Monday, November 23, 2009

apparently i'm getting uber crafty

there's more... i'm loving them





so today i'm sitting in my classroom and the icky math teacher strolls on in. he's icky for a variety of reasons, but his obsession with TI-83s and any other calculator the TI family might put out is frightening. FRIGHTENING. he's lost in mind in faculty meetings before when people brought up online books, as though they have been produced by the robot army that is slowly working its way through the bowels of technology, counting the minutes and days until the powerful TIs will be removed from their throne of moving sine graphs. so he strolls in and sort of looks at me and then says "so the students are saying that you've resigned." i tell him that yes, yes i have, and he then stares at me for about 30 seconds. 30 seconds of nothing except glassy, TI-strained, bloodshot eyes. then he sort of looks down and kind of makes these snorty/exhalation noises like a horse, then starts talking to me about....... yep, calculators. after a few minutes of that, he says "well... if you're leaving for personal reasons.. i just.... i mean, if it's personal... i just really think you should give (the school) a chance." i think i said something like "well, i appreciate your opinion." and then threw a TI-83 on the floor and danced in its shattered plastic splatter.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

rhett butler... you are divine

yesterday i went to the movies to see gone with the wind. the local theatre here was playing it on the big screen, and since i had never seen, i figured seeing it in a proper-style theatre with lots of old people would be the way to go. and was it ever. FOUR HOURS. the movie is four hours. and no one in the theatre died during those four hours. thankfully. but i was neck-deep in little old ladies (and suspiciously, very few old men.... but then i realized they were all probably dead), many of whom were wearing fur coats and were incredibly dolled-up. very cute. and the movie was great and i officially have a huge crush on rhett butler. stupid scarlett. ashley's a total dud and gross-looking and rhett was so great and funny and dashing and charming and ugh. what an idiot. ol' ethel next to me was just as irritated as i was.

my latest project: making frames out of old books. and i'm loving them. they're aged and rough and cute and will look really rad hanging up. with sexy lady photos in them.

Friday, November 20, 2009

and in case the zebra comment didn't get you....

i just remembered something else mr. bright pants said. he told me he used to fill in at the high school i resigned from. he asked about what happened with the football team, and when i told him what they shouted and the aftermath, he responded with "i taught those kids. those are all good kids. there's not a racist in the bunch." really? i am so goddamn tired of that response to what these kids did. how exactly do you define what a racist is? if yelling "kill n***ers" doesn't fall into your definition, maybe you need readjust your criteria. what exactly does it take to be considered a racist around here? lynching? being a part of the KKK? i would say that being a subtle racist still makes you a racist, but it's not even about subtlety! you screamed for the destruction of other groups of people based on their race, sexual identity, and religious affiliation. that makes you a racist, homophobe, and anti-semite. done.

don't tell me zebras can't be domesticated

last night i went out for drinks with some folks and had a relatively ridiculous interaction with an older man sitting to my left. i brought the book i was reading to the restaurant because i'm a nerd and always have a book with me in case i'm sitting there waiting for someone. which i was. the book: Guns, Germs, and Steel. an interesting book that discusses why it is that european culture came to be the prevalent world culture, why it is the europeans tended to be the conquering folks, etc. very compelling and fun and thought-provoking. and written by a guy who won a macarthur genius grant, so obviously the guy's not a total moron. so my friend shows up and i set the book down, little knowing that the older man who's about to sit on my left is about to feast his eyes on it and get a little wacky. i actually take notice of the older man when i glance over and see his incredibly bright orange pants. not hunting pants, just bright orange. since i have my own pair of bright orange pants that i love, i didn't fault him for it, just made the observation. so then a couple of minutes later, he says "so what do you think of that book?" i respond by saying the author poses really interesting theories and ideas and blah blah. well, this guy counters back with how he's a history teacher and this book really ignores huge things, and how people take the book as the bible when really the fact of the matter is that some people ARE really superior to other people and don't try telling him that you can't domesticate zebras because he's seen it. wow. i try to say that the author isn't necessarily trying to ignore those other factors, but is attempting to explain history from an angle that hasn't been done much before. he continued on with how he had to substitute teach at a school and they made him play some film about how a white woman converted to islam and went to mecca and how great her experience was, but they weren't telling the whole story and as an american he wants the truth. ARE YOU KIDDING? and yes, his wife/partner/mistress was sitting next to him, but by this point he was practically in my lap and things were getting uncomfortable. i managed to escape for a little bit, but then later in the evening, and after some wine, it started up again... this time with him trying to get me to taste his chardonnay, me absolutely refusing and telling him that was gross, and then him leaning in and saying "you're cute." no... i'm not. but, i do know you have lots of ties and you should donate them to me for the ecofest stuff i'm doing. get out of my lap.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

why i love kids

there are two boys in my high school class who are.... let's just say they aren't necessarily the types to turn their homework in or stay on task or always have their shoelaces tied. but they are also very bright kids who are exceptionally sweet and come from houses where there is a lot of yelling and little attention paid to them. i have a soft spot for both of them and have really worked to reinforce the great things they do and keep them motivated and get them involved and pretty much remind them on a daily basis that they are good kids. i think one of them is taking my leaving rather hard because i am one of the teachers that he gets along with and is able to talk to. and it's leaving those kids that is the hard part of all of this.... those kids that so easily get pushed aside because they are "problem" kids... that problem being that they come from awful social and emotional situations that they don't know how to deal with.

so i check my email today and waiting for me is a message from one of these kids:

Dear Dr. L
I'm very sorry for the students at XXX and hope you can forgive us. Now I can really see why you are doing what you are doing. I am apologizing for the jerks and myself for being a problem in your class. I did not mean to be a problem sometimes it just happens and well i guess XXX feels the same way he may seem to be a pain but deep down he must be good. For all of the other kids in our school i can not say much others feel the same but I am trying to stop the mean things being said about you.

and that's why kids are awesome.

Monday, November 16, 2009

mad as a hatter. so mad.

i guess i was naive to assume that my resigning would go smoothly. but some part of me thought that considering all the times i have spoken to people at the school about my frustration with both the incidents of hate-speech and disrespect from students they wouldn't necessarily be that shocked at my leaving. but they were. shocked and angry. and it's hard to tell where exactly those reactions are coming from. it's almost as though they are shocked that i would really, for real, resign on principle. resign because i will not associate myself with a place that tolerates and silently excuses hate. i won't do it.

the angry reaction is a little bit harder to dissect. and let me say that the anger i have had directed at me since resigning is far more intense than anything i saw the football team receive during their hate-speech bonanza. i think part of that anger comes from a warped sense of loyalty, or a warped sense of loyalty that some people feel i should have. loyalty either to them as people or to the school in general. then another part of it comes from embarrassment. and then another part.... it seems as though people like to talk about all these changes that are going to happen to curb the intolerance, but nothing happens. and then when i decide to do something and resign, the first reaction people have is anger because my resignation indeed indicates that something really is wrong and they're standing around and letting it happen. that for all the talk going on, there is no action being taken. and talk is important, but if you're not going to follow up on anything, then you're just going through the motions to make yourself feel better. and i of course realize that my leaving, i'm removing a person from the school who was working hard to make these changes happen. but when you're one person bashing your head up against the wall and getting punched in the face by gross racists, perhaps it's time to walk away. my leaving is one of the few repurcussions i have actually seen at the school. you act like this, you refuse to take action, then i walk away. but i'll probably be ducking in case you try throwing anything at my head. grossos.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

passion pit of passion... i love that band

hilarious/frightening treat of the day: on a female college student's homework: "a pap smear is when a woman usually 18 years and older go to a doctor and get tested for cancer in their boobs." my written response: "who is your doctor?"

and in my anatomy class today, i reminded my students to make sure that they wrap their dissected cats in wet paper towels... because "nobody likes a dry pussy. what? did i just say that out loud?" yep. yep i did.

so my resignation has been submitted and i am counting the days. i've come to realize that it isn't the actions of the students that are moving me to leave, it's the complete apathy of the faculty and staff. COMPLETE AND UTTER APATHY. and if there's one thing i may add to my list of "things i abhor," it's apathy. and that goes across the board: apathy in regards to social issues, sexy-time relationships, politics, you name it. show some passion! how can you not being worked-up about being in love, or being surrounded by racist idiots, or making the best goddamn sugar cookies you've ever made in your life?! being excited and ethusiastic about people and places and things you love doesn't make you some sort of infantile who's missing the bigger picture. it may just be that you do see the bigger picture and that's all the more reason to be excited about what's going on right in front of you. denying yourself those small moments of excitement, and sometimes infuriation, leaves a space where that visceral, emotional connection just might be. good or bad, those emotions are beautiful and frightening and challenging and a gorgeous reflection of the energy you are bursting with. i love it. i love that energy and i love that passion. and i love people who aren't afraid to show it. like my sisters. we built a mouse maze for andrea's pet mouse red and that was one of the most exciting and awesome projects ever. in the history of the world. no, it wasn't when we were kids, it was three months ago. rope swings, forest made of pencils, paper towel tower... amazing! hug some exciting person tonight... :)