Monday, February 18, 2013

Simple Things

It's amazing how the simplest of things can be the most memorable.

This morning I sat down to breakfast.

Suddenly the room brightened and my eyes were drawn to the kitchen window.

Sunshine streamed through blinds casting shadows,
no...light through shadows, 
that brightened cabinets and walls with its design of diagonals.


Beautiful.

Simple.

I left my breakfast in search of a camera.
Surely there was more of this "simple beauty" throughout the house.  

And there was:

...across the drawers of a chest



















...illuminating closet doors

...resting on a bed quilt



















And then,
as quickly as it had brightened to a blazing contrast of light and shadow,
it softened.
Outside, a haze of clouds slowly crossed the sun, stealing the magic.

Often natural beauty is fleeting,
but the joy,
the lift of spirit,
the childlike smile it brings,
lingers
and sometimes,
commits itself to memory.

Like the song that plays on the radio and takes you back to the exact moment your first heard it floating through an open dorm room in college.

Or the Cardinal on your fence that takes you back to a childhood nature walk when your father said it was your state bird.

Funny thing is, you never know when or what will trigger this new memory in the years to come.

You only know that, right now, it has changed your mood and insight for just a little while.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Again

The amazing thing about fifth grade writers in late January is that they've become fearless.

The amazing thing about blogger Lisa-Jo Baker is her ability to draw writers together every Friday to write on one topic for five minutes.

Mix the two and you have a Language Artsy Friday afternoon in my classroom.

We'd just spent 45 minutes reading and sharing books with our second grade reading buddies.  The room was so full of students sitting in pairs, the second grade teacher and I had to tiptoe our way through.

Finally, the second graders were gone and it was time for writing exercise.

Before the topic, we agreed to write prose rather than poetry or lists.

Twenty-five students sat eagerly, notebooks open, pens in hand, waiting to give their all for five minutes on a writing topic.

Lisa-Jo did not disappoint.  The topic was "again".

Pens scratched noisily across landscapes of notebook pages in an otherwise silent classroom.

A focused silence, almost reverent.

I walked from table to table peeking over shoulders as writers quickly penned their thoughts.

The five minute mark arrived.

Notebooks in hand, students left their seats for the comfort of a large, berber rug.

They shared their writing and personal approaches on the topic.

  • the meaning of the word "again"
  • the sound of the word "again"
  • sibling rivalry episodes that occur "again and again"
  • vacations they want to take "again"
  • going to school "again"
  • being out of dress code "again"
  • if I had my ____ "again"
  • wanting to see a grandmother, long gone to Glory, "again"

I sat listening, in awe, to writers who once refused to write more than a sentence in September and October.
Writers who once drew stickmen in the margins of pages rather than write.  
Writers whose mantra was once, "I can't think of anything!"  

Now, I can send a one-word topic orbiting around the room and students willingly reach out to reel it in, ponder its existence, and then write on its relevance.

Today,
there exists a classroom of fifth grade writers,
who in late January, 
are fearless, 
and do not disappoint.







Sunday, December 23, 2012

The Christmas Prayer

Friday, as the entire school prepared to leave for Christmas break, 
one of my students pulled an envelope from her backpack.  
She rushed to my computer desk and thrust it towards me.

"I forgot to give you this," she said.

The envelope held a Christmas card from her family.  

Inside, beautifully penned, was the following prayer:


"May our dear Lord be with you and your family as we celebrate the birth of Jesus, 
the Savior of the world.
Usher you into the new year in victory,
grant you peace and grace for the year ahead. 
Amen."



Mychelle



Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Hot and Dry

Trees line three sides of my backyard.
I hang bird feeders in them.
Each day grateful diners serenade their thanks.

Most mornings I sit on the deck sipping a good cup of coffee.
The low hum of cars from the nearby highway is as soothing as listening to waves on the beach.

The problem lately...it's been too hot.

So, I've sat in my air conditioned kitchen sipping that coffee.

It has been a hot and dry summer here in the midwest.

My lawn, although low cut and well trimmed, is both crunchy and the color of hay.
The crabgrass, which manages to stay green through drought, is blonde as well.
Fortunately, I've maintained flower beds of blooming perennials that are hardy and find their way in arid weather, plus I water them no matter what.

This morning I awoke at 6:17 to the slightest pitter-patter of rain.

Rain!

I opened my bedroom window and was welcomed by a cool breeze.
The weatherman made it clear that this reprieve would be short-lived.
I'll take it!
Now to brew that coffee and get out on the deck.







Monday, July 16, 2012

Diva Love!

I ring the bell while peering through a glass door.
"Hey Gi-r-l!", coos our hostess as she opens the door and embraces me in a hug. 
 "So glad you could make it!" 

She leads me through the foyer to her spacious living room.

This is my reentry into the Divas Book Club.  
The ladies take turns standing and extending their arms to me.
Their hugs are honest and strong.
I feel as if I've never been away.




We bring ourselves up-to-date over Grapefruit Margaritas 
and then make our way to the dining room 
for dinner and politics.

Oh, I've missed this!

Finally, we discuss possible books for the September meeting.

Seven books 
and a field-trip to the local Barnes and Noble later, 
we decide on one.

The next meeting place?
 My house!