Monday, December 28, 2009

The Bare Minimum

On the bus a few weeks ago, I sat with some friends and we talked about the bare minimum requirements for living. Melody and I came to the conclusion that we could survive on coffee and sunlight. I think I can safely add that we were taking the Lord's grace for granted as we made our lists.

I'm in Waynesboro and have just enjoyed a lovely cup of coffee. It's time to show my face to the sun. And it is a-shinin'!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Christmas Break

Hustle and Bustle
and
breathe.
Hustle and Bustle
and
breathe.


Finals claimed my last three weeks of this semester. I am so grateful to the Lord that I had the chance to focus completely on my schoolwork. I was only distracted by meandering thoughts and the insatiable desire to make things rhyme, or put words to cadence. My winter break will include: another go at the Lord of the Rings, a visit to the Fulton Theater, a visit to the Vietnamese restaurant down the street, dusting, some working, talking on the phone, and some quiet contemplation.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Teaching vs. Apprenticeship

I have not even finished reading this article, but I have to stop and wonder at these bits. It is taken from an article on Wishtank.com, "From Schools to Learning Communities: A Historic Shift" by Dr. Ron Miller.

"During the past 25 years, education has become ever more standardized, ever more mechanical, as it serves a political and economic agenda of competition, production and corporate profit. Young people in the present system are not perceived as growing, active human beings who seek meaning and connection to the world, but as units of production whose academic achievements contain primarily economic value. The age of modernity has reached its zenith, so that now even first graders — six year old children — are rigorously tested to ensure that they fit into the system, while those who resist mechanistic discipline are sedated with powerful drugs."

http://www.wishtank.org/magazine/commons/from_schools_to_learning_communities_a_historic_shift/

Monday, December 14, 2009

A Deli Christmas

First things first: this is finals week, and the week before Christmas, and there is a lot to do. But at work, there is not a lot to do. By what evidence, you ask? Wayne was inspired by the muses this afternoon and rewrote the Twelve Days of Christmas for me, complete with props, it was beautiful.

an old moldy wedge of brie cheese
two chicken breasts
three french fries
four thawing burgers
five onion rings!
six geese have laid these [eggs]
seven olives swimming
eight pints of milk [that's one gallon, to the layman]
nine honey mustards
ten leaves of lettuce
eleven peppers pepping
twelve hashbrowns browning

Also today, Bill got locked inside the ladies' room for over ten minutes. He always uses the ladies' room, see. And the lock had been finicky for months. But, o fates!, the door has always managed to open in the past, despite great difficulties that the poor customers suffer. He called Leonardo, the prep guy, from his cell phone. Leonardo, doubtless, recognized on the caller ID that it was Bill calling. But he is kind of vindictive. So he let it ring. Finally Gary came to the rescue and opened the door. Bill then posted a sign that read something like: You may enter, but good luck getting out, the lock is broken.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Something to Begin

Please write a poem ending with these words:



those indifferent stars.