High school: first day

The choice seemed pretty simple to me: either leave the familiarity of my friends for the private Catholic school where I would initially know one person, or attend the closest public school in my district that sported metal detectors at the doors guarded by gruff men in uniform who searched backpacks between classes.  No, thank you.  I’d rather chance it with the Catholics.

Aside from my best friend and his father, who happened to be the band director at the new school, I knew no one.  Everyone else in the school, having attended parochial school together since kindergarten, had long since formed their cliques. I didn’t expect to be accepted right away.  So it wasn’t a surprise to me when I found myself completely alone in a sea of almost a thousand other bustling students hurrying to their next classes.

That’s right – I said a thousand students.  There were three hundred eighty four in my graduating class.  You do the math.

The school was large – large enough to comfortably handle almost a thousand students.  While the gym, music rooms, cafeteria and bookstore were off on their own in a separate wing of the building, the rest of the classrooms were contained in a three-storied set of hallways that, if one examined a cross-section, resembled bars on a jail cell.  Four sets of staircases, one in each corner, got students to and from their classes.  Each day, between each class, for some reason that still escapes me, the near-thousandfold student body opted to ignore three of the stairwells, thus bottlenecking onto the stairs nearest the cafeteria.  Being a freshman without a mind of my own in the strange new land of high school, I followed like a lemming.

Did I mention this was a Catholic school?  Having never attended anything but public school before, I was thrust into a world of new educational values: crucifixes in every room, mass every week, meatless Friday lunches and, strangest of all to me, uniforms.

Not my uniform exactly, but it may as well have been.

I have heard that since I graduated, my high school has since relaxed their standards of girl’s dress, allowing khaki pants and sneakers.  But when I attended this particular school, girls were to wear white Oxford shirts, closed-toe and -heel shoes, and the most hideous wool-like plaid skirts ever invented by man.  I can’t say they were wool, because wool has never felt so much like plastic.  They were itchy, hot and uncomfortable, and, as we found out after graduation, fire-retardant.

Skirts were to be no higher than two inches above the knee, which translated to most mothers who had to hem their daughters’ skirts as mid-calf.  The result was a school full of teenage girls who were horrified to wear such conservative garb, and thus rolled the tops of the skirts so as to shorten the hemline.  It made for longer looking legs, but fatter, donut-shaped bellies.

In addition to rolling for shorter skirts, it was also the fashion at the time to don uniquely patterned boxer shorts, just in case a stiff breeze came along and caused the skirt to fly up over one’s tush.  My personal favorite was the Big Dogs smiley face pair.

And so here I was, being carried up a flight of stairs by a sea of people who knew each other and where exactly they were going, all the while trying to negotiate the most uncomfortable, unflattering skirt I have ever worn or ever will wear.  All things considered, I was doing pretty well.  That is, until I reached the landing between the first and second floors.

It’s a pretty well known fact that I’m a klutz.  I trip over my own feet on uneven surfaces, walk into doorknobs and regularly smack my head on cabinet doors left open.  It was only natural that I should trip up the stairs in my new school in the most crowded stairwell with seemingly the entire school present as witnesses.  But this wasn’t just an ordinary trip-and-fall-flat-on-my-face moment.  This was an epic how-did-I-actually-manage-to-make-friends-after-that moment.

Being the dorky freshman I was, I didn’t trust that I would have enough time to stop at my locker in between classes.  I packed every book I would need for the entire day into my back pack.  The weight behind me may have contributed to my fall; I’m actually not sure how I managed to fall forward instead of backward. Unbeknownst to me at the time, I had forgotten to zip the top of the pack.  So as I fell forward, the momentum caused the back pack slid over my head, spilling its entire contents onto the landing ahead of me.  If that wasn’t bad enough, one of the buckled straps hanging from the back managed to latch on to the back of my skirt, pulling that up with it, too.  Being my first day as a dorky freshman in an unfamiliar land, I hadn’t been privy to the boxer short style.  The only thing separating my booty from the masses around me was a thin layer of white flowered cotton panties.

No one stopped to help me collect my belongings, though they were kind enough to sidestep me so as not to trod upon my fingers.  I was late to my first geometry class.

Megan Dancing

Back in 1985 or so, when I was about four years old, I took “dance” lessons.  I put “dance” in quotation marks because while we wore dance shoes and tights, we didn’t exactly dance.  It was more of a coordination class. Well, apparently, our dance teacher thought we were so fabulous that she volunteered us to perform on live television, for the Delaware Special Olympics Telethon.

While my parents drove me to the television studio, which they tell me was many, many miles away, a neighbor offered to record the telethon so that my television debut would be forever saved for posterity.  It was saved on a simple black VHS labeled “Megan Dancing,” which I have just transferred to the computer using my brand new Roxio Easy VHS to DVD.

A few notes about the performance, which may be more clear after you watch it:

  1. The quality is a little wonky, but that should be expected considering the tape is almost 25 years old.
  2. I was the line leader.
  3. We were supposed to stop in the middle of the stage, not at the far side.
  4. We did actually have a routine prepared.
  5. Despite what happened, we were not part of the Special Olympics.

Recent reviews of our performance raved:

So cute and a little scary!

Don’t quit your day job!

Even after all these years, it makes me laugh til tears are in my eyes.

And so, gentle readers, without further ado I present “Megan Dancing.”  Enjoy!

Stuff My Students Said

As a teacher, I regularly come into contact with young children.  As young children, they tend to stay true to Bill Cosby’s adage and say the darndest things. On several occasions I have walked out of a lesson laughing so hard that I couldn’t even get the words out of my mouth to explain why I was laughing.  It makes for a pretty good work environment.

There’s only one problem.  My memory is that of a gnat.  I remember cutting one student’s lesson short last year because I couldn’t stop laughing, but I can’t for the life of me remember what that student said to make me laugh so hard.  That’s just not cool.

And so, with the help of a colleague, a new blog was born: Stuff My Students Said. We decided to chronicle just what the blog says: stuff our students say. Specifically, the stuff they say that makes us laugh, or is just plain out of left field.

While this blog is the result of piano lessons and stuff said by piano students, we certainly welcome stuff other students say, whether they be from music lessons or math class.  So, if you know any teachers, spread the word and tell them to submit the stuff their students said.

Later, gator

Summer is camp time.  Working at a camp is a tremendous amount of work, since pretty much a whole semester is crammed into the span of five days.  It makes for some serious physical and emotional exhaustion, especially when two of those camps happen during the same week. Fortunately, most of the camps in which I am involved only last a week, so after an intense burst of too many kids in one place that leaves me overwhelmed and drained, I can walk away and return to a relatively relaxed schedule.

One of my favorite camps I work at is ballet camp, which has spanned the better part of the summer. Cute little kids in tights and leotards, aged seven to thirteen, come in for the better part of the day to dance, stretch, do arts and crafts, and prepare a mini ballet to perform at the end of the week.  My part of the camp is to play piano for the 90-minute class they take first thing in the morning.

Over the course of the week, that class becomes shorter and shorter, as the teacher realizes that the ballet they are preparing is nowhere near ready and the kids need more time to rehearse.  That is a-okay with me, because I can leave early and have some extra time to myself.  Yesterday, class ended after only 45 minutes, with the announcement that an “emergency rehearsal” was needed.  Sweet deal.

As it turns out, those kids (and the teacher) are really sneaky.  You see, today was my last day of playing for ballet camp, because tomorrow I will be skipping town forever.  So, the sweet little darlings spent their rehearsal time making me goodbye cards, ornately decorated with pipe cleaners, glitter and every color from the crayon box, which were presented to me at the end of class today with quite a bit of dramatic flair from the lone boy in the class.

Amongst many wishes of “congratulations,” “good luck” and “we’ll miss you,” some of them touted my pianistic abilities, as well as their own:

“I play the piano too, and if I’m lucky I will become as good of a player that you are.”

“P.S. I play the piano to. (sic)  P.P.S. Don’t you like to play the piano?”

“Thank you so much for being the best piano player!  You rock at it!”

“You are an amazing piano player.  Nobody can match up to you.”

I can’t argue with that.

Still others were more heartfelt, and actually brought tears to my eyes:

“We will miss you very much but knowing you are happy makes me feel warm.”

But this one, penned by the tiniest girl in the class, an adorable little girl with blond hair in pigtails whose height barely reaches my belly button, was probably the funniest, yet the most profound:

“You will really miss us.”

You know, I really will.

Current events

Once upon a time, I regularly checked in on a blog that was maintained by the wife of a friend of my main squeeze.  Her posts were witty and hilarious, covering everything from the mundane and ordinary to the spiritual and all that is Josh Groban.  Over the course of some months I developed a feeling of oneness with this woman who, despite being friends on Facebook, I have never actually met.

Then one day the posts stopped.  There was some lame excuse for not blogging. Something about a doctoral dissertation and birthing a small human being.  Every once in a while (read: every four or five months) a new post would show up in my RSS reader, letting the world know that she had not in fact fallen off a cliff and perished a horrible, bloody death, and that someday soon the posts would return with their previous frequency.

It seems that someday soon has arrived.  Theology Girl has been updating with alarming regularity over the past week.  (You hear that, Adrienne?  Now everyone on my blog knows about it, so you have to keep updating.  How’s that for peer pressure?)

Although I had planned to take a short break from the internet, I hadn’t expected it to go on for quite as long as it has.  I wish I could present a cute baby from my loins as proof that I’ve been busy with other things, but that would be a vicious lie. The truth is, I’m just plain lazy.

The good news is that almost two weeks away has given me plenty of blogging fodder.  Here’s hoping I can maintain my resolve and follow through with posting the weird shit I saw last week.

I’m sure that my return to blogging after my brief hiatus, though, will be completely overshadowed by the big news that has just overloaded all the airwaves: the death of Michael Jackson.

More

Stop motion experiments

One of my favorite shows when I was a child was Gumby Adventures, the 1980s revival of the original The Gumby Show from the late 1950s.  I’ll save my lament of today’s kids for not having the foggiest idea who Gumby is for another time.  What I will talk about is the totally tubular claymation that made the show what it is.

I won’t lie: I was honestly scared of the blockheads. They seemed so real!  But that is part of what made this show so neat.  What fascinated me was that the animation was not just drawings on a page, but animated clay.  To me this seemed to make Gumby and Pokey come alive more than ink and paper would have.

Let’s fast-forward to this past year, when a new song from a new artist emerged.  The music video for Oren Lavie’s Her Morning Elegance was shot entirely in stop motion and took the internet by storm.

Personally, I think the video is tremendously clever.  It must have taken forever to shoot.

My first real education in stop motion came shortly after my exposure to Gumby, on an episode of Muppet Babies, when Nanny gave the kids an old video camera.  Before recreating an abridged version of Star Wars, Skeeter showed the others how to animate clay by making a sculpture, pushing a button on the camera, moving the sculpture a tiny bit, pushing the button again, and so on.

This weekend I decided to try a little stop motion of my own, just to see if I could actually make the theory work.  My first experiment, subtitled Sock Porn, was shot with my regular, everyday point-and-shoot Canon PowerShot SD1100 IS.  There were 118 photos total, it took about a half hour to shoot and was edited together in iMovie HD.

In general, I’m pleased with the end result, especially since I had never done this before.  There are a couple obvious errors, like my leg showing up in the last few frames, but that’s the sort of thing from which we learn.  The most blatant issue, though, was the fact that the camera, despite being set up on a tripod, would move ever so slightly whenever I pushed the shutter button.  The result is a shaky, nausea-inducing film that I am thankful lasts only 22 seconds.

My second experiment was a return to my Gumby roots: I used clay.  I also changed the camera. Because I don’t have a remote control on my PowerShot, I had to find a camera that wouldn’t move when the photo was taken.  That’s where my laptop came in.  Using the built-in camera atop the monitor of my laptop, I shot all the photos for this experiment using Photo Booth.

I want to make it very clear that I am not an artist.  My days of playing with Play-Doh are long gone, so I am sorely out of practice.  But the goal of this experiment was not to create a masterpiece worthy of the Louvre.  I’d say this experiment turned out quite well, indeed.  The neutral tone of the clay showed up (all I had lying around), the camera was steady, and I even like the grainy quality of Photo Booth’s photos.

I’m totally into this stop motion filming.  Eventually, I’d like to get a camera that works well in the capacity for which I would like to use it.  Meanwhile, I think I’ll stop by the store and pick up some Play-Doh this afternoon and practice for next time.

Sardoodledom

In addition to being a grammar Nazi, I also consider myself to be something of a spelling Nazi. Perhaps this is why I so enjoy watching the annual Scripps Spelling Bee on ESPN, a channel to which I would otherwise never tune.  I admire the kids who spend so much time training to be correct spellers.

Unfortunately, due to my lack of a cable television connection, I had to miss last night’s challenge. I did hear a little snippet, though, today on NPR’s All Things Considered, when they brought the fifth place winner, Kennyi Aouad, on the show.

Two years ago, an eleven year-old Kennyi was faced with a most awesome word, “sardoodledom.” It’s pronounced just like it looks: sar-doodle-dumb.  He reacted the same way I would have if I were in his place: with an onslaught of the giggles.

I adore this kid’s ability to find humor in the silliness of the sound of the word and just be a kid, but also his ability to stay cool under pressure and spell his way out of a challenge.  His handling of the word with a resolute, “Fine, I’ll give it a shot,” still has me laughing.  As good a speaker as he is, I will be very surprised if Kennyi doesn’t end up in some public position when he grows up.

One thing is for sure: I will never forget the word “sardoodledom.”

The Witching Hour

Gentle readers, insomnia has struck again.  In honor of the occasion, I thought it would be nice to share a bedtime story.

Tonight’s chapter comes from one of my all-time favorites books, The BFG, by my all-time favorite author, Roald Dahl.  The man could spin a tale like no one else, sucking me into his stories and making be believe that I was in fact the child hero.  Although The BFG is a children’s book, I still pull it out every now and again to reread it, which I may have done hundreds of times by now.

I always think of this passage on nights like tonight, when the wee hours of the morning are creeping along and sleep still eludes me, and my imagination, already quite overactive, starts working overtime, making monsters out of the shadows in the moonlight that cuts through the miniblinds.

Sophie couldn’t sleep.

A brilliant moonbeam was slanting through a gap in the curtains.  It was shining right on to her pillow.

The other children in the dormitory had been asleep for hours.

Sophie closed her eyes and lay quite still.  She tried very hard to doze off.

It was no good.  The moonbeam was like a silver blade slicing through the room on to her face.

The house was absolutely silent.  No voices came up from downstairs.  There were no footsteps on the floor above either.

The window behind the curtain was wide open, but nobody was walking on the pavement outside.  No cars went by on the street.  Not the tiniest sound could be heard anywhere.  Sophie had never known such a silence.

Perhaps, she told herself, this is what they called the witching hour.

The witching hour, somebody had once whispered to her, was a special moment in the middle of the night when every child and every grown-up was in a deep deep sleep, and all the dark things came out from hiding and had the world to themselves.

* * * * *

The moonbeam was brighter than ever on Sophie’s pillow.  She decided to get out of bed and close the gap in the curtains.

You got punished if you were caught out of bed after lights-out.  Even if you said you had to go to the lavatory, that was not accepted as an excuse and they punished you just the same.  But there was no one about now, Sophie was sure of that.

She reached out for her glasses that lay on the chair beside her bed.  They had steel rims and very thick lenses, and she could hardly see a thing without them.  She put them on, then she slipped out of bed and tip-toed over to the window.

* * * * *

When she reached the curtains, Sophie hesitated.  She longed to duck underneath them and lean out of the window to see what the world looked like now that the witching hour was at hand.

She listened again.  Everywhere it was deathly still.

The longing to look out became so strong she couldn’t resist it.  Quickly, she ducked under the curtains and leaned out of the window.

In the silvery moonlight, the village street she knew so well seemed completely different.  The houses looked bent and crooked, like houses in a fairy tale.  Everything was pale and ghostly and milky-white.

Across the road, she could see Mrs Rance’s shop, where you bought buttons and wool and bits of elastic.  It didn’t look real.  There was something dim and misty about that too.

Sophie allowed her eye to travel further and further down the street.

Suddenly she froze.  There was something coming up the street on the opposite side

It was something black…

Something tall and black…

Something very tall and very black and very thin.1

 


1Dahl, Roald. The BFG (New York: Puffin Books, 1982), 9-11.

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