Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Spring Break coming: good boat needed.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Spring Break coming: good boat needed.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Last week I thought I was reaching a new marital status. We aren't even empty nesters yet, but I thought we were going to rise up to "old married couple"
I woke up, went in to the kitchen to eat breakfast, and said good morning to my husband who had been up hours before me.
"I may have to sleep upstairs tonight," he said.
"Why?"
"You snored all night, and I barely got any sleep. It's been bad the past couple of nights."
I knew it had because I felt the poke of the elbow in the rib cage. One time it was almost a push to turn me over.
I am pretty sure this snoring is due to the pandemic weight I have put on, but I was hoping it was something else.
The next night I got up in the middle of the night and slept on the couch because of the guilt. But I am a sleep-in-my-own-bed kind of sleeper. I was exhausted, he exhausted, and we knew something had to be done.
That night I went and bought nose strips and used them for a couple of days. I don't know if they really work, but I can now shout...
We are NOT an old married couple...yet!
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
I stand
in the 4th grade hallway
as he trudges along
in his work boots
with one pant leg caught.
Many boys are flaunting
their Air Jordans,
but not A.J.
A.J. proudly wore his
work boots.
He was a worker
a helper
a blessing to those in need.
Eight years go by
and I watch
the service
as his life ends
much too soon.
Below the casket
sits a pair of boots
and I remember.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Two things happened last night between waking up from my nap and going to bed: reading Terje's post about weird dreams and talking to my cousin.
Terje shared her midnight slice and her dream about puffins and how she wrestled with her brain while trying to go back to sleep.
My cousin called me to tell on himself. He lives independently but also lives with a disability and is mostly confined to a wheelchair. He called to tell me he went for a ride with my mother. Let's just say this is not a good thing, and we have warned him not to do this. He mentioned that mom only "ran one stop sign and pulled in front of one car." (This is the hard part of loving someone with early dementia. You want them to have their independence, but you also want them and others to be safe.)
Those two events, I am sure, led to my own dream. Many times my craziest dreams happen early morning when I have awakened but have fallen back to sleep.
I awoke this morning, looked at the clock, and refused to get up.
And the dream began.
I was riding in the car with my mom, and she pulled out in front of someone driving a jeep. The man drove right up behind us and then quickly drove around us and pulled in front of my mom.
She got mad and started driving erratically on the sidewalk to pass him back. I remained calm (yes, this would only happen in a dream). I asked her, "Mom, you do know you are driving on the sidewalk." while she was dodging trees and fire hydrants and people.
"Yes I do, but it's okay."
Then I woke up, shook my head, and I knew exactly what led to this strange dream.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Sometimes you just need a nap.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Sometimes when I read a book, I think about a certain student and how I know it is the perfect book for him or her. When I finish, I can't wait to run and tell them about it.
A few weeks ago I was reading Hunter's Choice by Trent Reedy. I have become a fan of his writing because he writes stories that I know kids are going to want to read. Hunter's Choice is about hunting; it's an outdoor person kind of book. This is a type of book that fills a much-needed void in my classroom library.
As I was reading, I kept thinking about Carson, one of my students. Earlier in the year, he wrote a narrative about a fishing trip, so I knew he liked being outdoors. He has also been a difficult student to match with books.A few weeks ago, his mother, who is a staff member, asked me what she could do to get him reading. I immediately told her about this book and how I had thought about Carson the whole time I was reading it.
Today while we had our reading time, I noticed Carson was reading it!
Matching kids with books is the most important part of my job and the one that brings me the most joy! I can't wait to see what he thinks because I think it is the perfect match!
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
Spaghetti and french fries.
Salmon patties and macaroni and cheese.
Pork steak and Chef Boyardee spaghetti.
Ghoulash and creamed corn.
You may be wondering what these foods have in common.
Growing up, I could always count on certain things: fried chicken Sunday dinner; Bobes pizza on Friday nights; and the house cleaned on Saturday. These were a given, week in and week out.
But my mom had some weird food combinations that we could always count on - like the list above. The only one I still eat is the salmon and mac-and-cheese.
Mom hasn't cooked for several years, partly because she lives by herself and cooking for one is not easy and certainly no fun, but mostly because I don't think she remembers how. Mom has shown signs of dementia for several years, but we have seen a significant decline in her memory lately.
I will often take her meals so she has something homecooked. One night I called her and told her I was making spaghetti and asked if she wanted some. She thought for several seconds and replied, "No, I don't think I want any. I will just eat something I have here."
"Are you sure? I have plenty."
"No, but don't forget to ask me again."
I thought this was strange as I knew she liked spaghetti. I didn't think any more about it until I was talking to my younger sister. "Hey, I hear Mom turned you down for spaghetti."
"Yes, she did. I don't know why."
"Well, I do. She told me if she took the spaghetti, she would want french fries with it!"
I guess there are some things she just can't forget!
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
It is 6:30 PM on day two, and I already at a loss. I have looked for slices all day. I even told my colleagues at lunch that I needed a story, but nothing has been worthy of word-smithing. We were talking about breaking down in front of our assistant principal (who is amazing!).
Another teacher said, "You farted in front of Nancy?"
We all burst out laughing, and I said, "I think I have my story!"
Well...thank goodness that's really not my slice. But that is how desperate I was.
Tonight during our Time to Write writing time, a new member of the group said she was selling her house and was needed to write about her house and her favorite part. Bingo! I had my slice.
We built our house 30 years ago. I love many things about our house, so it is really difficult to choose just one. But if I had to choose, it would be our porches. We have porches on the front and the back that run the entire length of the house. This is where dreams were made and stories were shared and where we learned how to love.
I remember the day we moved in: July 1st, 1992, two years after we were married. I was nine months pregnant and my feet were so swollen I could not wear shoes, and I could hardly walk. I sat on the porch swing while my husband, sister, and mother unpacked my boxes. I just sat and told them where to put everything.
Those porches, with their Cracker Barrell rocking chairs and potted geraniums, have held such special memories. It was my quiet spot with each of my babies where we would rock or swing for hours, singing lullabies and whispering secrets just between the two of us. It also became my time-out from motherhood. I would go out and read and sip iced tea while my husband gave the kids their baths, read them books, or had playtime. I could hear them giggle through the open windows, reminding me the stress of staying home with our children was all worth it.
As they grew up, we would have picnics or snacks on the porch where the lined up the peanut butter jars waited to catch fireflies later in the evening. The years quickly moved forward, and I began watching Megan shoot basket after basket on the court at the end of the driveway, perfecting her three-point shot. Ethan would be skateboarding trying kickflips and ollies over and over until he landed them.
Now, I sit on the back porch with my grown children. Megan and I grading papers together in silence and solving the world's educational problems. We laugh at funny stories about things that happened at school and share the stresses of teaching. Ethan shares about his band, where they are playing next, and what new songs he has learned. He tells me about the skateparks he has been to and the kids in crisis that he met with that week and tried to coach.
If these log rails could talk, they would have so many stories to tell, so many memories to share.
A lot of life has happened on our front porch, yet I know it also has many dreams left to hold.
Join Two Writing Teachers and other teacher-writers as we share a slice of life every single day in the month of March.
For some people, especially for us Hoosiers, March means basketball. But for many bloggers, March means 30 days of slicing, finding those small moments in the day to capture and share with others.
This is my 8th "first day," and honestly, I wasn't going to participate this year. Most of my writing lately has been professional writing, and I have struggled with writing "for me." I have tried other recent challenges, I have stunk at them all. I didn't want to fail at the one challenge that I have succeeded with for seven years and the one that has connected me to some wonderful people, many of whom I call dear friends.
But here I am on Day One.
One of my goals this year was to help and support teachers in believing they are writers. The slicing community became my support system early on in my blogging experience. I am hoping that not only will I support teacher-writers, but I will once again receive that much-needed support myself.
Fail or not, I can't imagine the month of March without slicing.
When I slice,
...I grow as a writer.
...I notice the small things, the ordinary.
...I am reminded to find the extraordinary.
...I find comfort in the predictability of the routine.
...I stretch those writing muscles that haven't been used in a while.
...I'm inspired by others and use that inspiration to "stack my own words".
...I become a better teacher of writing because I know the difficulties that writers face.
...my world becomes bigger because I meet so many new writers on the same journey.
With all of these reasons, why wouldn't I participate?
Why would I be afraid of failure - as there really is no failure in this challenge.
Let's do this!
As I went about my Saturday routine of grocery shopping, laundry, and cleaning, I found a little spring in my step.
The only traces of last week's snowstorm are the snow mountains that dot the parking lots and the clumps of grass and dirt from the roadway that accidentally found their way in front of the snowplows and are now haphazardly laying in people's yards.
Looking in the landscape this morning I saw the heads of the daffodils poking their way through the mulch - a true sign that spring may be on its way.As I was tidying up my desk in Ethan's-bedroom-turned-my-office, I opened the window a crack to let in the sun rays and the freshness of the spring-like air.
I heard my husband tinkering with his Jeep, preparing for that riding-with-the-top-down kind of day.
Tonight I plan to grill burgers, hopefully toasting winter's departure.
I feel it.
I feel the change of the seasons today. I feel the promise of spring.
I hope Mother Nature doesn't let me down.
I’m joining an open community of writers over at Sharing Our Stories: Magic in a Blog. If you write (or want to write) just for the magic of it, consider this your invitation to join us. #sosmagic
Thank you to Two Writing Teachers for creating this community to share our stories.
He's listening. He's always listening."
I hear these words in the back of my mind all the time. Who is listening you ask? Well, I don't really know, but it is quite troublesome.
Last week my husband's toe was hurting, and after researching on the Intenet, he seemed to think it was gout. He wrote beets down on our grocery list. (While searching, he also found that beets would help gout!) He then asked, "Do they make beet juice?"
"I have no idea, but I will look," I said to pacify him.
I "searched" at the store and told him, "Nope didn't see any beat juice."
"He's listening. He's always listening."
The next day as I was scrolling through Facebook, guess what came up in my feed. Yep! Beet juice. I never searched for it on my computer, but there it was. This greatly troubles me. Are people listening to my conversations? Can they hear me through my phone or my computer?
My husband did search for it on his computer, so I guess maybe if the search is at least in our house, it could possibly show up on my computer?
But, I still feel like someone is listening.
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| This is just one of several advertisements that popped up on my feed. |
It's less than two weeks before the March Slice of Challenge begins. And I think it has been since last March that I sliced. I thought it might be a good time to build up to that writing marathon! Don't you think?
Tonight I read a post about a COVID haircut from Jennifer Larance. She was a brave wife and gave her husband a "real" haircut. I cut my husband's hair about every three weeks, but I use the clippers with a 1/4 inch guard. In other words, it is merely a shaved head.
But that 1/4 inch guard is a very important part.
He sits in the chair down in the basement with an old crib sheet around him like a cape. I complete my first run-through and check to make sure I didn't miss anything. Shaving his neck is my favorite part, so I take the guard off and carefully pull down the sheet to expose his neck.
Buzz...I finish the haircut and place the clippers down. Looking at my wonderful work, I realize I missed a spot on the bottom of his head near the nape of his neck.
"Oops. It looks like I missed a spot back here," I say as I pick the clippers back up.
But that 1/4 inch guard is a very important part.
I click the button up and the buzzing begins. Just as I make a quick stroke up the back of his head, I suck in my breath. What have I done?
"Oh no."
Yes, that 1/4 inch guard is a very important part.
Thank you to Two Writing Teachers for creating this community to share our stories.
In 2021 I'm trying to return to communities that support me as a reader, a writer, and a teacher. Not sure how regular I will be, but I am here today.
Jen Vincent at Teach Mentor Texts and Kelle and Ricki at Unleashing Readers co-host It's Monday! What Are You Reading? Stop by and see what others are reading this week.
What I Read Last (Two) Weeks:
I recently finished a new book by Jeff Zentner, In the Wild Light. A line caught my attention where a grandfather in the story said "stories told just become ordinary."
I believe in the power of story and the strength of the ordinary, so what exactly did he mean? As I read on, I realized he meant that some stories are meant to be untold for fear of becoming ordinary.
One of the characters in the book, Delaney, has a conversation with the main character's dying grandfather. Delaney tells Papaw what is on her heart and never reveals it to Sawyer (until the end!).
This story reminds me when we keep those untold stories tucked inside our hearts, they become extraordinary. Like...
In 2021 I'm trying to return to communities that support me as a reader, a writer, and a teacher. Not sure how regular I will be, but I am here today.
Jen Vincent at Teach Mentor Texts and Kelle and Ricki at Unleashing Readers co-host It's Monday! What Are You Reading? Stop by and see what others are reading this week.
I have been taking a break from social media, and I am loving the reading time it is affording me. I've reacquainted myself with Netgalley again, and our library just made Hoopla available, so I am loving my reading life right now.
Here's what I read last week:
Back in 2014, I joined Carrie Gelson at There's a Book for That who started a little community of readers with a common goal - to tackle our to-be-read stacks. This year I have agreed to co-host this small community. It is one day before the end of the month, and I am just now finalizing my list and writing this post.
I have boxes of books that I have not yet read but want to. I opened each one and pulled out twelve titles to use for this year-long challenge. I am following Michele Knott's lead and will try one each month. Sounds easy enough, huh?
Here is my #MustReadin2021 challenge titles.
Wednesday the weather app showed an advisory for our county. Snow coming early afternoon. Hopes of an early release filled the hallways like an all-morning passing period. We had been disappointed two other times recently, so we were almost afraid to talk about it for fear it would never come to be.
Around noon, the snow began to fall, quickly covering the fields outside our classroom windows. Kids were too excited to focus on the lesson I had prepared, and talks began about having a snow day the next day. I told them how I didn't want a snow day but would rather have a Friday in May when it was warm outside. They, of course, thought I was crazy.
The news came that the busses were on stand-by followed an hour later by the announcement that we were dismissing early. By 8:00 that night, the superintendent had announced a two-hour delay the next day, BUT they would reevaluate in the morning.
Today, I woke at my normal time, turned on my phone, and waited for the call I was sure would come. Yes, we had a snow day. As much as I said I didn't want a snow day, I have to say, I welcomed pulling up the covers and rolling over for a few extra minutes of sleep.
My daughter Megan posted on her classroom page a request for snow day pictures. We live on one of the few hills in our town, and many kids come to sled when we have snow. Megan shared with me who all was on the hill and showed me pictures of students sledding and snowboarding and building snowmen and having snowball fights.
And the guilt set in.
I remembered all the snow days when my son would get up at sunrise, pack his bag, and set out for the hill. He would spend the entire day outside, coming home only to get dry socks and gloves and food. He loved the snow, and we have so many memories of these days.
I am sure many of my students spent the day outside just like my son did all those years. Telling them I didn't want a snow day was a little selfish.
Yes, today we had a snow day. And I am glad we did.
I’m joining an open community of writers over at Sharing Our Stories: Magic in a Blog. If you write (or want to write) just for the magic of it, consider this your invitation to join us. #sosmagic
Back in 2014, I joined Carrie Gelson at There's a Book for That who started a little community of readers with a common goal - to tackle our to-be-read stacks. This community continued to grow, and Carrie continued to round up our lists and blog posts until 2019. Although some have continued to create their own #MustRead lists, the community has not had an "official" round-up.
I don't know about you, but I know my reading life took a dive last year with the pandemic. Because of this and with the start of a new year, I was looking for a way to reignite my reading life. I found that I missed the #MustRead community. So I decided to team up with Cheriee Weichel at Library Matters, and co-host #MustReadin2021.
For those of you new to the community, this challenge means you take a look at the books you wanted to read in 2020, but for whatever reason, did not get to them. You then make your own personal list of books you want to commit to reading in 2021.
There is no set number of books and books can be published from any year, in any genre or format, and in any category. These books will not be the only ones you read this year but will be the ones included in your personal challenge.
I will round up the initial posts here on my blog, and Cheriee will host the update posts on hers at the end of April, August, and December. Update posts are optional.
If you would like to create and share a list, click on the link-up below to add your blog post. Feel free to use the graphic above to include in your post, too. Be sure and check back regularly to see the reading plans everyone has made. If you would like to look back at posts from previous years, then check out Carrie's curated posts here. I look forward to co-hosting with Cheriee and continuing to build the community Carrie began.
We can't wait to see what is on your #MustReadin2021 list!
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterThree hundred and sixty-five days ago, I chose the word commit as my one little word and made a list of my "ten commitments." I glued them in my notebook as a reminder of the ten things I wanted to be more mindful of and committed to: my family, my health, my teaching. my writing, my reading, my faith, my communities, and limiting my distractions.
Little did I know that 2020 would hold one of the biggest commitments I have ever made. A commitment to keep me, my family, and others safe.
Because it does me no good to dwell on how the year turned out, today, I decided to make a list of other "commitments" that came up during our pandemic time this year.
I became committed to:
A Six-word Memoir