I had an interesting conversation last night with one of my students at Fullerton College. In assigning my essay on technology/new media, it pushed her to think about my experience with technology growing up. She came up to me after class, and this was the conversation that ensued:
V: "I think I have an idea for my paper, but I need to ask you an important question."
Me: "Okay…"
V: "When you were in high school, and you needed to communicate with your teachers, how did you do that?"
Me: "Well…we visited their room before or after school, or we left them a note in their box in the office."
V stood there for several minutes trying to digest what I had just said. There was a look of complete shock on her face. "Realllllllyyyyy?"
Me: "Yes, really."
V: "So you had to go and see them?"
Me: "Yes. Remember, there was no internet or email. It didn't exist yet."
V: "Wow! I can't even believe that."
This little conversation got me thinking about the things we take for granted. Technology has made our lives easier, as evidenced by this conversation. For her generation, she can send an email easily to her teacher, if she has any questions. In my generation, you had to gain a lot of confidence (actually, that was my issue as I was fairly shy and HATED bothering my teachers), and go and talk with your teacher face-to-face if you were having problems. I think this might be an important step that students are missing out on. Having to learn to talk with a teacher, who is in a position of authority forces students to learn how to be respectful and thoughtful of their actions. I wonder if having the ability to email or text a teacher lowers that standard because students don't have to look a teacher in the eye and be reminded of their position in the classroom. Not that I am a super formal-kind of teacher, BUT I wonder if the one of the problems we see in classrooms with respect and entitlement comes from the anonymity and ease technology provides. It's not the ONLY thing to add to this, but I wonder if it is a contributor….What do you think?
Endeavoring each day to find a way to live a more virtuous life by revealing that which seeks to destroy me daily.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Monday, February 17, 2014
Monday's Musings
A few random musings about who knows what…
(1) I am seriously addicted to Tiny Death Star right now. I have had a smartphone for a long time now, and I have fought to keep games off my phone. Until now. I find myself seriously babysitting the building of the Death Star, and it is such a time suck. It taunts me. Seriously. It calls to my OCD-side that I need to keep the Death Star going. It needs to keep building. For what purpose? What would happen if I literally ignored it for days? Would the world end? I think not. Yet, here I am, as I write this blog, babysitting this dumb game.
(2) My husband, son, and I went and saw the Lego Movie. Let me first say, that I thought this was one of the best "kid's" movies I have seen in a while. It is witty and well-written. But that isn't the point of this musing. The point of #2 here is I love to watch movies and shows with my kid. He and I have a similar sense of humor, and he gets the dry humor. There is nothing better than to hear him laugh at the best jokes, and it makes me think that I have done something a little right with him. It drives me nuts when people have no sense of humor, or the humor they appreciate is the low-brow kind (not that he doesn't like poop, fart, and butt jokes). But he gets the high brow stuff too, and it makes me feel a bit successful as his mom and teacher.
(3) There is something about the Olympics. I have always loved both the Summer and Winter Olympics, ever since I can remember. A year ago, I used to ask an attendance question: Favorite Olympic Event? I found that most of my students do not watch nor ever have watched the Olympics. I was dumbfounded. This is the ultimate competition, as it exists on the world stage. It compares to the World Cup in soccer. It unites our world, and I think it is important. Here are my favorite Olympic events:
(4) I am incredibly excited about the blogging in class. There have been some GREAT blog posts, and I think people are figuring it doesn't have to be too painful. I love the way it connects us as a class…
That's it for now, I think!
(1) I am seriously addicted to Tiny Death Star right now. I have had a smartphone for a long time now, and I have fought to keep games off my phone. Until now. I find myself seriously babysitting the building of the Death Star, and it is such a time suck. It taunts me. Seriously. It calls to my OCD-side that I need to keep the Death Star going. It needs to keep building. For what purpose? What would happen if I literally ignored it for days? Would the world end? I think not. Yet, here I am, as I write this blog, babysitting this dumb game.
(2) My husband, son, and I went and saw the Lego Movie. Let me first say, that I thought this was one of the best "kid's" movies I have seen in a while. It is witty and well-written. But that isn't the point of this musing. The point of #2 here is I love to watch movies and shows with my kid. He and I have a similar sense of humor, and he gets the dry humor. There is nothing better than to hear him laugh at the best jokes, and it makes me think that I have done something a little right with him. It drives me nuts when people have no sense of humor, or the humor they appreciate is the low-brow kind (not that he doesn't like poop, fart, and butt jokes). But he gets the high brow stuff too, and it makes me feel a bit successful as his mom and teacher.
(3) There is something about the Olympics. I have always loved both the Summer and Winter Olympics, ever since I can remember. A year ago, I used to ask an attendance question: Favorite Olympic Event? I found that most of my students do not watch nor ever have watched the Olympics. I was dumbfounded. This is the ultimate competition, as it exists on the world stage. It compares to the World Cup in soccer. It unites our world, and I think it is important. Here are my favorite Olympic events:
- Swimming (obviously!)
- Gymnastics
- Figure Skating
- Snowboarding (all the events)
- Super G (CRAZY!)
(4) I am incredibly excited about the blogging in class. There have been some GREAT blog posts, and I think people are figuring it doesn't have to be too painful. I love the way it connects us as a class…
That's it for now, I think!
Monday, February 10, 2014
A Narrative To Share
I have to admit. I love a good story. I especially like the ones that make me cry a little, or the ones that reflect on a situation that, at the time, seemed irrelevant, but later were determined to be significant. I don't know…there is something compelling about the simple moments in life.
A few years ago, I wanted to write a narrative for my English 59 class at Fullerton College. This is a class that is two levels below college writing. I figured the students needed to "see" a narrative, so I took a few hours to put something on paper.
In all honesty, I had been writing this story in my mind for much of my adult life. When the main situation in my story occurred, I began writing the rest.
Below you will find the story in its entirety. To be honest, I have not revisited it since the day I drafted it, so it is rough, and it needs some revision. I find a few places to be obvious, and that annoys me. Anyways, I thought I would post it here to share with you. Maybe it will help you as you put your narrative together….
A few years ago, I wanted to write a narrative for my English 59 class at Fullerton College. This is a class that is two levels below college writing. I figured the students needed to "see" a narrative, so I took a few hours to put something on paper.
In all honesty, I had been writing this story in my mind for much of my adult life. When the main situation in my story occurred, I began writing the rest.
Below you will find the story in its entirety. To be honest, I have not revisited it since the day I drafted it, so it is rough, and it needs some revision. I find a few places to be obvious, and that annoys me. Anyways, I thought I would post it here to share with you. Maybe it will help you as you put your narrative together….
Half Made Whole
I never felt whole. I never understood why I never felt
whole. I just didn’t. It felt like I had gotten out of a line for
an event, but I didn’t know why and it had been a mistake. Every year that
passed, I felt a void. An emptiness I
couldn’t express. I showed this
emptiness, this void, in my relationships with people. Whenever I had trouble with a friend, instead
of facing them, I would run. I would
hide. I escaped into the void that I
didn’t comprehend. When my husband
wanted to get close, I ran to the void, ignoring him, pushing him away. It seemed safer there. One day, however, I
was confronted emotionally, and eventually physically, with the void. The “halfness” of me. It changed my life; it changed me.
I barely remember him. My last memory of him was from the back seat
of a car. I cannot tell you what the car
looked like, or even what he looked like.
I was nine years old. Nine is a
strange age, I think. I felt like the
most innocent little girl. I loved
dolls. I loved to dance. I loved to roller-skate. I loved being a girl. Yet, every time, I had to go with him, I felt different. I loved the dolls he bought me, not because
they were dolls, but they were from him.
I didn’t dance in front of him. I
don’t remember roller-skating with him.
I wanted to be his girl, but he had moved on to a new family. And I resented that. I was no longer just his girl. He had a new wife, a new son. They were his priority. They were with him every day, every second,
every minute. I got a weekend every six
months.
Sitting in the back seat of his car
(which I don’t remember), coming from a fun weekend of Disneyland and Sea
World, he asked me the question that would change my life, change me.
“Do you want Roger to adopt you?”
What did
that mean? In my innocent nine-year-old mind, I couldn’t understand or fathom
the extent of this question. Looking
back on this moment with my thirty-eight year old mind, I ask myself, can a nine-year old really make this type of
decision? Should I have ever been asked
this question? From this time, I don’t think so.
With butterflies in my stomach, I
looked down, a bit pale from the confrontation, and in a soft, almost inaudible
voice, I said, “yes. I want Roger to
adopt me and Kevin.” I don’t remember his look, but I do remember the deadening
silence of the car. No words were spoken
for awhile. And, to be honest, I don’t
remember his response. Maybe there
wasn’t one. Maybe I don’t want to
remember it because it may not have been the response I wanted to hear. Did I really want him to allow another man to
adopt me? Even more, did I really
understand the significance of it? Did I
know it would create my “halfness,” my void?
Shortly after that day, we went to
court, became “Hunts,” and he left my life.
After the birth of my son, Ethan, I
missed him. I had given birth to Ethan a
year before and was trapped in wondering about my dad. Even though I had told him as a naïve
nine-year-old I “wanted” a “new” dad, I could never understand how he had
easily walked away. How does a person
walk away from his own “blood”? Sitting at my computer, I typed him a letter,
telling him about my life and my brother’s life. When I had completed it, I re-read it to
insure I didn’t sound crazy or had made any grammatical mistakes. I made some changes, printed it off, and put
it in an envelope. With my hands shaking
slightly, I addressed it with his name, my former name, and added the correct
postage to it. As I placed it in the
postal slot, it felt like I was in a strange dream where I could see myself from
above but I couldn’t feel or connect to me.
The letter was gone…
He never responded.
August 28th, 2008. I sat looking at his obituary
and news articles which described him as a “wonderful father and community
leader.” Was this the same person I
knew? Was this the man who failed to
respond to my letter, or the e-mail I sent two years after the letter? What happened? How could this man, the man
who had five hundred people attend his memorial, be the same man who walked
away all those years ago because a nine-year-old told him she wanted a “new”
dad? In my mind, I did not know him as
this “wonderful father.” I knew him as
someone who left my mom and eventually my brother and me. That void I felt, my halfness, was
highlighted, on fire. I needed to
know. I wanted to know this man.
I sat at the computer, pulse pounding, my heart racing faster
than a thoroughbred. I began
typing. Hello, Beth. My name is Amy Dickinson.
For some time, I’ve wanted to contact you, but I didn’t know if I should. I’m still not sure if it’s right. But, I just found and read about [our dad’s]
passing, and it’s sent me and my brother into a bit of a spiral. I don’t know if he ever told you and your
brother about me and my brother…I hope this message doesn’t bother you too
much. I just wanted you to know that my brother and I are here…All my best,
Amy.
I knew I
needed to contact my half-sister who I had never known and who I wasn’t sure if
she even knew about me. As I finished
the message, my hands were trembling beyond control. I re-read my message, pressed “send,” and it
was gone into the internet ether. What
if she didn’t respond like him? How
would I handle it?
I grabbed Ethan and my dog, Savannah. We needed to walk. I needed to get out of the house to calm the
adrenaline that was pushing through my veins.
As we walked down the street about half a mile from my house, my mind
was spinning. Would she respond? If she did respond, would she know about
me? Had I “opened a can of worms”? Maybe I shouldn’t have sent the message. I had lived the past twenty-eight years
without him. Why was it important to
know these people now? As we continued
to walk, I worried; I also secretly hoped and prayed to God she would
respond. Thirty minutes later, we were
back from our walk. I wanted to run to
the computer, but I was terrified. After
putting the dog away, finding other things to do around the house, and holding
off the inevitable for as long as I could, I sat down at my computer.
It was there: the
response.
My hands were shaking even more than they had when I sent the
message. With my heart pounding like a jackhammer; I opened the message. Amy,
Thank you SO much for contacting me! My brother and I do know about you and
were planning on trying to locate you when things settle down a little. Wow,
where to begin!...Despite him not talking about it much, by reading the
agreement, knowing my father, and talking to my mom about it, I think he was
deeply hurt by losing you and did it more for your sake than his…He was a very
devoted father to my brother and I [..] can’t help but wonder if his devotion
to us and the youth in the communities (which I’m guessing you read about) was
partially fueled by the guilt of losing you two….Please, please be in touch and
tell me all about yourself and your brother!!!!! I cannot begin to express the
emotions that are going through me right now! Beth
In the moment I read “he was deeply
hurt by losing you,” hot tears streamed down my face like little rivers. I began sobbing as I finished the
message. The void, the halfness, was
filling. Our dad did not tell my sister
these things; she knew them from everything he had given her and others. For some reason I cannot comprehend, I
believe it. I needed to hear he wanted
me, and it seemed in his own way he had.
As the days progressed, our written conversation taught me about
him, my brother, and my sister. Each
message that came filled a little more of the void, and it taught me about me. Before long, my brother, Kevin, and I met
Beth and Patrick in person in Maryland.
They too have never understood the decision our father made to stay out
of our lives. It didn’t seem to make
sense with the type of father he was to them.
All of a sudden, it didn’t matter to me. In that moment of meeting them,
my half became whole, and I felt like that innocent nine-year old again, who
truly felt loved by her daddy.
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