In the twinkling of an eye, the whoosh of time swirls you through the years in a lovely blur of lessons and accomplishments wrapped in unfathomable love and pride as you watch your children, your priceless treasure, dream and grow. And then they get married. The family circle widens and makes room for each beautiful new heart. It is the happiest of all happy times.
The mind-meandering musings of a teacher, thirty years in the classroom, who, despite the enormous changes seen through the years in every single category, sees one remarkable, beautiful constant which is the hope that is our students, the children.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Thursday, May 29, 2014
On Retiring
Lessons Learned
Looking
Back, Looking Ahead
Reflection
informs anticipation. The past informs the future. Memory informs expectations. And all of these have significant bearing on
one’s perception of today. Thirty years as a teacher will in two days be boxed up
and passed on to the next one who very soon will fill my classroom with new
dreams, excitement, hopes, and strategies to inspire learning for all children.
How does one begin to process the width, the depth, breadth, the height, the
gravity, the magnitude, and the overwhelming relational experience of thirty
years in the classroom? From the highest pinnacle of elation to the deepest
depths of despair and every conceivable tint and shade of every hue of every
emotion in between, this is the gamut of feelings regularly traversed by a
teacher through the years alongside thousands and thousands of students and
their families, colleagues, administrators, and school support staff, community
helpers and neighbors as together life is lived and journeys are shared. It
consumes you in the most excellent way for you ceaselessly and willingly pour
yourself and all that you know and understand and are into making a positive
difference in the lives you are given to touch. It is beyond humbling to
comprehend the trust, the vulnerability and the belief parents offer you as
they bring the treasures of their heart, their children, to your classroom.
They bring you the best they have, having done the best they can hoping their
little ones will thrive and grow and aspire and achieve under your gentle yet firm,
inspiring and challenging tutelage. The responsibility of teaching is honestly
staggering and the full acknowledgement of that truth is an ever-present lens
through which you view and engage the everyday goings-on in the classroom. Teaching is without a doubt, an epic job with
layers and layers of life intertwined with ripples of the shared experiences
rolling out for years and years to come. I have loved teaching as I love life,
and despite my flaws and weaknesses I have given my best and my all to what I
believe matters infinitely much; that being inspiring, encouraging, protecting,
leading, caring for, and believing in the children. In reflecting on a career I
have loved, I joyfully anticipate the next chapter of service to others, for all
that I have learned through all who have been entrusted to my care will most
assuredly lead to countless more collaborative journeys.
Thursday, May 22, 2014
The Vulnerability Of Creativity
Lessons Learned
To Dwell
In Creativity
A creative spirit
frequently lives in a lonely place. Not bad lonely, just slightly misunderstood
lonely. To create, one needs to be comfortable with vulnerability, and if not
completely comfortable with vulnerability, then at least aware of the weight of
this demand. To create, one needs to imagine possibility and unexpected
connection and to do this one needs to drop the wall of fear that neatly and
typically holds us captive and safe within our prescribed conventions and
protocols. Dropping the wall of fear to see beyond it, is terrifyingly and
exhilaratingly vulnerable. A willingness to live there is risky, but it is the
only place for a creative spirit to feel the freedom necessary to dream and
imagine. Creativity flows like a faucet through the imagination of the one who
seeks to see a new connection or hear a new combination of sounds, but living
in this refreshing flow is inefficient and immeasurable, whereby rendering it
inconsistent with the standard rhythm of life which is much more lock-step and
non-threateningly predictable. So in choosing to be a creative spirit, one is
choosing to be different, and different is vulnerable and can be lonely.
The process of creating is extremely intense and focused, yet at the same time
wildly invigorating. In the process of creating, one hears and sees through the
heart of imagination in response to an idea or thought and then captures that
idea in a new way through any of an infinite variety of creative vehicles. My
choice is music, and it has been since I was a child. Unexplainable as it is,
other than to say it is a gift, creating music fills my soul and gives voice to
the emotion wrapped around an idea, a thought, a situation, or a chapter in a
life story. Inspiration for the creative process can occur at most any time and
it compels the creative spirit to engage; convenient timing or not is rather
inconsequential. From the moment of engagement, out pours the creativity
unrestrained. When at last the creative piece is complete, there is a
frozen moment of awe, when for the very first time the one who has dreamed and
created views in actuality what previously had existed only in the heart of
imagination. Breathtaking. Perfect. Thoroughly and absolutely unique. This
precious moment of awe is a very vulnerable place where no judgment or critique
is ever welcome and only the gentlest of viewers are allowed. The
creative spirit is strong of heart and faith and optimism, but in this moment
of awe, the creative spirit is indeed fragile. If you are ever invited into this
moment with a creative spirit, accept it as the true gift it is, offer nothing
but your stillness, and allow the awe to bless your heart.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
No Family Is Perfect, But Love Is Perfect.
Lessons Learned
Love Is
Perfect
Jack’s father never showed
up to introduce himself. Jack’s mother was killed by a drunk driver when Jack
was four. Jack was an only child. But Jack was not alone because Gramma moved
in with her suitcase full of love and filled their home, their upstairs flat,
with optimism and joy. Although their pile of worldly treasure could have been
contained in a child’s shoebox, their heart-treasure was an ever-overflowing
cup. Strong. Confident. Proud. Family. There is no perfect number for a family.
There is no perfect family. But love is perfect, and my first graders in Jack’s
class informed me of that. A family is a circle of love where your hand is
held, your face will be kissed, where your dreams can safely swirl, and where,
wrapped up in a hug, you can freely spill your tears unjudged upon a Corinthian
thirteen shoulder. The need to be loved, to be heard, to be seen, to belong is
desperately, life-changingly great and demands a free gift of the heart which
is in the full possession of each of us. Nothing fancy. Just something
selfless. Within the circle of a family, between the interlaced fingers, flow
the faithful , endless prayers of each one for each other. The bonds of
love are infinitely strong across the miles, across the years, and provide deep
connection and peace that fully transcend our foibles, imperfections, and
errors. We love. In family reunion, at graduations and weddings, at sporting
events and concerts, at awards ceremonies and celebratory dinners we lay aside
our busy bustling routines and race to be together, to draw close together in a
strong circle to remember the joy, the peace, the strength, the promise, the
uniqueness, the comfort, the hope, the blessing, the perfect love that is
family.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
He Taught Me...How Blind Eyes See
Lessons Learned
Green
There
were so many things I had wondered about blindness and deafness, and not simply
the sterile, scientific, factual ramifications, symptoms, or causes of these
particular special needs, for infinite pages of information about and research
concerning blindness and deafness were readily available; undoubtedly enough
material to support a lifetime of articles to be written. No, I wondered about
the feelings associated with the everyday, ordinary, walking-through-life
experience of being blind and/or being deaf.
Was the silent, dark world sad or lonely or scary? Do you imagine
sounds? What would you imagine spring to sound like? In your imagination, do
you see pictures? Colors? My dear blind-deaf friend, who taught me more than
most of my college textbooks, welcomed these sorts of questions driven by
curiosity and an earnest desire to understand and be sensitive. He frequently
chuckled at the endless stream of questions that I would clumsily fingerspell
into his hand. He was pursuing a PhD in
Computer Science and was the first true genius I had ever met. One day, in the
midst of transcribing a textbook to braille, which was always an excellent time
for listening to him explain his thoughts, ideas, and feelings, I asked my
friend, “What is your favorite color?” His instantaneous response was, “Green.”
There was not a moment’s thought. There was no pensive pause for contemplation.
Just an automatic, “Green.” He had obviously considered this before and
confidently trumpeted his answer. How? and why? were my knee-jerk responses. His
beautiful response was one I will never forget. He smiled as his soft, clear voice replied, “I
know that green is the color of living things. Living things are hopeful and
fresh and lovely. Because of that knowledge, I am certain that green is a color
that I would love.” There was always
something ever-optimistic, ever-hopeful, and ever-believing about my most
amazing friend. In his silent, dark world, he ceaselessly pursued learning,
service to others, and joy. In his silent, dark world, he chose possibility and
promise and fully discarded self-pity and self-doubt. He believed. He knew
hope. He trusted in the goodness of those around him and generously gave of the
greatness that was in him. In his silent, dark world, he heard life’s music and
saw the light. He taught me.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Build Bridges Of Collaboration And Watch Cities Grow Stronger And More Kind
Lessons Learned
Celebrate Your Hometown
Forbes Magazine has more than once listed Rockford as
being among the most violent cities in America in addition to other equally
unflattering distinctions. But to us it’s home. It may not be perfect but there
is a tremendous lot of good here, and it is all of this good that we focused on
when we wrote a musical play about Rockford’s story. We engaged the support and
participation of more than 20 local organizations as we planned this project
known as “Hometown History.” It became a grand celebration of Rockford’s story,
our shared story, for which our Mayor issued a proclamation. We raised money so
that all District 205 3rd
graders could be transported to the stunning Coronado Theater to see and hear
our shared story free of charge. The entire event felt like a huge hug for our
city and certainly served as a step toward building bridges of hope and trust
between neighbors. This big, affirming collaborative event received a Mayor's
Arts Award for Cultural Event of the Year, and that is a credit to all of the
countless neighbors with willing hands who gathered their hearts and raised
their voices in a resounding “Yes” to our city. This event was not a one shot
deal, however; for there will be more and more until the bridges of
collaboration and hope and trust out-number the walls of fear and despair that
divide and isolate us and cause us to concede to Forbes. What do they know?
They see numbers, we see neighbors.
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
The Gift No One Asks For But Everyone Wants
Lessons Learned
Always In Season
Bridges connect east to
west, uptown to downtown, north to south, city to city, and because of these
bridges, we can easily cross one side to the other. This is significant.
Our cities today are under siege from a desperation, a loneliness, a despair
that originates in hopelessness and chronic dysfunction and culminates in a
fear-wrapped paralysis that can no longer see possibility. Our families today
are under siege from a materialistic world that paints a spectacular mirage of
how successful life ought to look, despite the fact that the closer one steps
toward that lie, the more one horrifically realizes that it is not there.
So the pace is quickened, the dial on the treadmill is turned exponentially up,
blinders are donned in hopes that faster and more focused can conjure OZ. It
cannot. We wallow in the frustration of our delusion and live angrily because
what the world tells us we want, we cannot have. Our schools today are under
siege from a bureaucratic system so heavily laden with infinite, infernal paperwork,
that the attempted fulfillment of our metrics obsession which is theoretically
designed to enhance individualized instruction, does in fact consume an
inordinate amount of prime, meaningful, relational, teachable time, leaving our
students more stressed with little to no academic gain. Our lives are
under siege so we build walls and live alone. We give up. We strike out
at those around us and weep quietly in the darkness. This is all wrong.
Our lives are designed to be lived relationally, in community, sharing hearts
and gifts and hope one life to another. Our hands are designed for reaching and
helping not hoarding and hiding. We need each other. We need more bridges.
Bridges to connect east to west, uptown to downtown, north to south, heart to
heart in our cities, our families, our schools, and every aspect of our lives.
Within our mirrored walls we see only ourselves and, truth be told, we do not
like what we see. It’s selfish. We need us. We need bridges. We need to look
out, reach out, for then we will find out that in serving and caring and
connecting, we ourselves are blessed. We all fully know that a far deeper
satisfaction is felt in giving a gift than in receiving a gift. The thing is,
each life is packed with gifts, heart gifts that cost nothing to give yet mean
everything to receive. The gifts of time, of compassion, of gentleness, of
listening, of smiling, of helping, of patience, of generosity, of forgiveness,
of willingness, of mercy; these gifts and so many like them cost little to
nothing but have the strength and power to change a life, to balm a wound, to
heal a pain, to offer hope. These gifts are bridges, the bridges needed by our
cities, our families, our schools, and by all of us. As giving a gift is always
in season, perhaps this season we need to consider the gift of a bridge.
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