dream animals

dream animals

Sunday, July 26, 2020

yes, but

You’ll wake to the drip of a leaky roof
or a rodent-ravaged pantry,
and recall the forgotten property tax payment that has incurred a 10% penalty.
Your preteen child will aim her arrow
at your bedroom window while she is sent outside for being naughty
and when she lets it go with an “I hate you, mommy!”
it will shatter onto your green, antique desk
into which she had carved her name, then made it indelible with sharpie.
Your mother, who finally learns to trust
after being twice abandoned by your father and your father-figure, respectively,
will take a leap, and you will all squeal and say, “Yes! She deserves this!”
but she will be vulnerable again and she will sob-  
only the second time you’ve heard it from her-
about her loneliness.
You ultimately have to accept that,
although you’d pity others with a limited capacity for reproduction, barrenness,
and considered it one of your greatest fears to not experience the reiteration yourself and him into lives that perpetuate and multiply,
you will have to accept it because you are, collectively, barren.
After tens of thousands of dollars and debt and certainty of success x7,
and a still sore right-bum cheek from the 16-guage hormone shots,
you would still bleed, still cramp,
still hear that haunting, “I’m sorry,” on the line
and your arms will continue with their achy emptiness.
But
there is that sticky, small hand, whether brown or pink,
that slips into yours in the dark that soothes the ache,
and the soft, hazel eyes that look at yours with the intentionality of never ending that reassures,
and the whiff of pine and wild rose that you catch in the quiet mornings,
and the memories of Concord and crisp orchards and cobblestone and libraries and clear streams.
There is that scent of plumeria on your grandmother’s pillow,
and that dialogue between small objects mimicking the way your babies see the world.
There is the cool greenness of babaganoush on the corner of a chewy, resisting bite of warm pita,
and the sweet cooing of birds’ and babies’ songs to greet your ears while surfacing from sleep,
and, always, the hope of more--  that love did, indeed, conquer and progression is eternal.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

"A Quilt of a Country" Unraveled at Lunch Recess


Yesterday, during recess, my sweet and earnest 8-year-old, June, was called an "African-American monkey" by a boy in her class.  Several times, apparently, and with hurtful intentions.  Her teacher called me to de-brief while June was still at school, reported that the boy had been suspended, and that she was checking in with June all afternoon.  When June came home, I wanted to get an unadulterated account, so I didn't mention that I had spoken to her teacher and, instead, just asked for the usual report of her day.  After a monologue on the inequity of bowling in PE class, she mentioned,

"Oh, and ______ called me an African-American monkey a bunch of times at lunch-recess."
"What?! What does that mean?"
"I don't know.  Maybe he just knows that I'm good at the monkey bars."
"Did any of your friends stand up for you?" (her teacher had mentioned that she thought they had).
"Well, no, but I stood up for myself. I said, 'I AM African-American and ALSO Korean, but I'm NOT a monkey.'"
"June! I'm so proud of you!"
"Yeah, I don't know why he was having a bad day, but he had to go to the office."
"Oh, well, how do you feel about that?  And what he said?"
"I don't really know. But a bunch of teachers told me today that I'm beautiful for some reason. And Ms. Lemmon said I'm gorgeous. Maybe I want to be a 2nd grade teacher when I grow up instead of a nurse."

I had to excuse myself to cry in my closet for a moment--  mostly tears of relief that her tender sense of self-worth hadn't been too badly damaged.

Then, we asked ourselves all evening, "Where does a 2nd grader get these ideas from?!" 

Appropriately, that morning, I had been grappling with our public school approach to "Read Across America" --often characterized by lots of Dr. Seuss celebrations.  As a literacy teacher, Dr. Seuss has always felt fundamental--  his phoneme/morpheme manipulation is brilliant!  I'd thought that, if nothing else, his books are catchy and benign.  

Not so, apparently, as lots of research has recently revealed a strongly white-supremacist undertone in his texts.  And, occasionally, not so subtly. 


NPR, as per its usual, has helped me process this as both a literacy educator and a mother of black daughters:



I have to admit, when I first learned of this research, I felt a bit skeptical.  I mean, sure--  he had totally different views than I believe are ethical, but does that mean we have to scrap all the good that he DID contribute to the world of reading?  and imagination?  What about The Lorax?!

But then, what about this:
Image result for dr seuss racist
Image result for dr seuss racist
Dr. Seuss, Cross-Section of The World's Most Prosperous Department Store, 1929. Courtesy Nate D. Sanders Fine Autographs & Memorabilia, Los Angeles.

Granted, I know these are not the texts that my son is pouring over during his "Green Eggs and Ham Day," but ideologies like this are pervasive in all of one's creations. 

So, "Where does a 2nd grader get these ideas from?!"

They come from Anna Quindlen's left-of-the-hyphen syndrome that I am discussing with my students today.  Written shortly after September 11, 2001, her eight paragraphs in "Quilt of a Country" continue to capture the irony of our divisive, indivisible nation under God, on a playground in Eastern Washington on March 9, 2020.  It's worth considering.