Saturday, October 31, 2020

Halloween 2020

31 October 2020: Went to the last backyard concert of the season at my former dean's house tonight. It was a lot of fun, combining a fiddler and a great local storyteller. Bittersweet, of course, as the cold weather sets in and we have to retreat indoors for a long COVID winter. The last song the fiddler played, "My Epitaph," struck just the right kind of hopeful note as we also stare down whatever next week brings us. 

"The flowers you give me, please give them today
Don't waste their beauty on cold lifeless clay
One rose with love could do so much good
And I think all would give it if they just understood

Now God gives life freely, then he takes away
What we do for each other oh let us do it today
We have no promise that tomorrow will come
Don't sing my praises after I'm gone"

Friday, October 30, 2020

Nine full weeks...

30 October 2020: A long week, filled with some interesting stuff (including a fair amount of B.S.), but, boy: October is almost over and I've finished nine full weeks of on-campus instruction. It's been frustrating, scary, exhausting, and I never want to repeat it. But there have been moments of joy and the old magic. And I never thought we'd still be open at this point. On to Week 10. 

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Way to go, Buddy!

29 October 2020: Though I am bummed we couldn't celebrate in person, it was lovely to see Hannah get her Finest Under Forty award from Shepherd's Alumni Association today.



Wednesday, October 28, 2020

"Here are some emojis..."

28 October 2020: Started to well up with tears when I saw an email from Krista in my inbox. Opened it and could not stop chuckling. And I stayed teared up, too. 




Tuesday, October 27, 2020

"Under the Table"

27 October 2020: Everyone needs a friend like Hannah, who makes me feel supported and seen and provided me with the perfect anthem for some bullshit I had to deal with today. 

Monday, October 26, 2020

"But I know who holds tomorrow..."

26 October 2020: In the midst of a Monday that is jam-packed, including teaching, advising, a COVID test (for screening purposes), a meeting at which I'll have to be confrontational, and a workshop about a project I'm not sure I fully understand (or want to do). 

So this song popping up on Pandora helps:

 

We are swimming in so much uncertainty these days and I feel so deeply unsettled. Grateful for these words:

"Many things about tomorrow
I don't seem to understand
But I know who holds tomorrow
And I know who holds my hand..."

Sunday, October 25, 2020

"You Got It All"

25 October 2020: Saw this song, "You Got It All" by The Jets, get mentioned in a tweet yesterday morning and it has been playing in my head non-stop since then. The opening bars are a like a time machine. The tune is simple and sweet. The lyrics are kind of lovely, too. Wistful and nostalgia-inducing with a touch of melancholy. In other words, a perfect "rainy Sunday in autumn" soundtrack. 


(By the way, the tweet was pointing out that the lead singer was about 13 (!) when she sang this.)

Saturday, October 24, 2020

"No matter what..."

24 October 2020: Got choked up today listening to one of my dear friends talk about how she's helping her son through some struggles. "No matter what, I love you," she told him. Not everyone hears that from their parents. What a gift that is. And it just makes me feel lucky to know her. 

Friday, October 23, 2020

Pumpkin carving...

 23 October 2020: Carved a pumpkin for the first time (I think?) since my senior year of college. Happy to have done it outside on a warm-ish autumn night with two of my favorite people six feet away. Add some Chinese take-out, smores over the fire-pit, and some dumb movies and it was a perfect night.






Thursday, October 22, 2020

Leave the World Behind

22 October 2020: “'I would feel better if I just knew what was happening.’ Amanda looked toward the hall, could hear the plash of water in the bathtub. These words were not true, but she did not know that.” –Rumaan Alam, Leave the World Behind

Finished this book last night. It's so good, but I don't think I want to ever read it again, at least not until "these interesting times" are over. Passages like the one above epitomize what it does so well--the haunting narrative voice, the little details, the increasingly desperate characters. A profoundly unsettling book. 

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

A poetic gift...

21 October 2020: Finished a discussion of "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" today in ENGL 204. When class was over, a student (who is over 21!) presented me with a can of this beer. She works at a liquor store and is a craft beer expert and was delighted to see this show up in the store. 

Incidentally, this was one of the best discussions of that poem I've had with a 204 class. I think it's because I finally divided it over two class periods and we could just take our time. 


(This is a picture I found online--I accidentally left the can in the fridge at work!) 


Tuesday, October 20, 2020

"The Promise"

20 October 2020: A long day--one of those "miles to go before I sleep" days. Not bad...just a lot. 

 

This song has been in my head on and off the past few days. Brandi and Catherine Carlile sang it at the live-streamed campfire sing-along Brandi and the twins did a couple of weeks ago and I re-watched it on Sunday. And did I just about die when they sang it? You know it.

Anyway, it's just such a masterpiece of a song, I think. Always makes me wistful and and calm. That's a pretty good energy for days like today. 

Monday, October 19, 2020

"With Will to choose, or to reject"

19 October 2020: We're covering this poem in my Dickinson seminar this week. I kind of can't stop thinking about it. Really feeling its energy and impulses these days, especially as I think about my earlier life, how I've come to see myself, and where I am going. 

I'm ceded — I've stopped being Theirs —
The name They dropped upon my face
With water, in the country church
Is finished using, now,
And They can put it with my Dolls,
My childhood, and the string of spools,
I've finished threading — too —

Baptized, before, without the choice,
But this time, consciously, of Grace —
Unto supremest name —
Called to my Full — The Crescent dropped —
Existence's whole Arc, filled up,
With one small Diadem.

My second Rank — too small the first —
Crowned — Crowing — on my Father's breast —
A half unconscious Queen —
But this time — Adequate — Erect,
With Will to choose, or to reject,
And I choose, just a Crown —

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Sunday vibes

18 October 2020: Got a decent amount done on a day that feels long. This even as the daylight leaves earlier and earlier. Lots of time to think and feel accomplished and then turn around and feel all the other ways. 

This year especially, these late afternoons and evenings feel like I'm fighting against the literal and figurative darkness and other inevitablities. 

Saturday, October 17, 2020

"And Life steps almost straight"

 17 October 2020: Grading Emily Dickinson essays today and find myself drawn to the poem below, mediation on grief and resilience that seems appropriate for times like these:

We grow accustomed to the Dark -
When light is put away -
As when the Neighbor holds the Lamp
To witness her Goodbye -

A Moment - We uncertain step
For newness of the night -
Then - fit our Vision to the Dark -
And meet the Road - erect -

And so of larger - Darknesses -
Those Evenings of the Brain -
When not a Moon disclose a sign -
Or Star - come out - within -

The Bravest - grope a little -
And sometimes hit a Tree
Directly in the Forehead -
But as they learn to see -

Either the Darkness alters -
Or something in the sight
Adjusts itself to Midnight -
And Life steps almost straight.

Friday, October 16, 2020

Frost in the time of COVID

16 October 2020: So many times this semester, I've been moved by how the literature I teach takes on new light or significance during this pandemic and political moment. Today it was Frost's "Mending Wall" in ENGL 204. We talked about walls, both literal and metaphorical and it occurred to me that masks and social distancing function as kinds of barriers proving "good fences make good neighbors." 

(I suppose my title has double meaning, since there's a frost advisory for tonight.)

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Virtual 5K

15 October 2020: My daily walk had a bit more purpose this morning, as it was in support of Shepherd Virtual 5K, with proceeds going to the Last Dollar Fund. Nice way to start the day.



Wednesday, October 14, 2020

P.S.

14 October 2020: Got an email from one of my favorite students (that's a big category, I know) that had this very simple inclusion: "P.S. you rock." 

So simple, but it made me smile in the midst of a long day. 

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

"a desire to walk into the ocean"

13 October 2020: Quoting from an email from one of my ENGL 301 students that gave me both validation and a hearty chuckle:

"I'd just like to thank you for your suggestion to have other people read a story for a reader-response paper! My theses are pretty much set in stone already. Having a group of average men read 'The Use of Force' was extremely illuminating, and handed me a thesis on a silver platter, unfortunately now I am overcome with a desire to walk into the ocean."

Monday, October 12, 2020

Dashboard frustration

12 October 2020: Really wish Shepherd would stick to its word and update the COVID dashboard on time. (It's supposed to be updated at 4:00 every weekday). For those of us there every day, doing our best, this seems like an easy way to keep/maintain trust. I start hitting refresh at 4:00 and sometimes the update doesn't come out until way later. Right now, at nearly 8:00, it's still showing Friday's numbers--numbers that indicated in a big jump in quarantines.

So yeah: maybe give us the info???

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Remember movie theaters???

11 October 2020: A message I just sent Hannah: "Like...seeing a movie on a fall (summer, spring, winter) day, settling in with your soda and popcorn, watchin' trailers, feeling your butt go numb but not (really) caring, hitting the bathroom as soon as its over, then talking with your homies about it after, maybe over some Waffle House or Thai food or whatever?"

Just really missing bits and pieces of "normal," especially as they feel more and more remote. 

Saturday, October 10, 2020

Midterm Grades: DONE!

10 October 2020: At around 7:00 p.m. this evening, I submitted my last set of midterm grades for this very strange semester. Still felt good, even though, like most things this semester, its very normalcy felt a bit surreal. 

Still, tradition demands chair-dancing.

Friday, October 9, 2020

46

9 October 2020: My brother would have turned 46 today. Because it's been a long day/week/month/year and I am tired, and because it feels different every year and grief keeps evolving and remains hard to describe, and because sometimes the simplest word does enough work, I'll just say it's sad.

But it's also true that often when I feel sad about his life and death, I find myself thinking about my students and how hopeful it is to be surrounded by college students, even in dark days like these. I also think their liveliness, their energy, and their wit reminds me of him in his better days. I think that he would get a kick out of them. 

So I was glad to spend some time this afternoon with the Sigma Tau Delta students as we hosted an "Outdoor Literature Celebration." To be honest, I wasn't thrilled about going at first. There was work I wanted to get done and I didn't think we'd get much of a turn-out on a late Friday afternoon during a pandemic. But darn it if I wasn't wrong--and I love being wrong about this. We had a pretty decent crowd and the event was kind of awesome. 

After it was over, I went back to my office and worked for another couple hours, and then walked over to pick up my weekly Thai food take-out. As I walked back to my car, I kept thinking about everything I've written about above. Then I started thinking about one especially impressive member of Sigma Tau Delta, someone whose parents struggle(d) with addiction. And here she is, thriving and inspiring. She's a delightful young woman who makes me laugh. I realized, in a different universe, she could be Ryan's kid. I don't know what to do with that, but it made me smile. He'd get a kick out of her, too. 

Thursday, October 8, 2020

Behaving herself...

8 October 2020: Yearly exam completed. As is usually the case, this semi-feral drama queen actually behaved pretty well. But her face in these pics reveals multitudes. 




Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Off it goes...

7 October 2020: As I walked to my class in Reynolds Hall today, Carrie was waiting outside. Usually that means the technology isn't work (she teaches there right before I do). "What's wrong this time?" I asked her. 

"Nothing wrong. Just weird," she answered. "There's a bird trapped in there."

Lord, did I worry about that bird. It flew back and forth throughout the class and looked stressed. And yes: I sure did project every bit of my own baggage on that little creature. (Among other emotions, I kept thinking about being stuck in the GSO airport on my way to an interview in upstate NY, watching a bird fly back and forth, trapped inside.)

When the class was over, I found a door in the back to prop open. A couple of hours later, Carrie texted me that it got out. What a relief. 

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Done, I suppose...

6 October 2020: I turned in a big(ish) project today which definitely feels good, but the project itself--academic/institutional bureaucratic busywork--is sucking some of that good feeling away. But at least it's done. Whew.  

(It is interesting to see the ways I have allowed myself to get involved in precisely the kind of work I always said I never wanted to do. Sigh.)

Monday, October 5, 2020

"A Reason to Smile"

 “You won me over with your way of kissing and the way you hold me when we dance. You’re not a fantastic dancer, but you hold me fantastically…” –Hunny, to Elliot, her husband of 60+ years.

This is just a delightful episode of the StoryCorps podcast. Really hit the spot at the end of the day. 

Sunday, October 4, 2020

Nostalgia

4 October 2020: On a day where I once again find myself seeking escape in very old game show re-runs and dreaming of the "before times," this episode of Sawbones on nostalgia hits differently. I always remember a professor telling me that the word combines "'pain" and "home" and I've been acutely aware of its inherent bittersweet-ness ever since. 

Saturday, October 3, 2020

"Traveling Alone"

3 October 2020: Was in an pretty awesome mood most of the day--one where I even caught myself in the midst of it and wondered why. Said to myself--out loud--"you are having a good day." 

Things shifted a bit tonight, but hanging in there. Music hurts and helps in equal measure. 

Friday, October 2, 2020

"it is a little thing..."

2 October 2020: "Susie--it is a little thing to say how lone it is--anyone can do it,but to wear the loneness next to your heart for weeks, when you sleep, and when you wake, ever missing something, this, all cannot say, and it baffles me." --Emily Dickinson to Susan Gilbert, 1854.

Thursday, October 1, 2020

A bit of validation...

1 October 2020: Lots of meetings today with good folks. And that one person who was giving off bad vibes? Condescending and low-key aggressive? It's really validating to hear that I wasn't the only one picking up on those vibes. Not only does that show that I'm not crazy, but it makes me feel better about what I might have been giving off myself. Shew.