Thursday, February 28, 2019

February Book Report: Amy Snow



I sandwiched in this book between the first novel in the  Ingrid Undset Kristin Lavransdutter series and Amitov Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies, both of which are serious books.  They are satisfying in their own ways but neither were light (to read or to carry!) and for this reason, Amy Snow was a most welcome and delightful read.

Tracy Rees’s novel is set in early Victorian England and is a commentary on class and gender within the story of an orphaned young woman, Amy, discovering herself after the death of her only companion, Aurelia.  Tasked by Aurelia with saving a mystery of sorts after her passing, a sad and lonely Amy summons her courage to do just that.

The reader joins Amy as she unravels Aurelia’s mystery and makes plans for her own future.  Amy finds unexpected kindness in her travels; the sorts of kindness that make a reader like humanity.  This happy story was a welcome respite from the daily news in Trump’s America and I enjoyed every page of this book.

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

American History


As Black History Month comes to a close, my students and I are taking up the story of slavery in antebellum America.  We started talking about the stories of Africans in America when we studied Jamestown; this group knows why the date 1619 matters.  We talk a lot about black history in my class, which covers the period from 1609 to 1850.  We don’t only speak of enslaved Africans in America, though the stories are obviously prominent.  My goal is to ensure that these 7th graders always know that black history is American history. 

Though we’d prefer to ignore it, slavery is a prominent part of the American story.  When I teach my students about the history of slavery, I show them that damage can be inflicted more quickly than a cure can correct it.  So I point out that the North American English colonies began enslaving people in 1619, protected the continuation of slavery when the Constitution was adopted, and didn’t officially make slavery illegal until 1865.  Those years were followed by systemic racism in the form of segregation and denial of rights; a condition that lasted until at least 1964, with the passage of the Civil Rights Act.  Even that date is a generous “end” date for the legal practice of slavery and segregation of blacks in America.  But if we use it, we’re talking about more than 350 years of time spent inflicting a wound.  

In this generous definition, we’ve only “officially”ended legalized racism for 55 years.  And I note that this is generous.  The Black Lives Matter movement of the last decade didn’t occur in a vacuum; it’s a response to the systemic racism that continues to exist in the United States.  From the incarceration rate of African Americans to the modern segregation of American schools and the maternal and infant mortality rates of African Americans mamas and their babies, the inequality that first came to our shores in 1619 persists today.

It will take much more work for us to recover from it.  We can only make progress if we are truthful with ourselves.  As Bryan Stevenson reminds us, “The great evil of American slavery wasn’t involuntary servitude: It was the ideology of white supremacy, in which people persuaded themselves that black people aren’t fully human.” We would do well to remember it every time we consider our nation’s history.  

Monday, February 25, 2019

Blustery Day


The wind came up around here last night.  I can hear it blowing against the house this morning and I know that when I step outside, I will feel it.  A windy day in the company of energetic school children is a lot to ask on most days but especially a cold Monday in late February, when Spring Break still feels miles away and Spring blooms even further in the distance.  

I’ll be glad to welcome March later this week, if only for its proximity to longer days days and April.  I’m closing in on my unilateral declaration of Spring and have a few cozy pastel sweaters at hand to help me maintain the illusion of warmth when that day arrives..

But today there is a gale outside and it is emphatically wool and tights weather.  Tomorrow is likely to be the same.  I remind myself that it won’t last; that Spring is on the horizon and hope that patience and a Winter coat will keep me warm.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

This Will Pass


This afternoon as I was walking into a store, a mother and her middle-school aged daughter were leaving.  Their faces were lined with stress and they were clearly unhappy with one another and as they walked past me, I heard the mother say,”I know you are frustrated but you don’t get to speak to me that way.”

I know exactly how both of them felt in that moment; middle school is often a hard age for kids and parents alike and I could well-imagine the tone the daughter had used toward her mother; you could certainly hear mom’s frustration in her voice.  At the same time, I know well the feeling of being 12 or 13 and wanting to be taken seriously and be heard even as wild and inexplicable emotions spin their way through one’s heartland mind.

I wish I could have stopped them and said, “this will pass.”  To the daughter I would say, “she loves you unconditionally even when you don’t feel it.  Take a deep breath and try to be patient.”  To the mother I would say, “she’ll be out of your house and away at college in less than six years.  I know it seems like a lifetime away but it’s not.  Tread lightly; she needs you now more than it seems.”

I didn’t say any of this because I live in New Jersey and no one at the door of Michael’s Craft Store on a blustery Sunday is looking for unsolicited advice from anyone, let alone a stranger.  But I’ve thought of that mother and daughter all afternoon and I hope they found their way forward together today and for the next few years.  

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Snow Day


This week and last, Mother Nature delivered snowstorms with nearly perfect timing and so last Tuesday and again today I have enjoyed a snow day.  


A snow day is always appreciated and neither storm brought a boatload of snow so I’ve no complaints.  As I went outside to shovel this afternoon, I was struck again by the beauty of snow, which still seems exotic to this California native.  When snow is freshly fallen, everything glimmers fresh and lovely.


Today’s snow was light and easily shoveled; tomorrow’s forecast promises temperatures in the 40s and sunlight.  Winter is beginning to yield to Spring sunlight and blooms.  But today was lovely to behold.  That’s happy!



Tuesday, February 19, 2019

28 Days


Without fail, this point in February finds me staring at my calendar wondering when I can reasonably abandon the wearing of Winter tights, heavy coats, wool sweaters, scarves, and mittens.  In November and December, I love these clothing items and gather them near with pleasure.  In January, I tolerate them out of their obvious utility.  But in February, my resentment builds.  Far earlier than makes any sense, I begin to contemplate abandonment of my cold weather clothing.

A reasonable woman would check out the weather forecast and refuse to set aside her Winter clothing until daytime temperatures are reliably in the 60s.  I am not that woman.  Without fail, I will declare an arbitrary end to the Winter clothing season.  I can usually wait until March for my unilateral declaration of Spring but there are no guarantees.

I’m no longer bemused by the prospect of snow in the forecast because snow will make flip flops seems like a foolish footwear choice.  I’ve begun too long for pastel sweaters and scarves, which I believe March will warrant.  I’m busily counting the remaining days of tights and heavy, dark Winter coats.  As usual, my imagination is untethered by reality.  One hopes my pride will keep me warm.  

Monday, February 18, 2019

On Presidents and Leadership


I have to confess that in the last two years the Presidents Day holiday has been more important to me than ever before.  It has nothing to do with the necessity for a relaxing three-day weekend (though that’s awfully nice) and has everything to do with the ignorant Cheetoh we (or the Russians) have installed in the White House.

For all the imperfections of our past presidents, and there are many, there are also moments when our leaders have helped us to rise above our human frailties.  I teach many of them and on a day like today, so many examples come to mind.  There is Jefferson’s 1801 Inaugural address when he acknowledges the bruising partisan divide of the 1800 election and reminds the nation that we can “unite with one heart and one mind…(and)…restore to social intercourse that harmony and affection without which liberty, and even life itself, are but dreary things.”  That Jefferson is able to bring that unity is important, both to the people in his day and to us now.

I look to the words and deeds of Abraham Lincoln in his 1861 Inaugural address, the one that famously closes with a powerful request to his fellow citizens, “I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”  Despite Lincoln’s call for unity, a civil war would ultimately follow.  But even during that most bloody of conflicts, Lincoln urged us to heed our better angels as the only way forward.  In his second Inaugural address, he asked the nation to both finish the war and look forward to being truly unified.  He closed that address with powerful words,  “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations."

I know by heart the words of Franklin Roosevelt as he opens his 1933 Inaugural speech by reminding us that “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself” and then closes with a powerful promise that, “For the trust reposed in me I will return the courage and the devotion that befit the time. I can do no less. We face the arduous days that lie before us in the warm courage of the national unity; with the clear consciousness of seeking old and precious moral values; with the clean satisfaction that comes from the stem performance of duty by old and young alike. We aim at the assurance of a rounded and permanent national life.  We do not distrust the future of essential democracy.”  FDR wasn’t perfect but he preserved democracy in our nation and in the world; he did it while he asked us to be better.

This history matters; it must matter.  For every failing leader we have had (and Trump is not alone here), we have had leaders who have inspired us to be better.   We can be better.  On this Presidents' Day, at this moment in historical time, I need to believe in that more than ever.  

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Birthday Thoughts


19 years ago today, JT was born.  He was born just after midnight after a tiring 3 days and so I slept a bit after his birth.  I remember waking up later that morning and holding and rocking him for most of the day, utterly charmed by this 7 pound wonder who had made me a mama.

That day, I sang to him and talked to him about all the lovely things we would share in the world: stories and books, trips to the park, laughter, and celebrations big and small.  I remember marveling with wonder at his dark, shining eyes and wondering about who he would become.


I thought of that on Saturday as T and I watched JT in his final 3k race of his first indoor track season for Springfield College.  His goal was to beat his best time (a 9:38 run earlier in the season).  He took off strong and as the laps flew by, T and I traded stories about the many races we’ve watched JT run.  We laughed about the fact that these days we are a far cry from the races we watched where JT rolled across the finish line talking non-stop with the other end-of-the-race runners.  We remembered the runs on vacation between his Sophomore and Junior year when something sparked and he became an impassioned runner.  We’ve always cheered as he crosses the finish line and yesterday was no different, as we scanned the results to see his final time and realized he’d bested his day’s goal, with a final time of 9:23.  He was thrilled and so were we!


I am his mother and I think that he looks to me for guidance and unbounded love, which of course he has.  It’s been a wonder and a marvel to watch JT grow up. I am proud of the young man he’s become and I look forward to cheering him on for many years to come.  On this day, I can’t help but remember that his arrival all those years ago forever changed who I am and made me so very grateful to the universe that brought this boy to me.

Happy Birthday, JT.  Fly high and run far, sweet boy.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Amaryllis Report Week 7: February 14


Over the past weekend, my amaryllis bulb finished its work and has opened up with four splendid blooms.


It’s lovely and the flowers will carry me through a few more cold weeks.  In the meantime, I’ve spotted the first of the daffodil shoots peeking through the soil.  The pretty flowers and that bit of green are hopeful signs that Spring will be here soon enough.

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

The Industrious Snow Day


Yesterday, we had the day off for the sort of snowstorm that was perfect because of its timing.  This storm brought snow, ice, and sleet but not in abundance and temperatures slipped back over freezing overnight so that today’s morning’s drive won’t be horrible.  A Tuesday holiday makes for a shorter week and I was determined to both get things done and enjoy my day off.  Over morning coffee, I made a to-do list and then got after it.  I started a load of laundry and did some schoolwork.  I  completed my taxes (and shook my fist at Donald Trump, whose tax cut didn’t help me a bit).  Then I took a break, made a cup of tea, and settled in with the cats to read my book for a bit.


I baked some shortbread and made a few treat packets to give away.


I worked on the paper craft flowers that will be my March front door wreath and now I am ready to assemble the wreath.


I took after my nightstand and the tiny drawer therein, which has become completely crammed over the years.  First, I emptied the drawer onto a towel on my bed and marveled at the amount of book marks, paper, pens, and safety pins one woman can toss in a drawer.  Below is a picture of the empty drawer.


And here is the heap I had stuffed in it.


As the heap thinned, I found some treasures.  These pictures of two year old JT were charming.


I also found my grandfather’s pocket tape measure.  I suspected it was in the drawer and finding it was a treat.


After throwing out the trash, I sorted out the treasures that remained, decided which ones spark joy (I know that idea sounds silly, but it really works), and then neatly returned those items to the nightstand and the drawer..



Like all of the other Marie Kondo-inspired clean-ups I’ve made, this one is lovely because it will make my daily life nicer.  

I wrapped up the day by making a pot of red lentil soup which was warm and spicy; a perfect bowl for a cold day.  This recipe is a keeper, both because it’s easy to make and because it’s delicious.


It was nice to have some time to catch up and relax in equal measure.  This morning, I head to school refreshed and with a much shorter to-do list.  That’s good news!

Monday, February 11, 2019

Valentine Crafts


I enjoy paper crafts and the kits at Paper Source are just my speed.  The patterns and colors are splendid and the kits are comprehensive so that projects come together nicely.  I enjoyed making these mermaid and pirate valentines.



I don't have a need to hand out loads of Valentines so this kit will last me a while.  That’s happy!

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Going All Marie Kondo Up in Here


Like everyone else, I watched the Marie Kondo episodes on Netflix, consoled myself that my mess wasn’t that bad, and then and promptly got to work on said messes.  I like things tidy but I’m prone to letting little messes pile up.  When the clean up spirit strikes me, I’m more prone to a “burn it down” approach than a “spark joy” approach.  As I sort through things that I never should have kept around, I grow more and more horrified and then it all goes in a trash bag.  This is not always a good idea and so the Kondo method of being mindful about the items in my house appealed to me.  It also gave me permission to organize my things without judging myself.  And on that basis, T and I got to work.  There are no before pictures because they were too horrifying, so all we’ve got are after pictures.  But it’s quite an after, if I do say so myself.  The linen closet is pleasing every time we open the door, which we sometimes do just to be pleased with how it looks.


The cloth napkin drawer is now lovely and useful.


The kitchen towel and dishrag drawer got a clean-out and tidy-up.


Though neither are on Marie Kondo’s radar on her Netflix episodes, the fridge and freezer got a much-needed massive clean-out and tidying as well.  Shout out here to my sister, whose fridge is always this fucking clean.



The nice thing about completing these chores is that they add pleasure to daily life, reducing the amount of time I spend pawing around like a raccoon in a dumpster looking for the item I need (and loathing myself for being unable to locate it).

That sparks joy!

Friday, February 08, 2019

Working It Out


For years now, since before JT was born, I’ve had a commitment to working out.  I lift weights, I walk, and and I run on an elliptical machine.  I do other things from time to time but the elliptical has been my go-to activity for years.  I’ve made time for working out because of the payoff I experience: I sleep better, I like my body more, I have more energy and strength to do all the other activities that make my life happy.

Since I took the administrative and teaching job I now have, one I started on the eve of JT’s entry into some very busy high school years, it’s sometimes been hard to find the time to work out.  This year, with JT in college and less immediate demands on my time, I’ve gotten back into a consistent work out routine.  Even when I am tempted to curl up with a cat on my lap and a good book, on workout days I come home, change clothes, and turn right around to leave for the gym.

While I run, I work out the leavings and half-finished thoughts in my mind.  I find myself able to solve problems that have stymied me; write sentences or ideas that will pay off down the line; and generally feel better.  Some workouts are easier than others; some days it’s more of a struggle than I would like.  But the payoff is always the same and I’m grateful for that every single time.

Thursday, February 07, 2019

Amaryllis Report Week 6: February 7


It was a busy week for the amaryllis and it looks like a deep red flower is coming my way soon.


I first had an amaryllis in 2000, the year that JT was born.  That winter, as I waited for my baby, I watched the amaryllis grow and daydreamed about my growing baby.  I recall that the flower had bloomed by the time I went the hospital to have my son.  This year’s amaryllis is on schedule to do the same.  JT’s 19th birthday is next week; T and I will drive north to take him out for his birthday and I will wonder at how quickly my baby grew up.


There is something about traditions like this that I especially enjoy.  This year’s amaryllis is surrounded by other plants, all of them soaking in the Winter sunlight and making my day brighter for it.

Monday, February 04, 2019

Front Porch in February


After a patch of cold that closed out January, the first full week of February is looking to be warmer than usual.  Yesterday, sunshine and milder air were the rule of the day.   The driveway ice patch melted and I went out to the porch to set out February decorations.  There is a heart wreath with a polka dot ribbon.


The flag has some Valentine cheer.


Zip, the cast iron front porch squirrel, is doling out advice for the squirrels that try to break into the bird feeder out back.


February's calendar is already awfully full.  As the days grow steadily longer, I’m looking forward to more light in the evenings when I come home.  That’s happy!

Sunday, February 03, 2019

Run, JT, Run



Running is not a sport that welcomes an off season and so JT trains all year.  This Winter, he’s getting his first chance to run indoor track.  Cross country remains his first love but he’s enjoying the indoor season.  On Saturday, T and I made the trek to Connecticut to see indoor track for ourselves.  For this meet, he was running a 5k.


That’s 25 laps around the track, with plenty of turns to keep one’s attention focused.  T and I cheered and made pictures.  After the race, we brought the boy and his roommate breakfast sandwiches and iced coffee.  It was happy to see him and catch up and now we have a new running sport to cheer on.



Friday, February 01, 2019

February 1: Fairy Garden


I’d like to write that I stood outside this morning and carefully made a picture of the fairy garden spot while it continues its Winter rest.  But it was 7 degrees at dawn today and while that is admittedly warmer than yesterday’s 2 degrees at sunrise, I wasn’t feeling brave enough to snap the perfect photo.  We’re at the point of Winter where I pile on a scarf, hat, and thick mittens before I brave the outdoors.   So I snapped a quick pic from the back deck and then quickly scampered back inside the warm house.


The fairies are plenty glad to be in warmer climes as we enter Winter’s last full month.  It will be a while before this patch of the garden will warm up enough to receive them.  In the meantime, the bird feeder has been a pleasing addition, as much for the amusement of watching the squirrels attempt to dine there as for the birds (especially the neighborhood cardinals) who sometimes show up.  The days are steadily getting longer; sunlight is forecast for today; the weekend promises a temperature just over freezing.  I’ll take it!