Personal: August 2007 Archive Page

26 Aug 2007

Full Moon Rising

IMGP3486.JPGThis evening, I was out in the yard playing with the kids, when they noticed the full moon rising above a house a little ways down the street.

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Here's a collection of teaching tips for the first day of classes brought to us by Honolulu Community College (check their reference lists for more good sources, too). The Pig Personality Profile [try here -- DGJ] is frivolous fun, but probably a good icebreaker and something I might even use when I teach Memoir Writing again in 2005-6. I especially liked reviewing Joyce T. Povlacs' 101 Things You Can Do the First Three Weeks of Class. If your term is just getting started too, you might want to review this list.

Here's a carefully worded google search that results in a great sampler of more on this topic.  --Mike Arnzen

Our first day of classes isn't for another week. Today was a full day of meetings, with lots of slideshows bearing statistics about how many students are enrolled, how we are doing on various ongoing university goals, and so forth. I'll be chairing the undergraduate English program review committee, and I also volunteered to be part of an ad hoc committee implementing an undergraduate humanities conference next spring. We hope to encourage juniors to deliver research papers on campus, so that during their senior year they can apply to off-campus conferences. (I presented on academic panels with four undergraduates at two conferences, last year, and I'm excited by the prospect of establishing a more formal way to keep that momentum going.)

Getting ready for the students is foremost in my mind, even though I've got another full day of meetings tomorrow. So now that the kids are in bed I'm taking a moment to think about the first day of classes. I'm still casting about for a comfortable way to start the first day of classes. 
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Today we drove to the Thunder Mountain Lenape powwow, which was full of color and music. There were two drums — that is, groups of singers who sat around the same drum, chanting in rhythm.

Dancers mostly moved around the circle. The younger the dancer, the fancier the footwork and the more the likelihood of spins and twirls.

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The two elders in the lead pretty much just walked, stepping in time. But look at the stage presence of the woman -- she was impressively regal. (I heard someone say she was the clan mother.)

A younger male and female lead dancer not only took on major parts in the ceremonial dances, but also made sure that the little kids felt welcome. Elsewhere on the grounds there were child-size teepees and little houses made out of shipping pallets.

Between the dances, the powwow leader told stories, mostly illuminating some cultural detail. One story was about how the Lenape give thanks for their food while they plant it, while they harvest it, as they cook it, and after they finish it -- but not right before they eat it, which is considered an awkward time to give thanks.  Another story was about how an older relative invited the speaker over to visit when the speaker was a young boy, but when the boy arrived at his relative's house and knocked, the relative wouldn't get up to open the door... he later told the boy that he'd already given him one invitation, and it was rude to stand outside his relative's house and expect another one.


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I've been experimenting with MT4, and have in fact imported 5 years of blog entries from the indie software created by my former student, Will Gayther. I got used to the particular rhythms of Will's software, which was very fast and configurable. But I got tired of having to fight the spammers on two different fronts... so I'm throwing my lot in with MT for the time being.  MT4 was just released, though I've been playing with the beta for a while.

I'm used to sub-second responses to almost every button in my old blog.  This one has a rich-text editor, which will probably encourage me to start using bold keywords again.  I think it's going to be a lot easier to include images, too.  We'll see how it goes.
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Truthfully, I expected my new department would be grateful that I wasn't having kids. But the unofficial motto here seems to be "We do babies!" And indeed we do..... I couldn't believe that I was struggling to meet anyone who could go out for a drink. --Carol Peace --An Unexpecting Minority (Chronicle of Higher Education)
Who would have thought that academics with young children wouldn't have as much time to socialize as their child-free colleagues do?

I admire Peace for writing such a candid essay, and I note that she explicitly states her awareness of its self-pitying tone. She also points out that, from one perspective, it's a good thing that so many women in her department feel comfortable balancing work and family in this manner. Nevertheless, I have conflicted responses to this essay.

One colleague in my department has written several essays in The Chronicle of Higher Education about balancing her professional life with motherhood. She used to live too far away for us to get together, but she has recently moved very close, and we have already had playdates at the amusement park, a local museum (where the kids spent most of their time cutting up paper in the art room), and rodent-themed kiddie restaurant.

My response to Peace is that her colleagues with young children are probably very tired; they have less time for socializing of any kind; and they are probably worried about about taxing her patience.

If you spend a lot of time around smokers, or pet owners, or yodelers, you develop a tolerance for smoke, slobber, and yodeling, and you feel more relaxed around people who have a similarly high tolerance; consequently, you feel a bit uneasy when you're socializing with someone who doesn't share your interest in smoke, slobber, and yodeling, and you're never quite sure whether the person who says "Oh, I don't mind the smoke|slobber|yodeling one bit" is really about to scream but is instead trying to be polite -- and all the while planning to complain behind your back about how you thoughtlessly exposed them to an unreasonable amount of smoke|slobber|yodeling.

That sounds paranoid, but I am a social introvert (despite having an extroverted teaching persona), and social interactions don't always come naturally to me. Maybe Peace's colleagues simply aren't confident about what her reaction will be.

The cardinal rule of making friends is that you show an interest in what the other person likes to do. So, if Peace wants a quiet evening with the parents of young children, she might arrange for a teenage friend of the family to play with the kids in the backyard while the adults can have a quiet dinner.

I know I can be so completely wrapped up in parenting -- interrupting an adult conversation to ask a child sotto voce where she left her sippy cup and then trying to slip immediately back into the conversation. Like most parents, I've developed the ability to tune out kid disruptions that don't cross a certain line, and I'd like to think that I'm capable of adjusting that line depending on the circumstances.

I remember several times at my previous job when my wife and I accepted an invitation to bring our child to the house of a childless colleague. We made it clear that baby Peter was in the "cruising" phase, where he couldn't quite stand by himself and so was likely to lean or pull on the furniture in order to get around.

All evening, one of us had to follow Peter around so that he wouldn't yank down a tablecloth or grab a statue off of a coffee table or crawl into the kitty litter box or tumble down the stairs. Our hosts kept inviting us both to sit down at the same time, but even if they were telling the truth and it wouldn't have bothered them if we hadn't stopped that lamp from toppling over, we didn't it want it falling on our son's head. If our son had spit up on the imported carpet or scratched the flatscreen TV, we would have felt obligated to pay for it. At the time, we were eating off of a folding card table and our living room couch was the same futon we had used as grad students, and all the items of value (my laptop, precious books, etc.) were sequestered behind a baby gate in the study. It was very stressful for us to watch our son as he tried to finger unprotected wall outlets (can a baby really get a shocking by poking a finger in one of those? I don't want to find out) and reached for knicknacks on the bottom shelves (where we always deliberately left toys for him to grab).

Two female colleagues a few doors away from my office had young children around the same age as my son. My wife's decision to be a full-time parent automatically put me in a different category; they were working moms who had to make hard decisions about how to balance their home and professional lives. No matter how equitably my wife and I divided up the chores -- when I came home, my wife would often hand me a poopy baby and then retreat to the bedroom for the rest of the evening, while I made dinner, gave the baths and read the bedtime stories -- when I was at work, I was always a man whose career was riding on my wife's back.

One day we encountered a faculty couple walking together alone in the mall; classes weren't in session, but they still dropped their child off at daycare. I don't mean to say their decision was wrong, but it wasn't a decision that either of us would have made. My wife and I even babysat this couple's child once so that they could do something together, though they never offered to return the favor.

My point is not to criticize or gripe, but rather to point out that even though a child does give colleagues one more thing in common, all child-having couples are not automatically members of the same social group.

My kids are thumping on the floor above my study crying out to be fed, so I've got to end this blog entry now. If there are any rough spots, so be it -- I've got macaroni noodles to cook.
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This page is a archive of entries in the Personal category from August 2007.

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