8/52 Keep Writing?
After being away for three months, I am trying to find my life again. What parts should I keep? Do I want to keep? What parts should be updated?
One thing that I am trying to keep is my promise to write. I had pledged to write one essay a week for the year. It started so well. Every Saturday, boom. I had a deadline. I had the motivation. I had a special writing spot where I could hunker down and ideas just popped up each week drawing words out of me. When I was still writing after the first month, I was excited. I was sure my writing would start to improve. It would capture my thoughts. By the end of the year, I would have a literary portrait of myself. I was confident and sure of my resolve.
Then I left the country.
I thought the solitude of living alone would be conducive for writing. I thought the nights alone would give me the time to play with language, to illuminate my deepest thoughts. I didn’t realize that my hunkering spot was so important so I set out to find a new one. The kitchen table seemed ideal since that is where I work at home. But no, even though it glowed in the morning sun, and glimmered in the setting sun, there always seemed to be other things to do. I tried to work in the bedroom, but there was no desk. Eventually, I hauled a kitchen chair into the room and used the bed as a desk. That was minimally successful. I did get ideas popping onto the paper, but they never developed past the first few lines. Maybe it was more than a hunkering place that I was missing. Maybe I lost the essence of myself, my American self. Now I was back in the land of my childhood. I could walk the beach, visit with family, or hold my grandbaby. I could go walking with friends from high school. People knew me, but they didn’t know me and I didn’t know them. Oh, I know their names and their histories, but I never had the luxury of walking with them through their lives. At least, thirty years of American life had intervened. Yet we were family. We were friends. While small details of my life were unknown, our friendships started up as though no time had passed. So then I thought I would find my other self. Still there was no writing.
Then my mom went to hospital.
The solitude was gone. The long nights alone gave way to exhausting evenings sitting in a ward watching and waiting. There was plenty of time to think, but the thinking was about childhood. My mother wanted things to be her way. She wanted me to be her child. She wanted to be my mother. My siblings spent more time together than they had ever done. I am fourteen years older than my youngest sister. When I left home at 18, I devoured a new world. I started my own family. Most of my siblings were left in the old world where they grew up and started their own families. But now we were together, we hae one mission. We need to stand by our mother. My high school friends also stepped in, giving me respite, giving me advice and walks in the dark. I found my old life there and it grew and developed. I spent hours thinking about what to write, about my life, about my mother, about what to write.
Then I came home.
After being away for three months, I am trying to find my life again. Maybe I did find my life. Maybe my life is the sum of its parts. I may leave portions behind, but they are still there. They can delight or haunt me, they can support me or devastate. Writing will surely help to sort this out.
7/52 Immigrants
Yesterday, I marched with immigrants. I don’t think I marched for myself. I marched for those who could not march.
I am an immigrant and so is my second son. But I have papers and so does my son. That makes a difference. I don’t think I did much to earn the honor of receiving papers. It just happened. We were lucky. Two of my other children were immigrants, but they chose to return home. The life of an immigrant was not for them. The call of home, of identity, was too strong.
My grandmother was an immigrant from England. She came to Australia to be with her sister and, I think, to escape from a less than wonderful world. To escape from crowding and bigotry and a marriage. She came to a land where she could not marry her partner of many years, where her children needed to remove their one pair of shoes after school. I wonder if she found her new country to be better. I never asked her and now I will never know.
My great-grandfather was an immigrant from Indonesia. He was sold for a bag of rice and became a companion for a captain’s wife. They say she brought him to Australia and treated him the way she did all her other children. But, even if that were true, did he feel equality, equity, humanity? He wasn’t allowed to marry. His skin was too brown. He lived as a fisher, was shipwrecked and saved those who were shipwrecked. A tram brought an end to him. His usual stop was cancelled, but he got off anyway.
My two countries, Australia and America, were once free of humans so in a way we are all immigrants. This world now has billions of people who continue to reproduce and who continue to search out new and better places to live. Humans are immigrants and I am human.
6/52 If you look at me, you probably don’t know that.
If you look at me, you probably don’t know that when I was in Kindergarten there were a group of children who changed my life. I can’t remember how old they were, but they were a little bigger than myself. They were dressed in their school uniforms. They looked like everyone else. Just kids. After school, I remember them teasing me and pointing at me. They would intimidate me with their body language and their catcalls of “Nigga, nigga, nigga.” They would ask why I was at their school and who did I think I was. At first, I would just slowly back off. My eyes fixed on them. Fear rising in my little heart. Then I would turn and run all the way home. Tears pouring from my eyes, leaving misty trails in the air. My mother’s reaction was very pragmatic. She didn’t know what to do or to say. I was her little “Indian princess.” She would hug me and say that I shouldn’t worry. She said that sticks and stones would break my bones but words could never hurt me. She was wrong, those words did hurt me. She said that by the time I was a teenager, they would all be very jealous of my skin. My five year old self was not consoled by either argument and continued to weep. I have to tell you that my kindergarten year was not successful. I was a very sick child and was not learning. On top of that, I spent a good deal of time in the corner and was punished in many different ways.
I remember my first day in high school. Our home room teacher went around the room assessing each student’s background and attitude. As a teacher myself, I expect that he was memorizing our names and starting to build himself as an authority figure. As he went around the room, he asked rhetorical questions or made statements about our names and how we looked. He was faced with a room full of freshman who needed to be sculpted in fine young scholars. I cannot really recall what he was saying to people. Something like, “Jackson, that is a good Scottish name. Son of Jack, only you are a daughter. You look like a nice Scottish lass.” “Dobinson, that is an old name from Normandy. We will call you Dobbie.” “Willoughby, well you do not look like a Willoughby. I don’t really know what part of the world you come from. You could be from one of many places.” At the time, I was just glad that he moved on from there. I did not know what he was talking about. I was sitting in the back row watching the world and wondering where I fit in. I had just left Catholic school and this was my first day in public school. I didn’t know anyone or anything, and my teacher didn’t know where I came from. As it turned out, my mother was right. Aren’t all mothers always right in the end? By the end of high school, my friends thought my naturally tanned skin was amazing. They would lie on beach blankets slathered in coconut oil trying to match the pigment in my skin. High school was a good place for me. I had friends, relationships, and perhaps, a future.
Now I am older, quite a bit older, my sister says that she hates my “black” skin. Her “English” pigmentation has allowed wrinkles to proliferate. People have stopped asking “Who is the older sister?” My thicker skin and lack of extended exposure to the sun has allowed my skin to wrinkle much more slowly. Thanks goodness for melanin. Now that I live in the diversity that is Southern California, I am considered to be a white woman. Nobody seems to think that I have unusual skin. No one thinks I am an “Indian princess.” I am not harassed. I am not called names. Often, after vacation, someone will comment on the beautiful tan that I had procured. After spending time in the tropics, I thought this was a nice compliment. But then I realized that I also get the same comment after traveling to wintery places as well. Vacation and tanning seem to go together. But most of the time, I am judged as a white woman.
I don’t know what happened to those children who called me names. I don’t know why they would even know the name to call me. We lived in a very white Australia. We lived under the White Australia Policy so that it stayed that way for a long time. I guess adults around those kids must have filled them with hateful ideas. I just know that it hurt. It turns out that my high school teacher had been a soldier in the German SS Army. Many parents would not allow their teenagers to take his class. He had traveled in a dark circle of his own.
Today is my birthday which is driving me toward retirement. I still am wondering who I am. In hindsight, this all seems such a small part of my life, but it has helped me build my identity. In many ways, I am invisible to the rest of the world. They see what they want to see. If they think I am a white woman, then that is what I am. If they think, I am beautifully tanned, so be it. If they think I am an Indian princess, that is their choice. When I think of myself, my eyes are closed. The thickness of my skin, the color of my skin, nor the amount of wrinkles do not enter the equation. I think about my challenges, the love in my life and my successes. Today I will enjoy my birthday and not worry about who I am.
5/52 I want a lachrymatory
During the Victorian era people would save their tears from the funeral of a loved one and store them in a lachrymatory. This week, I wished and wished I had one of these bottles. Day after day, my hot, puffy eyes labored to produce copious amounts of tears. If only I could have saved them. Surely they are valuable.
First, why did I cry? Small things. Large things. You be the judge.
I am off from work and on a special project.
At least a quart. I don’t know if they were joyful tears or sorrowful. Maybe just clear your eyes tears. Should they all go into the same bottle?
My boss packed up my office so now I am in storage. I am nowhere. In between. Limbo.
Several gallons at least.
Being tired from crying, but still oozing at the eyes.
Well maybe that only resulted in a cup. Fatigue lessens output after all.
Talking to my grandbaby in Australia through Skype.
These were the best tears. Joyful, loving, crazy tears. Please, I want more of those.
Walking the dog tears. Even though his ashes sit on top of the computer, we still do the dog walk every night. It always starts fine, but as we round the turn and head up the hill, tears flow like little rivers in the darkness. Is it the wind? The cool air? Missing the pup? Still? It has been almost a year.
Can’t sleep tears. Oh well.
There is nothing like waking up at one in the middle of the night crying. No way to catch those unless I tape a bottle to my face. Maybe I could start a business with this one. Maybe not.
Remember dad tears.
He has been channeling lately and my step-mom will call to be sure that I am ok because it is surely upsetting him. So before each tear, “I am ok dad. Don’t bother Rae. Don’t bother Annie. I will survive this. It is not so bad. Drip, drip, drip.
Tears that drain through your nose. Gross. Don’t need to deal with those tears. Sniff them up and pretend they were never there.
But now I have all these tears, then what do I do with them. Recycle, Reuse, Reduce. I wish I could reduce right now.
Uses for Tears:
Send them off for a DNA test. Are they really my tears? Which ancestor gave me so many tear genes? Why can’t I be a stiff upper lip person?
Give them as gifts. Excellent choice for those who already have everything, especially those who need some heart. Maybe you know someone who could use some.
Toss them in the ocean. They can team up with my dad’s ashes and travel the depths together with him. Share the adventures he experienced during his last five years.
Flush them. Signifies that they were a waste of time. Were they a waste?
Drink them. This would fuel up for next time. Ah next time. It is sure to come. Time to strap that lachrymatory to my face.
Works not quite Cited
Nick Knight “Why do we cry? The science of tears.” http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/features/why-do-we-cry-the-science-of-tears-9741287.html
4/52 The First Day of the Rest of my Life
Today is the first day of the rest of my life. Really, I suppose every day is the first day of the rest of my life. Every day provides opportunity, tragedy, confusion. Every day allows me to determine who I am and where I am going, but some days become tipping points in life. Graduation. Marriage. Childbirth. Death. Sabbatical? For the last twenty years, I got up each morning and went to work. I love my job. I am energized by it and feel that it is meaningful.
But on Monday, I don’t have to go to work. No. I am not allowed to go to work. This is a very peculiar situation. I have worked tirelessly for twenty years and now. No. You are not allowed on campus. You will work from home. For one semester, I am on sabbatical. I have my project. I have my work to do, but I am not allowed on campus. I am cut off from my life of twenty years. I am having a hard time dealing with this tipping point. My heart is excited about the project I have ahead of me, but also sad about the loss of camaraderie with peers and insights from students.
For the next semester, I am a shadow. I will do work that nobody sees. I will shape my life in ways that only I will know. I will learn things that nobody hears. I am not sure how I will flourish in this shadow world. There are more questions than answers. On top of that, my boss told me that I need to leave my office. There is no replacement office at this time, just more shadows. So, not only am I leaving for a semester, but I need to leave no trace of myself.
Yesterday, I started cleaning out my office for real. I had been poking around for a couple of weeks. I moved several books to the storage room that will be their home for four months or longer. I took home my orchid which sat on top of my cabinet collecting dust and rarely being watered. But yesterday, I got serious. I cleaned out my drawers full of pens, erasers, coins and nametags. I took the papers that had littered my desk and piled them in the corner so that the new inhabitant of my office could work without being impacted by any aura that I left. They wouldn’t know that the previous tenant was a hoarder, a procrastinator. I do have some time ahead when I can sneak into the office that is no longer mine to remove my identity. To remove my things. To become a shadow.
I also feel that politically I have become a shadow. The new president and political views that are broadcast over the media are not my views. Mine are the shadows that can be seen but are not deemed valid. For at least two years, the political climate is set until there are more elections. Unlike my sabbatical, I have no plan, no project to get through this period. I am searching for something that would make an impact. The tipping point for the country is aligned with my tipping point. Hopefully, for myself, I can carve a future that is bright and rewarding. But politically, what do I do? Currently, I delete offensive Facebook posts. I try to limit my exposure to the fabrications and marketing of right wing politicians who want to send my students back to poverty and violence. They want to build walls and create fear. I try to make sense of fact and fiction. Do I make up my own lies? Do I exaggerate my own view of the world and broadcast that? Do I tell my friends that they are with me or against me? That there is no middle ground. Actually, that is just not my style and honestly, I don’t think it is useful. Hate speech is hate speech whether from them or from me. But what do I do. I guess that is the million dollar question.
In four months, my career direction will be set based on new findings and new technology. Along the way, I will travel and study; create and write. I am looking to have more freedom in teaching online. It will also give students more freedom and open up a space for me to continue to grow and learn. In four months, I will return from the shadows and become part of the world of light and dark. Hopefully, the country will also rise from the shadows and find its way again.
Sleep is my enemy 3/52
Over the last few years, sleep has become my enemy. Oh she sneaks up on me at eight, just after dinner. She cajoles. She imposes yawns. If I sit down to watch TV, she calls me into her arms. Teasing me. But it is not until I go to bed that she finally pulls me to her breast and washes me with her soothing breath.
Sounds like a relationship built in heaven, but no. At two or three, depending on her fickle nature, she pushes me out of her life, a jilted lover. No more for you, she says. You have basked in my glory long enough. So in the dark, I count… I meditate… I wish that I could be in her arms again. I want to feel her renewing my spirit, washing my brain clear of waste. Helping me solve problems and ultimately to allow my creativity to flourish.
It wouldn’t be so bad if I could just start my day at that time. Enjoy the quiet darkness to get things done. Bask in the solitude. I have tried that, but unfortunately it doesn’t work. I drag my way through the next day unable to concentrate or think. She nips at my ankles. She weighs me down. She makes me hungry and irritated.
So now I have my rituals, my system to find predawn sleep. Not the luxurious siren from earlier, just a basic, every day, fundamental sleep. I desperately need to find renewal. First, I need to walk around the house for fifty steps. Then heat up a half cup of milk. No more, no less. While the milk is heating, get some honey ready to sweeten my draft. On my way back to bed, find a crossword. Not the Friday crossword that is too hard. Monday’s would be the best. So then, sit in bed. Do the crossword. Sip the sweet milk. Wait for sleep to come. Wait for the gentle pull. Slip into oblivion. Usually this method works, but sometimes, sleep prefers to play evil games. Put your head on the pillow. It is time. Ha…no it is not. Start your routine again. I dare you. Those nights are the worst. Drowsing. Waking. 3:40. Drowsing. Waking 3:51. Then I start worrying. It is easy to worry when your brain is full. Unclean. Unrefreshed. The neurotransmitters flood my brain with lies. Wake up. You don’t need her.
My solution to this is to try to learn more. My niece is studying sleep. I make sure to read all her papers and discuss her findings. After all, over 30% of my life is spent battling my enemy. Something under my hypothalamus is distorted, confused. Sending me error messages. Am I developing mental illness, Alzheimer’s, Lewy body dementia? Is it in my genes like it was for both my grandfather and father? When will science come up with a solution? Will it be too late?
But last night, sleep must have been in a wonderful mood. Sleep embraced me all night long. I woke just seconds before the alarm. What happiness and renewal flooded my life! I don’t know what I did to deserve her affection, but I hope she hope she comes again and says all night.
Why Weight? 2/52
All my life, I have been very active. At school, this brought me all kinds of problems. I was that kid standing in the corner. My report card repeatedly included phrases like “Talks too much,” “Can’t sit still” and “Doesn’t live up to potential.” This was bad. My mother nagged, but nothing helped. My doctor told my mom to find classes. “She needs to keep busy. She needs to expend the energy.” So I learned to swim at 3 years old and soon after that joined a swim club. I started dance lessons at 4, basketball at 7. But still the report cards came in with “Can’t sit still.”
Fast forward to me at 60: I sit in the office meeting with students. I stand in the classroom lecturing. At night, I crash on the couch. On top of that, I am an empty nester. Suddenly there is no laundry to do. No cleaning. No little league. No ballet. Just TV. Just work. No more hyper. No more svelte body.
But I am still surprised that suddenly the scale in the bathroom is rising. My reflection in the mirror is growing like a fun house illusion. Not exponentially. Slowly. Like a frog in a frying pan basking in the sauna. Slowly like a killer snail ready to take down my spinach. This is my fate.
Regardless, I am a problem solver who takes care of things. I know the solution. Listen to that doctor from my childhood. “Find classes. She needs to keep busy. She needs to expend the energy.” As a diligent patient, I joined a gym: Friday on the bicycle, Saturday on the Elliptical, Sunday in the pool. My miserly ways help. That gym is sucking money out of my bank account every month so I had better get my money’s worth. Every weekend, I ride that bike and get nowhere. I work that elliptical and the weight still creeps up. I forgot about the pool last year and spend time on the bicycle again on Sunday. I joined Tai Chi and attend Mondays and Wednesday. My doctor would be proud of me. But the creep never stops.
Why do I care? Why does weight matter? I am old (or at least older). I have earned to right to grow up or out or whatever way my body thinks fit to do. Haven’t I?
Why Write? 1/52
Why Write?
All my life I have loved to learn. I love to find out about things, all manner of things. If someone has a question, I am the first to run to Google to find the answer. I am an Explorer. At the same time, words do not come easily to me. Throughout school, I would avoid words. When we had to read a book and document our reading diligence, I read fables and fairy stories. Those were the shortest books I could find. If a composition was to be at least 100 words, I would write exactly 100 words. But without reading and vocabulary development, my writing always earned less than stellar grades. My writing brought insults from teachers and punishment from my parents. I just didn’t have the tools to put my thoughts onto paper. I didn’t have the words or the grammar.
So why take on an assignment to write an essay a week for a year. Why torture myself with finding the right words? Why? Why not continue in my relatively happy nonverbal life?
There are stories to be told. The older I get, the more I realize that books don’t always get it right. Where is my story? Where are my student’s stories? Where are my children’s stories? Now is the time for me to begin writing, to tackle the beast. I have so many stories that need to be told, that want to be told. I should at least try to capture some of them before it is too late.
I expect this will be a challenging, bumpy road. Many of the essays may not convey the right sentiment, use the right words, find the pocket. But hopefully, after a year of writing, I can find some diamonds in the rough. The reflection on my life, my heritage, and my legacy will guide me as I move towards the winter of my life. And maybe, just maybe, I will develop the tools that makes a good writer.
Basic Education- DSPS
Experiments: Milk with food color & water and pepper
Megawords : Review Lists 9-14 Find the prefixes and suffixes.
Read the words on the list.
Choose 5 words. Write them in sentences.
Write a Paragraph/Essay: Take one of your sentences and use it as inspiration for an paragraph or essay.
News for You: News For You Read two stories. Answer questions.
Math: Group work. BIM Math 18 PreAlgebra 3.1
Home Work: Write the following words in sentences:interfere, swinging, blankets, perform, styled
Write a story using these words