emotion exploded, tears dripped down my face. Even at this writing, I'm still reeling from the intensity.

It was another reminder of how layers of grief remain hidden, and unresolved issues are always seeking resolution. It took a black writer and a white male artist to collaborate in a way that spoke to this 66-year-old woman, and to the young person she used to be. And not only that, they gave healing advice, something I will find useful in my everyday life. Jason and Jason did not leave me without something to hold on to.

 *

In one day alone, I found new perspective, new growth, and a healing force from people I have never met, but somehow seem to know me. This is the power of reading to change us. Because in some small but significant ways, this has added to my life by increasing my empathy, making me feel connected to others, and perhaps, in the final analysis, will help my reading students, too.

And for that, well, there isn't enough gratitude in the world.




Saturday, January 15, 2022

Godspeed, Doug (7 Lines, 7 Days #87)

#108 Weeks

 January 9-15, 2022

Enjoyed reading Wayfaring Stranger by Emma Johns, as it took me to a part of the country I know and love so well.

My walk at the Slough was awesome. It felt good to be there. And I got a good piece of writing out of it. 

Received news that Doug is in hospice.

School resumed on Wednesday with many new students. Starting over.

Doug transitioned about 3:30 am Thursday morning.

Had success in the classroom with some new things I tried.

I got a kick out of photos Doug’s middle school girlfriend posted from their 8th grade year. So 70s! So fun! Godspeed, Doug.  Love you. 



Sunday, January 9, 2022

Between the Branches

 [Note: Sunday morning I arrived at Six Mile Cypress Slough, read David Whyte’s poem “The Thicket,” walked and meditated and took photos, wrote this, and then added quotes from Whyte’s poem in italics.]


I took my meditation to the slough…

free and observant

Contemplated the nature of all things being evolutionary and revolutionary…

surveying the tiny stages and the curtained dramas

Such as the Spanish moss hanging from tree branches…


 every further stage of vision leading me back to smaller and smaller worlds

The Pilated Woodpecker busy on his branch, finding breakfast, preening himself…


Always two realities…action or non-action.

never leave the branching world...a kind of enclosed womb-like eternity

What changes things?

Ideas. Curiosity. Faith.

The trees are both able to be touched and observed in a watery mirror.


Is the reflection telling the truth? 

searching between the branches... the knowledge of some immanence

When it was time to leave, the sun in the Cypress pond lit the way…


 

brought clarity to silence, set me to grow

Heart lifted. Exhilarated. A quiet mind.

Taking all the necessary actions

To meet the revolution.




Saturday, January 8, 2022

Quotes That Keep Me Going (7 Lines/7 Days #86)

#108Weeks

January 3-8, 2022

From Kara Vereen


Will you lose your balance?
Will you stumble and fall?
Don't give up
You have a reason to carry on
Lucinda Williams
 
 
Literacy is power.
Kylene Beers
 
 
One energy connects us all,
linking us soul to soul and heart to heart
Julia Cameron
 
 
All I've got to do is to love you
All I have to be is be happy
All it's got to take is some warmth to make it
Blow away, blow away, blow away
George Harrison 
 
 
I am alert to the good in every moment.
Julia Cameron
 
 
You can't just love your country when you win.
Joe Biden 


Beneath the turbulence of daily living, there is a longer, slower pulse of perfect timing
It is to that rhythm I give my soul.
Julia Cameron


 



Saturday, January 1, 2022

2021 Year in Review in Photos


The year of 2021 seemed rather mild in general, with a few hiccups and a couple of epic trips in the summer. Here is my Year in Review


Something New I Tried--Brew Dogs

When I arrived in Columbus, I knew one of our first stops would be Brew Dogs, a place I had been hearing about for a couple of years. It is an incredible brewery with restaurant, outdoor seating area, a nature walk, and a dog friendly hotel. It was the first of many adventures that week.

With Paul and Margie
 
Feeling Connected: Van Gogh Experience and Six Mile Slough
 
The pandemic was still raging with vaccines still not plentiful when I spent a couple of incredible days with friends. In February, it was a Saturday at Six Mile Cypress Slough with Laurie and Annmarie, followed by lunch at Mellow Mushroom. In March it was the Van Gogh Experience (art and music) with friends Amy and Kara. Since the exhibit was at the Dali Museum, we walked through the streets of St. Pete to find a place for lunch. Both of these days lifted my spirits during the trying times of a tough school year and health concerns, by connecting me to all the things I love most: friends, food, music, art, and nature.
 
 
Laurie, Annmarie, and me


With Amy and Kara at Dali Museum

 

 

Makes Me Smile -- Mom and John in Metroparks

This year we received the news that my 89-year-old mother has advanced Alzheimers. So you can imagine my delight when my brother John sent this beautiful picture of my mother at an overlook in the Rocky River Reservation. It is obvious the drive through nature was uplifting to her, since this is the best photo I've seen of her in a while.






Feeling Proud -- Ricky and his JCU Friends

My nephew Ricky headed off to college in the fall with $40 in his pocket I gave him with instructions that when he made friends at John Carroll University, he was to treat them. I was delighted when he texted me this photo of his friends enjoying ice cream on me!


 

 

Highlight of the Year -- Cookout in Westerville

What a wonderful evening at John and Gail's home--great food and the chance to see my niece Emily and her fabulous family. As a bonus I also got to spend time with my cousin Rick from Virginia, and my cousin Mark and his wife Kristen. It was a blast watching the kids play with the toys I got them, catching up with everyone, and just feeling relaxed on a beautiful Ohio evening.

 

With Paxton, Aiden, Lexi, Kaylee, & Margie

With the incredible Emily

John, me, Rick, Margie, & Mark

 

Meaningful Moment -- Ashlynn's First Day Back in My Class

I have long contended that reading a book together in the classroom is one of the most powerful experiences a student can have. More than once I have had students return their memories to me about books we read. I was thrilled and delighted when it happened again this year. Two years ago when I taught advanced 6th graders, we read The Bridge Home. This year, on the first day of class with 8th grade advanced students, Ashlynn walked in and the first words out of her mouth were, "Ms. Sadler, do you remember that book we read in 6th grade? That was so good! It is still my favorite book."  It doesn't get any better than that for a reading teacher!


Moment with Loved One -- Grand Ole Opry July 22

Nashville and the Grand Ole Opry have held great meaning for us since we first visited in 2013. After Jim's stroke, and then the pandemic hitting, I didn't know if we would ever be able to attend the Opry again. Our desire to get back there remain stoked as the Opry broadcasted live, even to an empty house, to keep the circle unbroken (as they say) during the shutdown. It made us long for the day we could return. In May I decided to map out a trip, even though it felt risky. But Jim agreed we should try, and in July we were on our way to Nashville. It was not an easy trip by any means, and our plans to meet John and Gail for dinner before the show got pretty messed up. But Jim had sprung for some of the best seats in the house and let me tell you, it really made a difference. From Connie Smith to Larry Gatlin to Lauren Alaina, we felt part of the music more than ever (and this was our 5th visit.)  When I think of this year, it is truly a night I remember most. Before the show someone sitting near us took this photo, and I'm so glad she did. To me it represents so many moments: making the risky decision to travel, pursuing our dream, and being somewhere I love with someone I love. It made everything that a came beforehand feel small in comparison.


2021 Wrap-Up (7 Lines/7 Days #85)

 


#108Weeks

 

December 26, 2021 - January 1, 2022
 

As I did last year, I'm including my musings on some favorites of the year, and my focus for the coming year.

I’ve had a wonderful final week of the year, full of time with friends and setting the best direction for myself. This time has been healing.
 
I’ve heard this quote a million times, but this week it hit me deep inside as a message I need to embrace: “You must do the thing you think you cannot do.” (Eleanor Roosevelt)
 
My favorite books published in 2021: The Lost Apothecary and Ground Zero
 
My favorite albums released in 2021: Blessings and Miracles by Santana; Wary + Strange by Amythyst Kiah; and Renewal by Billy Strings.
 
My word for 2022 is FAITH.  My guiding concept is WILD JOY. My question is WHO BENEFITS?
 
My motivational song for the new year is "Blow Away" by George Harrison
 
My Native American Medicine for 2022 is Dog which stands for Loyalty, Service, and Remaining True to My Personal Truth.

Perfect! 😊

 

 


 

Around and Around We Go

 It is Thursday, and my first thought is Why is the summer going so fast? My second is How will I ever get everything accomplished I need to...