Category Archives: Essays

Musings and personal thoughts on life, family, memories, and events.

This would get me fired…(Day 29)

Today’s assignment is to write about something that would get me fired.

I teach in a psychiatric facility, so the types of things that would get me fired are telling detailed stories about my students, using their names, birth dates, and physical descriptions such that people would be able to figure out who they are.

Also, other fire-able topics to write about include:  having an inappropriate relationship with a student, dissing my immediate boss, revealing my true feelings about the biggest boss of my company, claiming to have abused children in any way, blogging about deep drug or alcohol addiction issues currently raging in my life, pornography, doing jail time, or admitting to murder.

It would be nice to have the freedom to write about absolutely anything I feel like, but it is also nice to get a paycheck and to be trusted with the private confidential information of others as I help them to heal.  When my kids were little they would try to get details out of me about my students because I told them I was like an FBI agent who couldn’t share anything, legally bound and all.

I will tell a brief hodge-podge of craziness that has occurred in my classroom in the last month with scrambled names, genders, and identities to protect privacy:

Sam had a laughing fit that lasted almost 20 minutes.  Uncontrollable, insane, maniacal laughter that ended in tears.  The mania was a result of stopping a certain medication that resulted in hysterics.  Lisa stood up, headed for the door, gave the peace sign, and took off running.  She is quite the track star, so no one could catch her, except the police a few hours later when she turned up at a gas station asking to borrow a phone.  Ben threw up all over the bathroom…literally…all over…in the sink, around the toilet, on the floor, in the trash can, on the door…everywhere except in the toilet.  Sofie is a psychpath and coordinated a plan to sneak into the bathroom with another girl to perform oral sex.  Josh fell asleep on the floor in the middle of the classroom and peed on himself.  Such is my life…

And somehow we still manage to learn about Shakespeare, write poetry, edit essays, debate political ideologies, learn vocabulary, have spelling bees, and share personal narratives to make your heart break.  Today we wrote about bullying after watching Shane Koyczan’s To This Day.  Then we discussed propaganda and watched samples of hilarious commercials to demonstrate rhetorical devices.  We ended the class with planning products they could invent and sell – they will create their own advertisements.  It was a good day.

Julian Fellowes – (Day 28)

Today’s assignment was to research someone who seemed to be an overnight success and find out the true story.  I decided to focus on the mind behind Downton Abby Julian Fellowes.

julian

Apparently, his big break was when he was asked to write the screenplay for Gosford Park because he knew so much about social classes.  At the time, he was an actor who had published a few romance novels under the pen  name Rebecca Greville, but no major successes.  That screenplay went on to win the Academy Award.  He went on to create Downton Abby.  Very cool.

Things didn’t actually happen overnight, though.  I did a little research and discovered that he worked as a small-parts actor since 1981.  The romance novels he wrote were back in the 70’s and he didn’t try his hand at  publishing again until 2002 with Gosford Park.  Now he has written three more novels and several tv shows.  That is a ton of hard work for a very long time.  It is not just one big break.  It is a lifetime of honing a craft, acting, living story so that he can write it better.  If he can work on his craft for over 40 years and still be going strong, I have no excuse!

Don’t Should on Yourself – (Day 27)

The topic tonight is to write about 10 things I could have done but didn’t.

  1. Majored in Spanish and moved to Honduras or Guatemala as a missionary.
  2. Married someone better suited to me the first time so I could have been happier in my first marriage.
  3. Found Salsa sooner.
  4. Been an astronaut.
  5. Stayed out of debt so I would be living comfortably now.
  6. Moved to Colorado and lived in the mountains.
  7. Kept ice skating after college.
  8. Been a better mother.
  9. Gone skydiving before joint problems made it unwise.
  10. Gone into computer science so I would now make three times what I do.

Forging a Signature – (Day 26)

This assignment is to reminisce about forging signatures.

I really don’t remember attempting to forge signatures when I was a kid.  I was a very honest child with a powerful conscience.  I was more afraid of doing the wrong thing than trying to avoid consequences for actual mistakes.  I did cheat on grading a peer’s quiz one time in exchange for her cheating for me.  It turned out I made a 100% legitimately and did not need her help.  She would have failed, though, and needed my fake assistance.  She broke down and told the teacher, though, and I got in trouble.

My children attempted forgeries, poorly done I might add, when they were in school.  One was my son signing his father’s name in pencil and erasing multiple times to try to get it right.  I don’t remember what it was…probably a note getting permission to leave school early or something.

I did sign my ex-husband’s name a ton back when we were married.  All of our documents, paperwork, his checks to put in the bank, anything bill related, school stuff for the kids.  He didn’t like doing any of that, so always just asked me to take care of it.  I got pretty good at signing his name fairly close to the way he did.  I guess it was forgery, except that I had his permission, so…it was just his laziness turned forgery on my part.

 

 

Translation – (Day 25)

Today’s assignment is to attempt to translate a quote from another language that I do not speak.

The quote:  “L’amour est l’emblème de l’éternité, il confond toute la notion de temps, efface toute la mémoire d’un commencement, toute la crainte d’une extrémité.”

Madame de Staël

My translation:  Love is an eternal symbol, though sometimes it feels fleeting, that begins by making memories, and turns into the ultimate expression.

Here is the actual translation:

“Love is the emblem of eternity; it confounds all notion of time, effaces all memory of a beginning, all fear of an end.”

Madame de Staël

Favorite Quote – (Day 21)

Today’s assignment is to write a favorite quote, then try to rephrase it five different ways.

“The minute I heard my first love story I started looking for you, not knowing how blind that was. Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere. They’re in each other all along.” – Rumi

  1.  When you find the right person, there is a knowing that has been there all along.
  2.   I have loved love stories since I was old enough to understand them.  My soul loves to love.
  3.   In order to love someone else, a person needs to love herself first.
  4.   I don’t believe in love at first sight.  I do believe in recognizing the other – two souls seeing each other again for the first time.
  5. Love is the point of everything and loving you is my soul’s desire.

Then I found these that I liked along the same theme:

“Don’t worry about finding your soul mate. Find yourself.”
Jason Evert

“For some people, “the point of no return” begins at the very moment their souls become aware of each others’ existence.”
C. JoyBell C.

“Before you find your soul mate, you must first discover your soul.”
Charles F. Glassman

“A soul mate is not found. A soul mate is recognized.”
Vironika Tugaleva

 

 

Creative Family Tree – (Day 20)

Today’s assignment is to trace some of my creative influences and their creative influences as far back as I can.

I am most influenced by:

David Sedaris, Martha Beck, Oprah, Mema…

Who were influenced by:

Maya Angelou, Granny Great, Lao Tzu, Mrs. Duncan, Mr. Sedaris, Toni Morrison, Nelson Mandela…

Who were influenced by:

Bailey, Jr., Jesus, George and Ramah Wofford, Martin Luther King, Jr….

Who were influenced by Ghandi, GOD, Thomas Carlisle, John Donne, Washington Irving, Ralph Waldo Emerson…

That is as far back as I can find.

 

Dream World – (Day 17)

Today’s assignment is to write down my most recent vivid dream that I can remember.

So I was driving my brand new candy apple red and silver chrome Harley Davidson Sportster style motorcycle.  My car was in the shop and I had no other plan for getting to work, so I somehow ended up buying the motorcycle.

bike

I had to stop at a local hardware store to pick something up and ended up leaving my bike there for an entire weekend.  I don’t know why I wasn’t able to take it home, but I figured I would pick it up the following Monday.

I showed up Monday to get my bike, but it was gone.  I went inside to talk to someone at the front desk to see if they knew where it might have been moved.  They suggested looking out in the back parking lots, but said it had probably been stolen.  I had the sinking suspicion that they might be right.

It was nowhere to be found.  I asked several guys who worked outside at the store, but they were tight-lipped.  One looked like he knew something, but was hesitant to tell me the truth.  I pulled him aside and begged him to tell me what he knew.  He looked around nervously before telling me that he saw someone from the local mob-run bike gang take it.  Instantly, I knew he was right.

I went to the police to see if they could help me, but as soon as they heard that it was the work of the middle-Eastern mobster (whose name I cannot remember) and who they were deathly afraid off, as well as possibly on the payroll of, I was sent away told they could be of no help to me.  I temporarily contemplated driving an hour out of town to his compound mansion and talking to him one to one, but then decided the better of it and just began to mourn the unfairness of a life where powerful evil people can just take your stuff and there are no consequences.

I awoke still sad that my beautiful bike was gone.

Eavesdropping – (Day 16)

Today’s assignment was to eavesdrop on a conversation and write it down.  This was during my 1st period class when kids were supposed to be talking only about ballet articles for an open-ended writing assignment.  They were obviously off topic.

Girl 1 – “I’ve been having strange dreams lately.”

Girl 2 – “Me, too.”

Girl 1 – “I keep ending up on the floor or all twisted up in my covers.”

Girl 2 – “You talk in your sleep, too.”

Girl 1 – “What do I say?  And you snore.”

Girl 2 – “I do not!”

Girl 1 – “Yes, you do.”

Girl 2 – “You yelled, ‘Mom!’” last night.

Girl 1 – “Really?  I think I dreamed I was swimming.”

Me talk Pretty – (Day 15)

Today’s assignment was to share a passage from a favorite book.  One of my favorite writers is David Sedaris.  I love his essays the most.  This one is from Me Talk Pretty One Day and is the essay by that same title.  I will share the highlights.

I’ve moved to Paris with hopes of learning the language…The first day of class was nerve-racking because I knew I’d be expected to perform.  The teacher marched in…spread out her lesson plan and sighed, saying “…who knows the alphabet?”

…Though we were forbidden to speak anything but French, the teacher would occasionally use us to practice any of her five fluent languages.

“I hate you,” she said to me one afternoon.  Her English was flawless.  “I really, really hate you.”  Call me sensitive, but I couldn’t help but take it personally.

After being singled out as a lazy kfdtinvfm, I took to spending four hours a night on my homework, putting in even more time whenever we were assigned an essay.  I suppose I could have gotten by with less, but I was determined to create some sort of identity for myself:  David the hard worker, David the cut up.  We’d have one of those “complete the sentence” exercises, and I’d fool with the thing for hours, invariably settling on something like “A quick run around the lake?  I’d love to! Just give me a moment while I strap on my wooden leg.”  The teacher , through word and action, conveyed the message that if this was my idea of an identity, she wanted nothing to do with it.

…Before beginning school, there’d been no shutting me up, but now I was convinced that everything I said was wrong.  When the phone rang I ignored it.  If someone asked me a question, I pretend to be deaf.  I knew my fear was getting the best of me when I started wondering why they don’t sell cuts of meat in vending machines.

My only comfort was the knowledge that I was not alone.  Huddled in the hallways and making the most of our pathetic French, my fellow students and I engaged in the sort of conversation commonly overheard in refugee camps.

“Sometime me cry alone at night.”

“That be common for I, also, but be more strong, you.  Much work and someday you talk pretty.  People start love you soon.  Maybe tomorrow, okay.”

Unlike the French class I had taken in New York, here there was no sense of competition.  When the teacher poked a shy Korean in the eyelid with a  freshly sharpened pencil, we took no comfort in the fact that, unlike Hyeyoon Cho, we all knew the irregular past tense of the verb to defeat.  In all fairness, the teacher hadn’t meant to stab the girl, but neither did she spend much time apologizing, saying only, “Well, you should have been vkkdyo more kdeynffulh.”

Over time it became impossible to believe that any of us would ever improve.  Fall arrived and it rained every day, meaning we would now be scolded for the water dripping from our coats and umbrellas.  It was mid-October when the teacher singled me out, saying, “Every day spent with you is like having a cesarean section.”  And it struck me that, for the first time since arriving in France, I could understand every word that someone was saying.

Understanding doesn’t mean that you can suddenly speak the language.  Far from it.  It’s a small step, nothing more, yet its rewards are intoxicating and deceptive.  The teacher continued her diatribe and I settled back, bathing in  the subtle beauty of each new curse and insult.

“You exhaust me with your foolishness and reward my efforts with nothing but pain, do you understand me?”

The world opened up, and it was with great joy that I responded, “I know the thing that you speak exact now.  Talk me more, you, plus, please, plus.”