Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Calming presence
I'm learning so much, I don't even know where to begin. Every day I count write a book, I really could. I don't know how this is shaping me, I'm in the throws of it, but I know that I won't even approach education in the city the same way.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Meggiesf
Check it out... definitely on the lighter side, no more than a few lines of text- meggiesf.wordpress.com
I can't remember being this tired
It's from saying goodbye to first graders you've become attached to, knowing that you won't have the same relationship with them in second grade. They might say hi in the hallway or hug you every so often, but it won't be the unconditional love of their admiration that comes from being their teacher. It's from seeing the disparity in our nation and our educational system, seeing six-year-old kids throw tantrums, obsess over guns, lay on the floor instead of doing their work. It's from hearing them screaming, kicking, and crying- knowing that they are coming from a dark, dark place that even you can't imagine.
It's from realizing that my weekend is booked with social activities, that I want to do, but don't know how I'm going to muster up the energy.
But enough with Negative Nancy.
Here are some of the golden nuggets:
Maliq pretending to be a scientist (even the way he walks through the hallway or flings the milk from his cereal in a straw around the cafeteria)
Laughing when I'm supposed to cry or am too dumbfounded to react
Having two other amazing people going through this experience with me
Running on the beach after working with special needs kids
Having a mom from French-American at the school working too- just seeing how we're all connected and that she and her family are not living in an alternate reality
Seeing people (teachers, assistants, interns, principals) filled with patience and love, ready to greet some of society's most downtrodden, off of the schoolbus every morning
Watching a child's tantrum quelched and then once again reaching an equilibrium, with tear-stained cheeks, the storm is over
Watching a first grader roll over tables, under chairs, tell me I'm possessed because my eyes are so big, but then become my biggest fan and permanent summer line partner
Uniting the class through the World Cup
Roommates who care enough to knock on my door and ask if my paper is almost done
Parents who keep wanting to support me in getting all of the 940 books to Africa
Realizing that 16 days of summer school later, 3 more psych papers, 3 final projects, books in tow, I'll be headed to Africa, and seeing my mom there
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Single in the City
I don’t want to just think, this is hard, it will be over soon, because then I’m not open to the process and the person that I’m becoming through it. Through loss of friendships, I’m opening myself up to new people, new interests, new ideas. Like how I could spend Saturday effortless with a new friend, singing and memorizing the lyrics to the Broken Bells on the way back to the city while stuck in Bay Bridge traffic. Through my friends’ heartache and despair, I’m beginning to see that my lack of relationships has been God’s protection of my heart, not reflecting my own shortcomings or worth as a person. I’m constantly learning, I’ll never be happy with how I am just at this moment, I’m always on the cusp of being engaged in an exciting new skill (like turning boot-leg jeans into skinny ones) or reading more, gathering more information, or constantly cleaning out my closet, as though sometime I will get my style just right.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Sulphur and Sinuses
The sulphur from Wilbur Hot Springs came into play in healing me physically and emotionally from the last month, the transitions and the ups and downs. I don't feel exactly like a new person- I'm still blowing my nose all the time- but I'm in a better head space than I was before I went. I was able to be quirky, funny, random Meg- so much so that one of my friends said they can't wait for me to be married so that my husband can laugh at me all the time. I should have told them that six-year-olds get to everyday. Work didn't stress me out the way it normally does, neither did class and transportation (now sans bike). Or figuring out that I hadn't booked the flight home for next weekend like I thought I had.