Sunday, November 28, 2021
COVID Weight Gain
Sunday, October 10, 2021
Alphabetical Alliteration
An accounting of an abrupt address in which I was absurdly and awkwardly accosted:
Beginning with the banal and boring burdens before the bell
a completely confrontational conversation occurred at the copier.
A disagreeable discomfort developed for the duration of the discussion.
Emotional elevation and excuses emerged expeditiously.
Flustered and frustrated I found my foreman far away.
Gathering grit, I glimpsed a guaranteed grounding guide.
With hallmarks of hushed and hurried haste she heard my history.
Immediately invigorated I instantly ignored the initial inane incident
jumping justified and jubilant, jesting and jolly with
keen, kooky, kinetic, and kind kids kept captivated
learning lessons. Laboring later, legwork for looming lessons,
my mobile murmured a memorable and meaningful message.
A new nuisance incited new and novel nervousness.
Overtly omitting opportunities to observe or overhear orations,
planning passage to prevent the prospect of participation in a
queasy, quirky, and qualm filled quarrel with consequent quiet quaking
resulted in rethinking my relish to retain my recent responsibilities.
Students sweetly studying sway my sentiment slightly, still I
trust traditional terrible tension tarries twixt the team with the
upshot of unique and unusual unreasonable unease usurping
vast vestiges of vitality and elevating the volume of vexation.
Will warped ways wane or warily wait to wreak weightier wackiness?
Exhaustion extols exactly why extraction and exit excite.
Yet, I yearn for years of yore yawning with
zippy, zesty, zeal and a zone of zen.
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Spring Has Sprung
This week we went from freezing weather to spring in one week.. It made the first week back after spring break challenging for everyone to remain focused. The rain will probably be back within another week, as is par for the course this time of year in the Pacific Northwest.
The kids were super tired and super squirrely at the same time.. They were tired enough to not answer super simple questions each morning... the kind where when the answers came to light everyone goes, "Ohh.... right! I knew that!" And they did. They were unfocused enough in the afternoons that simple directions were not followed without repeated repetition. Kids were falling out of their chairs and running in circles around their desks as we got ready to head out to recess.
We had a good week, but I started to notice how close to the end of the school year we are. I'm hoping the cooler weather at the end of the week will help refocus the kids so we can have a strong finish to the school year.
My partner teacher and I are figuring out how to get through the rest of our content with the remaining weeks left. But of course we also need to keep the kids focused as the beautiful weather days increase and students can feel the end of the school year coming.
I have had to tell them several times this week that trash talk doesn't belong in the classroom, which is new, at least within my earshot. We are leaning heavily on the Second Step definition of respect: Treat others how they want they to be treated. I have this compliment artwork in my classroom and I bought three more inspirational sayings from the same artist to put on display around the room.
Friday, April 9, 2021
One Year In
One year in -
Has this pandemic learned to walk?
What will happen if it begins to run?
One year in -
Waiting (somewhat) patiently for our turn to get a vaccine,
Debating whether or not to turn on the news,
Owning a growing collection of masks,
Seeing family only through a screen.
One year in -
It bears repeating at this juncture:
When considering whether or not to spend the rest of your life
With a certain special someone, do NOT commit
If you cannot imagine living in indefinite quarantine!
One year in -
What will the coming months bring;
Are we on the cusp of another wave?
Will everything shut down once again;
Or could we finally be nearing the end?
Tuesday, April 6, 2021
Flash Fiction: Impossible Choices
Jason stood defiantly in the doorway of his bedroom, just across the hall from the top of the stairs, hammer in hand, poised to hurl it at his foster dad, Luke, should he take another step up the stairs. Jason had been living with the Hansons since last Thanksgiving, but nearly a year later, just days before Halloween, his behavior was worse than it had ever been. Luke stayed rooted on the stairs focused on Jason, trying not to look at the broken rail on the bannister, the Sharpie ink illustrations on the carpet, and the blue splotches of Listerine on the wall he and his wife, Shelia, had missed when they cleaned up after last night’s episode had ended with Jason up-ending a brand-new Costco sized bottle of minty freshness on Luke’s head. At the beginning Luke had thought he and Shelia were prepared for this foster placement, confident their home would be the forever home where Jason could finally begin to heal from his previous trauma. They had been eagerly waiting for their day in court when Jason would be adopted and officially become a Hanson. They had been advised to finalize after Jason’s thirteenth birthday, the age when new laws and policies went into effect. One of these, the Hansons had been told, would allow for Jason to eventually file for college financial aid as an independent if he was in the foster care system for even one day after he turned thirteen. Now, the much-anticipated birthday had come and gone two months before, and Luke felt farther away from finalizing the adoption than ever.
Luke
took in a slow, calming breath in a fruitless attempt to lessen the
oppressiveness of the weight that had settled into a constant presence in his
chest over the past two months. He
swallowed, working to moisten his mouth which had gone dry the moment he saw
the hammer in Jason’s hand. How the fuck
did he get his hands on that? Luke thought as his mind raced to find the
quickest and safest way to deescalate the current situation. The social workers and therapists had
recommended “actively ignoring” behaviors they didn’t like as long as they
weren’t a threat to safety. This
generally involved choosing, as visibly as possible, to turn their attention to
something else, anything else: work, making dinner, getting the mail, sweeping
the floor, their biological kids… But this tactic had only increased Jason’s
escalations in recent weeks, to the point where ignoring his misbehavior was no
longer an option. Last night’s Listerine
episode was a prime example of what had started happening when Jason got no
response from the Hansons when he shouted or threw things around the house. A waterfall of mouthwash wasn’t exactly a
safety concern, but neither could it be ignored. Despite their best efforts to clean it up
quickly, Luke wondered how long it would be before he could walk through the
hallway without catching a whiff of the minty scent that had already begun to
cloy.
Besides,
today’s situation went far beyond the minor property damage that had been
sustained thus far – Luke didn’t want to consider the consequences should Jason
decide to let the hammer fly toward anything or anyone. He said a silent prayer of thanks that Shelia
had taken their biological kids to the grocery store when today’s escalation
had begun with the discovery of the Sharpie graffiti on the carpet.
“What
is your goal here?” Luke said carefully. When he was met with stony silence
Luke, continued, “How will this get you what you want?”
Jason’s
mouth remained in a hard line, and Luke could see a twitch in his jaw, a sure
sign he was clenching, if not actively grinding, his teeth. It reminded Luke of the first week Jason had
moved in, when he had lain in his bed for hours, eyes squeezed shut, jaw
twitching, and the coarse grinding of his teeth audible, even from several feet
away. One of the few times in those
early days when Jason had allowed Luke to comfort him, Jason had talked about
his bio mom’s battle in court to appeal the termination of her parental rights. The appeal had been denied only a few weeks
before the Hansons had met Jason. Luke
had gently told Jason that just because his bio mom could not take care of him
did not mean she didn’t love him, and the sad, scared little boy had hugged
Luke tightly. But now, Jason hefted the
hammer, testing its weight in his small hand. Suddenly he smashed a hole in the drywall just
inside his bedroom door and angrily proclaimed, “It will get me exactly what I
want! I don’t want to live here! I don’t want to be adopted by you!” Luke felt
the weight of the words much more than the blow to the drywall, almost losing
his balance on the stairs as he processed their meaning. On some level he had suspected for weeks now
that Jason’s behavior was an active attempt to blow up this foster-adopt placement
so he would be removed from the Hansons home. But as he heard Jason’s words repeat
themselves in his head, he felt as if he’d been punched in the gut.
Luke
felt his own jaw tighten as his heart pounded in his chest. He heard the
reverberation of the hammer’s thud hitting the wall echoing in his ears and
watched little flecks of plaster dust settle on top of the orange mountain
scene, complete with a fire breathing dragon flying over them, that now
decorated the carpet outside Jason’s bedroom. He felt a deep sense of despair
and regret, a physical wrenching of his gut, making him nauseas. He knew that
Jason deserved a stable home to call his own, and a disruption to this
placement might very well mean he would never get that, but he also knew he
could not continue hoping the boy’s behavior would just even out on its own. So
he met Jason’s gaze, and asked, “Do you really mean that?” Jason’s aggressive
nod was coupled with a threatening lift of the hammer. But after a few moments,
when Jason lowered it, Luke continued, “You know it is difficult to find foster
homes willing to take teenagers.” Jason did not respond, so Luke added, “And
you know you won’t be going back to your mom’s.” Jason’s eyes flashed with anger, and with he
a low moan he began repeatedly, blindly smashing the hammer into the wall, the
doorframe, the dresser. Luke did his best to remain stoic on the outside as he retreated
to the bottom of the stairs, pulled his cell phone from his pocket, and dialed
911, finally following the advice of the social workers and therapists over the
past several weeks. As he began describing the current situation to the
dispatch operator the thuds from overhead stopped. After Luke was assured an officer was on the
way he quietly ascended the stairs in time to watch as Jason sat down in the
doorway of his bedroom and finally released his grip on the hammer.
Luke
took up a position in the middle of the stairs, keeping a wary eye on Jason as
he worked his way through a mental checklist of the necessary communication. He
sent Shelia a text telling her about the 911 call and suggesting she take the
girls to dinner before coming home. He called Jason’s state social worker and
his adoption agency, leaving messages promising to send them a written report
after the police had left. Jason sat in the doorway, the hammer still within
easy reach, until three officers arrived.
Two spoke with Jason and one with Luke into the kitchen. Luke was told that the property damage plus
Jason’s age of 13 meant the officers had to take Jason to the station and book
him for domestic violence, even if Luke did not want to press charges. As the
state was Jason’s legal guardian, the social worker would have to be the one to
meet them at the station to decide what to do next. Luke was advised to stay
home and wait for the social worker to contact him.
The
silence that settled over the house after the officers left with Jason in the
back of a squad car was deafening. As Luke stood in the utter stillness that
descended over the house, he felt a sense of relief wash over him, followed
quickly by a profound sense of guilt. His heartbeat intensified, and soon all
he could hear was his own heartbeat in his ears. He shook his head, and all was
quiet again. Then he found a rag and began wiping up the Listerine splotches he
had spotted earlier in the evening as he thought through the cleaning products
in his arsenal that might work to remove the indelible ink on the carpet.
Thursday, January 7, 2021
Pandemic Poetry: Virus Vicissitudes in Haiku
Virus Vicissitudes in Haiku
Travel vanishes
a vicious novel virus
vexes the whole world.
Vulnerable folks
fall victim to the virus,
devoid of visits.
Varied vocal views,
verbal venom on all sides,
vie for victory.
Divisive voices
will not vanquish this villain:
vaccines are vital.
Pandemic Poetry: How to Cope During Quarantine
How to Cope During Quarantine
No where to go, no plans to make.
What is a family to do?
Let's add to our home zoo!
Kittens, tortoise, how about a snake?
No where to go, no plans to make.
Legos, anime, Steam, and Discord,
Manga, Minecraft, card games and board,
If you're still at a loss, you can always bake.
No where to go, no plans to make.
Stop looking at a screen and go for a walk,
ride your bike, or draw on the cement with chalk!
Your eyes and brain will enjoy the break.
No where to go, no plans to make.
The news of this virus is NOT fake.
So please don't put your life at stake.
No where to go, no plans to make.