• goodbadi

    Curriculum, Art

    UPDATE: M told me that I knew the interesting facts not because of the zoo visit but because she’d checked out a book that we read about zoo animals. And N knew all the facts, too–I should’ve had her answer the questions.

    They’d pulled up in a nice red sedan and asked about schooling materials; they were doing an “internship” through a “college exchange program” and wanted to talk to the person in charge of schooling.

    “We’re often referred to the mom; is she here?”

    “No,” I said, “but I can speak for her.”

    “Can we have a few minutes to talk about a curriculum, to get the kids ready for next year?”

    “Well, we aren’t going to buy anything, and right now I’m in the middle of cleaning up a big pee mess in the bathroom, so now isn’t a good time.”

    “Maybe I can interest you with a little known fact for the day: Do you know what makes flamingos pink?”

    “It’s the food they eat,” I said. “Beta Carotenes, or something.”

    “Oh, you knew that! How about this one: What is a rhino’s horn made of?”

    “Hair.”

    “Oh, you knew that one, too!”

    “Yeah. We went to the zoo last week.”

    “Do you know why bats hang upside down?”

    “To sleep.”

    “Well, yes, but it’s because they’re legs are too brittle. They just have claws.”

    “Is that right? Thanks for stopping by.”

    At this point N, who was playing out in the yard with some friends, walked over, in time to hear them ask me if there are any other families with children around who might be interested in talking with them.

    “Not that I know of.”

    They thanked me and got back in their car, and N whispered to me, “You didn’t tell them about our cousins down the road.”

    “I know,” I whispered back. “I don’t want them to know about them.”

    She grinned.

    Just for fun, here are some of N’s recent drawings:

  • goodbadi

    Vigilante Christianity

    I feel an overall relief now that the recent string of burglaries has been broken by the arrest of a county woman, but in a way I’m disappointed, too.

    Before the arrest, I took much solace in the fact that the robbers (and it was rumored there were two, so one might still be on the loose) were nonviolent and only forcibly entered houses when no one was home to give them “directions.” It was only our stuff and not my family’s persons that seemed in danger, and so, anticipating filing a nominally hefty insurance claim once my beloved stereo, thrift-store shirts, and $180 electric guitar were stolen, I traipsed around taking pictures of everything we own and uploaded them to my private photos account on the web, and then recharged the camera’s battery for when the people showed up.

    I also came up with a number of response plans ranging from vigilante justice to Christianity. When leaving home we of course locked our doors and closed our gates, but I was more concerned about what to do if we were home when They arrived.

    The extreme cowboy in me wanted to move all of our vehicles to another location to make it look like no one was home, then wait with the camera poised, 9-1-1 at the ready, and a heart-stopping greeting for anyone who dared enter. But that would only be asking for a new layer of trouble–for me if not them–and so I quickly scrapped any such notions.

    Besides, our church’s morning service on the very day we learned about the robberies had been about loving the stranger, and the service on the following Sunday, the morning of the day the woman was arrested, was about loving one’s enemy, with lots of super-relevant Bible verses. It was rather compelling.

    About twenty-four hours before learning of the arrest, even before the love-your-enemies service, M and I brainstormed: We could greet the people asking for directions with, “Are you the people we’ve been hearing about who have been robbing homes? Come on in! We don’t have much stuff of much value, but we have plenty of good food–let us get you some.” And so on.

    If that would have gone smoothly, I’m disappointed that it didn’t happen. But at the moment I’m mainly glad that I still have all my stuff.

  • goodbadi

    Dreams and Reality: Musings

    These last few weeks of this pregnancy have been rather tiring for us all, of course M in particular with her lingering cough and cold and otherwise generally unfulfilling restless rest. I, on the other hand, most ever an easy sleeper, have even had time to dream.

    The other morning I awoke with a stiff neck, quite unrelated to the singing coaching I’d been providing the high-school-aged Alison Krauss. Her voice was great, but the way she was singing–or maybe what she was singing–just wasn’t at all right. Somewhere in the jumble homemade ice cream was being made in a hand-cranked mixer the size of a water heater; a look inside at the metal ice cream container revealed a very, very long container. Fifty gallons, I think.

    It is no dreamy joke, though, that during the last couple of weeks our neighbor as well as a colleague of mine as well as another household within the same five mile radius were robbed in the daytime while they were at school by someone seeking designer hand bags, clothing, and jewelry. (Some candy and dog biscuits were taken, too.) N happened to be with me when the neighbor filled me in with the details even as the sound of in-process deadbolt installation floated down from the burgled house; N subsequently worried a fair amount that someone would take her special (plastic) ring. We did our best to assure her that we didn’t have anything those people wanted.

    “If anything,” I said, “They’d take my guitars. But those are probably too traceable.”

    That evening I was playing my newest song on my still-unstolen electric guitar when the neighbors started shooting their handguns at a target in their front yard, and they left on all their porch lights for the next few nights. We closed and latched our driveway gate, and before bed wondered if our worthless dog’s contribution to our security would be enhanced by her being tied or roaming free at night. Since she was already loose and it was cold outside, we decided that chaining her could be counterproductive.

    The feeling that a criminal element was afoot put me in mind of Herman, the old man who rode with us to church most Sundays back when I was in high school. One week when the whole town was on alert after an armed duo killed a convenience store owner during a robbery, Herman said he was sleeping with a loaded gun on his bed stand. Mom somehow mentioned that she didn’t think Jesus would do that, and the next week Herman told us he’d put away the gun, that he’d rather be killed than kill someone else.

    At the same time, I’m in the middle of reading Sherlock Holmes stories and feeling rather horrified at criminal evil and grateful for the just Dr. Watson and cocaine-loving Sherlock. I know, however, that a loaded gun by my bed would make me feel much less safe; I would worry about the imminent danger of accidental harm. Even without a loaded gun at my bedside, though, I know our security out here in the country is rather nonexistent. After learning about the robbery, N asked me to pray that we would be safe. I overcame my internal struggle–I’ve written before about the “God lobby” and God not doing that great at protecting the innocent, but shoot, I really hope God does keep us all safe–and said a quick line that seemed to satisfy her.

    When it comes to safety, though, I haven’t forgotten about riding my bike for exercise. While starting tomorrow I’ll be sidelining my cycle’s saddle more in order to make possible a speedy homeward commute should labor hail during a school day, I am not losing sight of attempting to lean up (or is it ‘slim down’?).

    “You eat not as though you’re hungry, but like you’re afraid you’re going to be hungry,” M told me one time not too long ago.

    It wasn’t an unsolicited observation; I’d just asked for her weight-loss strategy recommendations. For part of our eleventh anniversary celebration, we’d watched our wedding video again, and I couldn’t help but admire my much thinner stature of a decade ago, and so in the name of someday having trimmed off some of my more apparent excesses, I decided this year I’ll try to eat from de facto–not de futuro–hunger.

    Hopefully that will benefit my family, and in a sense make us all more secure–even if it does mean that those fifty gallons of ice cream will have to remain in my dreams.

  • goodbadi

    Home Schooled by Self

    As M was signing out of school after she and the girls visited my classroom the other week, an assistant principal asked N her age.


    “Five,” N said cheerily.


    “Oh, you’re five! Are you in kindergarten already or will you go in the fall?”


    “I’m homeschooled.”


    “Oh! Is your mommy teaching you?”


    “I’m doing it myself.”

  • goodbadi

    Anniversary as Fiasco

    In some ways it was a fiasco–but in a one-on-one, relaxedly romantic sort of way.

    Our tenth-anniversary bash, a weekend away to the big-city suburbs and from everything but ourselves, started with a terrific concert by a terrific band we’d never heard of but M had researched: Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors. The band’s songs were strikingly normal, with mostly unsurprising lyrics about love, rest, worries, love, and melodies to fit, but fresh and energizing (and the lead guitar player was inspiring):

    We’d brought along a borrowed GPS gadget, a lifesaver especially in the after-show rainy dark, but somehow it didn’t occur to us until we were leaving our hotel on Sunday to look at an actual map of the area around the hotel. If we would have, well, maybe we wouldn’t have had so many opportunities to throw up our hands and laugh at ourselves; our entire weekend’s adventures were actually modestly local to our hotel.

    But we’re modest locals, at heart, all the way to our aspendthrift fear that the hotel amenities weren’t complimentary. The check-in man had, after all, asked for our credit card for any “additional fees.” Was the in-room coffee free? (It was.) If I turned on my beautiful Nexus 7 and accessed the internet would we be charged? (Not for the slower speed, which was okay for checking email.) Were the sleeping potions for the taking without fiscal recourse? (Now, in hindsight and with a clean credit card statement, I see that such worries were for nought.)

    Since this was our tenth anniversary celebration, M had planned the weekend’s activities in part to mirror things we’d done on our honeymoon and with an ear toward flexibility; we were at our leisure. But it didn’t take us long to figure out that suburbia requires a certain–in our case lacking–common sense.

    For lunch on Saturday we opted for Chinese buffet. We’d been hiking at a national park to see some roaring falls; General Tsao’s chicken and high fructose syrup-glazed broccoli couldn’t have sounded better. We pulled up outside a Starbucks to use the wifi, and found that none of the Chinese restaurants nearby were buffets.

    “But you want buffet? We have buffet at other location,” one place finally said when M called.

    We quickly memorized the address and headed off to…nothing. Even if we rearranged the address street numbers, no dice. After an hour-long-plus quest for Chinese, we ended up instead at a “next generation” silver diner that served locally grown food, great fries, and, for M, a cracked glass that leaked water all over the table.

    M, frustrated, decided to use the bathroom–but was back in a moment. “There was a man in it,” she said, “cleaning.”

    Instead we played Michael Jackson and “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” from the “authentic” jukebox that we later saw was spinning CDs.

    Saturday night we decided we wanted pizza. On our honeymoon we’d had it delivered to our hotel in the middle of a nighttime snowstorm, but the websites for the Domino’s and Papa John’s near us this time only said “carryout.”

    “What’s with that?” we wondered, and decided that since we had to go out anyway, we would call in a takeout order from a nearby kabobs place.

    As we walked out of the hotel to pick up our food, we passed a parked Domino’s pizza delivery car.

    After an extra round of the confusing nighttime block thanks to my split-second decision to take the wrong road, which earlier in the day had been the right road (which I had also missed), we pulled up to a hookah lounge run by impolite and tired-looking people who gave us containers of splendid-smelling food.

    A sign on the wall proudly declared, “Free delivery.”

    M grabbed some napkins and we headed back to the hotel, where we realized we hadn’t gotten forks for our salad, rice, spinach goop, and chicken.

    We used the little lids from the dressing containers as scoops instead.

    Sunday morning we decided to set out looking for donuts and coffee.

    “There’s a gas station over there,” M said.

    “Yeah, but let’s go back to near the music club–there’s got to be a coffee shop or something around there.”

    We checked the map and set out, our stomachs grumbling.

    “Nope, nothing in that plaza there. I don’t see…Hey, there’s a Giant–let’s go there. Maybe it has a cafe.”

    It didn’t, so we just bought donuts and quart of milk and headed back out to the parking lot, where we sat on the curb next to our car in the warm sun of the cool morning and then looked across the street and saw a coffee shop.

    Oh well.

    And then, when we’d finished, M said, “I’ll throw the trash away.”

    “There’s a trash can?”

    “Yep, over there–by that bench.”

    “A bench? We could have been sitting on a bench?”

    What bumpkins we are!

  • goodbadi

    Sad Tab Story

    M bought this welcome organizer for my church leadership papers, which were overflowing their binder, at her favorite thrift store. The tabs begin with the yellow “Resume” and tell the deflating reality of job hunting:

  • goodbadi

    Flattery…?

    Back in the early days of my adolescence, which hasn’t yet quite dissipated, I listened to a weekly Christian rock radio show called the Saturday Night Express. The DJ rocked the house, man, and I even won two cassettes from him in a drawing, one a compilation of a bunch of non prominent thrash-metal Christian punk bands, and the other a demo from the Rage of Angels which sported an interview with the band and one of my favorite glam songs, “Do You Still Believe in Love?” And I got saved, too, several times.


    I also took to attending the Christian rock concerts in the local college’s auditorium. The Newsboys came a few times, before they were really famous. The first time they were amazing: the guitarist ran all over the stage with his tongue hanging out, playing mesmerization itself. By the third time I saw them, though, I was less charmed even in spite of the drummer’s hydraulics setup that turned him upside down, partly since in one song the guitar player–a different guy than before and much more mellow–even ripped into his solo in the wrong key, and I saw the lead singer give him a dirty look.


    It was not as dirty, though, as the looks M gives me sometimes when I introduce our band’s songs by telling all the details all wrong, like the time I said the song we were about to sing, which she’d written just after falling in love with me, was about another guy.


    I don’t know if it was at that Newsboys performance or maybe the second that I bought one of their tapes and after the show waded through all the other adolescent misfits gathered in the lobby to get all of the band members’ signatures on the tape jacket. One of guys, when I handed him the cover to sign, looked at me a bit quizzically, then scrawled his name. Later I noticed that two of the signatures I’d gotten were identical.


    I have since given that album to a boy at my church. I’m pretty sure his family still has a tape player.


    When it comes to flattery, though–and it all does have to come to that, since this post is titled as much–one solitary incident at one of those small-town Christian concerts has always stood out to me. In the pitch dark between songs, as I recall, the lead singer had to ask the lights man to give him a little light so he could see what song was next.


    “I’m saying that to show you that we’re human, too,” he told the audience, as if… As if I’d thought him otherwise?


    I was reminded of this just a couple weekends ago when I took N to a planetarium show. In her presentation, the college student guide–who did an excellent job, really–couldn’t remember the name of a star or constellation or something I can’t remember and had to ask her fellow student for it.


    “See, I don’t know everything,” she told the gathered throng, as if…. As if we’d thought her omniscient? As if the predominantly early elementary school aged crowd was hanging on her every word and idolizing her and were now crushed?


    Maybe they were; N was in a state of constant marveling at the experience. “Are we actually moving?” she asked me at one point during the afternoon’s short dome film about molecules; later she crawled into my lap.


    Of course, neither of these As if… stories is to say I don’t flatter myself, too, mostly by writing about myself on my blog, but whenever else possible, too.


    For example, at the planetarium we were seated in front of two people with a child. During a film simulation of the Mars rover landing, one of the adults asked the other, “Is that an animal?”


    Is that an animal? I didn’t turn around to flatter myself by thinking out loud, “Umm, it’s a digitally rendered space capsule with fire coming out of its rocket boosters and so it is a piece of technology and not an animal.”


    Now, there is a fine line between flattering oneself by fully enjoying one’s excellence and just being critical of others. The previous paragraph makes a fuzzy blur of that line. That part which of it is critical I blame on my college education, which has enabled me to use words like “that part,” “which” and “of it” and during which one of my professors talked a lot about teaching critical thinking. That fall I wrote in a student-newspaper editorial, “I’m afraid I’m becoming a critical person.”


    And I have become as much, certainly.

    Just think of all I leave unspoken! Such as:


    At the doctor’s office last week N was asked three times by the same person in the space of ten extremely patronizing minutes what she did this morning.


    In response I didn’t smile sweetly and say, “You asked her this already. Do you have amnesia?”


    Then, after N had received four shots she’d heartily resisted, the same person kept saying, “You did great! Now you’re all ready for kindey-garten!”


    I again didn’t say out loud, “Actually, she cooperated about as well a chainsaw pinched by the tree it’s cutting down–she made a racket and got stuck anyway. And we’re going to have our schooling at home.” 



    And after a colleague denounced Obama’s inauguration as “taking away from” MLK Day, I didn’t say, “What? What? Did you really just say that?”


    “Actually,” I also didn’t say, “I think MLK in some ways would have been … flattered. No, honored. (Perhaps.)”

  • goodbadi

    Important Enough to Fire

    My governor wants to bundle teacher raises next year with policy that makes it easier for under-performing teachers to be fired. A raise would be grand, say teachers, but anything that challenges tenure is a no-go.

    This response by teachers devalues our profession.

    If teachers think the work we do is important enough to society to deserve more compensation–and think this we do, believe me–we must accept the fact that our role is also important enough to receive a little critical oversight that can snuff out ineffectiveness when merited.

    Societal respect for and recognition of a profession is perhaps best reflected in high salaries. Teachers want that respect, but not at the cost of job security. Trouble is, the societal payoff for increased salaries is boosted competition for coveted jobs. That’s an easy okay for new hires, but holds limited impact if employers are not enabled to glean good faculty from the general educator base and let the rest move along.

    The influence we teachers think we wield over our nation’s youngsters is notable. I face my sixty students for nearly ninety minutes every day for 180 days, thereby reigning over more than 16,000 childhood hours each year. If I do less than foster growth in each of my students during each of those hours, I have let down the kids and society–and myself.

    Whether or not teachers are paid more, we’d better be good at what we do, and when a teacher’s work is sub par, worthless, or detrimental, that teacher needs to do some reinventing or find a road to hit. I’d prefer my car’s safety belts were manufactured and installed by someone who was good at doing that rather than by someone who was keeping their job only by paying union dues; mine is no trivial preference that my children sit under the tutelage of someone who teaches passionately and effectively rather than someone who is merely counting the days until summer break.

    Certainly teachers need protection from inept or mis-motivated higher ups who might fire them unjustly, but the idea that teachers deserve unchallenged tenure is as misguided as the resistance teachers often grumble about being evaluated. Teachers in general dread classroom and walk-through observations by principals, and I admit that they still make me nervous, even though I’ve chosen to welcome them as–and have never experienced them as anything other than–opportunities to receive helpful suggestions and affirmation.

    But more important than just reminding me that I’m not self employed is the underlying value that ongoing evaluation places on the work I do: for the sake of all, I am worth professional scrutiny.