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Summer Painting

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

Just like that, the summer ends. My oldest granddaughter, Frog, has begun her prek-4 school year and we are back to our Monday/Tuesday babysitting for only one child – her younger sister. Bird turns three years old this fall, which is too late to start her preschool year in DC public schools.

We are missing ‘big sister’ on these babysitting days, though it is also really special to have one-on-one time with the little one.

Let me share an update on our summer art project; my granddaughters turned some old kitchen cabinet doors into paint canvases, making layers of fun. These doors went through a real  metamorphosis!

Here’s how the “BEFORE” for the cabinet doors!

Each girl had their own door to paint, and they worked with acrylic. I made sure to dress them to be messed, and we worked outside as much as possible. We had a bit of yucky weather that kept us inside once or twice, but I was able to set up their art in our basement, using lots of dropcloths – plus, keeping soapy water and wash rags at the ready.  

We began with ‘tape painting.’ The girls applied painters tape to the door, covering the doors in all sorts of different ways with painters tape and then painting. They used a variety of brushes and rollers. When the paint dried, they peeled off the tape – creating wild designs. Then it was time for more tape and a new paint color. Repeat, as needed! 

Our grand finale technique was “splatter painting.” Here, I added shower caps to their protective attire, hoping to keep the acrylic paint from their hair. The girls dipped brushes into new colors of paint and then let this fly through the air to the canvas.

Frog laughed and squealed throughout – which is exactly the reaction I expected. She had so much fun with this splatter paint technique, I found a bonus door for her to paint:

Did you notice that I only have pictures of Frog with the splatter paint? Bird was wide-eyed with horror at this painting technique. I don’t know what worried her –  was it the shower cap? The wild, large motion? The fact that she is potty-training and this was just TOO messy? She was thrilled to play with the bucket of soapy water, but she refused to splatter paint. She sat back in the sandbox and directed her older sister to add paint to her door!! Oh, this made me smile. Isn’t this what all the great mural artists do? Hire assistants to help, to follow their expectations and guidelines?

All this fun painting led to some nature painting, as well. The girls painted on a backyard tree, just for the whimsy of it. Bright paint ended up unexpectedly on the grass and weeds nearby. Without a doubt, the backyard was the perfect location for this fun. And, oh yes, there were various stages of undress during some of the painting…whoops! lol

The doors look wonderful, I think. If we get a school holiday and weather permits, we’ll squeeze in some creative drawing with acrylic markers, letting the girls add additional details to the doors.  Here are the final creations:

We had a fun summer! I hope you did, too.

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Aura of August

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

August.

Melting, wilting in a hot muggy daze. The evening approaches with wild, tempestuous storms, bringing precious but momentary relief to the air…and flickering lights. 

That old roof leak cannot be ignored anymore…let’s call for repairs.

August.

June and July were filled with travels; now the summer ends with quiet and slow. 

Here’s a month to “collect ourselves” – get a few chores done around the house, socialize with friends, cook at home (and enjoy lots of fresh vegetables and fruits), slip out in the early morning for a long walk . . . or linger in bed with a good book. 

I’m reading Daniel Nayeri’s Everything Sad is Untrue (a true story) – absolutely delightful writing.

August.

Two days a week, we babysit the granddaughters, which means lots of fun play: playgrounds, Dad’s and Uncles’ old Legos, arts and crafts, puzzles, dolls, playdough, books, and more.

We discovered that one missing puzzle piece leads to finding and playing with many other things.

August.

Hon, when did you buy apples? Did you buy them before or after the granddaughters visited? 

After. Why do you ask?

Well, there are these tiny little bites in the apples, in the fruit basket on the counter. I wanted to believe it was our toddler. Ugh. It is, as I fear – a nighttime visitor. Ugh. Ugh. Ugh. 

Time to set a mousetrap.

August.

Black-eyed Susans and crepe myrtles are in bloom everywhere. The milkweed is hearty and strong this year. Lots of bunnies and deer to be seen on my walks. 

There are always surprises to find in nature.

August.

All the teachers in my life are heading back for professional development, with students coming back to school very soon thereafter.

Three years into retirement, it still feels strange not to be stressed in August.

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How Community Works

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

I’ve been thinking wistfully about the preschool classroom, remembering how children learned to listen to one another. 

Why is my mind on preschool? 

My heart is heavy from an acrimonious meeting with adults. Those who spoke first essentially determined the agenda. The most emphatic discussion was about whether Robert’s Rules were being followed. People were silenced in the interest of rule-following. So much good community feeling was whittled away, as folks tripped over small procedural details. A few people spoke up over and over and over again; the quiet folks stayed mute; everyone was exhausted by the meeting’s end. 

Dare I say, this was a church meeting? 

Just ugly.

Now, our congregation is working on healing. 

Add my voice to the chorus of voices who say that Robert’s Rules are not very equitable. (Here’s one, if you’re interested.)

Preschoolers learn ‘coming together’ means listening to varied perspectives. We need to participate with open minds…and extend grace to one another.

deciding together

preschool circle time
all of us together

teacher as mediator
traffic light
safety patrol
guide

alongside

tears laughter 
squeals shrieks
wiggles jumps
ups 
d
o
w
n
s 
nonstop 	unpredictable 	
movement

someone
can’t sit still
another squirrels away
there’s a twosome chatting
 rolling playing with each other
oh, and you!
so frustrated you weren’t called first
oops! someone needs to go to the bathroom
worst,
they already did

oh my
how am I to introduce
the ‘big idea’ of the day?

how will we
make decisions
together?

this is how the year begins 
this is the teaching

three year olds
learning how 

to be together

and always
at some imprecise point 
after circling up several times in a day
every single school day
this learning 
suddenly

falls 
into 
place

there is magic 
our community working together

(hopefully, the calendar says October, not June)
 
why do the children know
why do the children show
why do the children sow
community

better than adults?

they
greet one another
look at one another
give space to one another
take turns talking
wait their turn
moderate one’s voice 
listen to and consider ideas of others
build on a friend’s ideas
make decisions together 

they trust community 
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Acadia Travels

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

I’ve just returned from a wonderful family vacation in Acadia, Maine. I missed the ‘Slice of Life’ last week for the first time in months, due to spotty wifi and unending fun. How to describe the many sweet moments and gorgeous scenery? Let me share a few photos and tales.

We explored from sandy beaches to rocky cliffs. Throughout the park, there were wild blueberries on the rocky edges of paths. Most were still a bit green for picking, but we snacked on a ripe few. There were historic cairns as guides along the trails. We had lots of animal sightings – frogs, turtles, deer, crabs, sea urchins, and more. On our first walk, just as my son and I were passing by a marshy area, a barred owl took flight not ten feet from us – magnificent! 

Deep in the woods, I stopped from time to time to listen to the delightful chatter of new-to-me birds (thank you, Merlin app, for helping me identify these precious sounds!) – red-eyed vireo, dark-eyed junco, black-capped chickadee, golden-crown kinglet, and a variety of warblers with adorable names – black-throated green warbler, yellow-rumped warbler, magnolia warbler. I heard these birds so frequently, I began to recognize their calls. 

Early morning at Cadillac Mountain, our views were obscured by mist and fog. It was exquisite, all the same – and made for somewhat cooler hiking. We hiked along Dorr Mountain trail and enjoyed more visibility as the morning progressed.

Look closely, and you can see my granddaughter Frog standing on an outcropping. I remain awed by her prowess on the challenging rock scrambles of this and other hikes – she is only four and half years old, and moves with courage, flexibility, and desire. She was amazing! I, on the other hand, have returned home with new fitness goals for myself, in hopes of being stronger for next summer’s family hiking trip. I became so fatigued on this hike, I could only climb up higher on rocks by using my two hands to lift my leg up. Oh my! 

Tony loved the hikes where you reach the summit and partake in these extraordinary panoramas. I was thrilled by these, too, but the Acadia tidal pools nourished my soul. We had planned our visits with low tide, allowing us to see the beautiful diversity of these fragile regions. The beaches filled with rounded rocks in brown, orange, red, yellow – these were absolutely exquisite. 

I am filled with many special memories from this beautiful national park. Let me close with a poem I wrote yesterday, for Ethical ELA’s OpenWrite…a ‘venn diagram’ poem about the different parts of Acadia that Tony & I loved, and the overlap between the two.

Acadia

he treasured the vistas
panoramic views from mountaintops
sweaty exertion of climbing
weaving paths negotiating roots scrambling rocks  
our hiking chatter grunts laughter
tide pools mesmerized me
close intimate looking and tiny finds
slow steady careful stepping
so many lives both strong and fragile 
waves rippling rocks
invigorating
all our senses, tingling
immersed in precious wonder
being in nature
together
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Georgia On My Mind

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

We’ve been in Georgia for the past week, for the annual reunion of my husband’s family. He is one of 13 children, with only four still living, and this leads to quite the crowd. There are spouses, children, grandchildren, and even a few great grandchildren for the oldest siblings. The reunion was on Saturday, but we made a week of it, visiting with different family members and friends for longer meet ups. It is a wonderful tradition to start our summer.

Driving back today, I looked through photos and reflected on conversations…it led to a bit of a poem. I need to work on this still, but here’s my slice of life…

Georgia On My Mind

the June reunion takes us back
over many miles and memories

a steady rain as we drive
seems to echo the mind’s machinations
whispering yet insisting,
saturating

all the cooking from the heart
butter peas, crowder peas, green beans
cornbread, mac-n-cheese
okra and dressing
(made just like Mimi always did)
pies, pound cake, chocolate delight
so many family favorites 
be sure to have a bite of everything

thirty-five years of showing up
has worn down 
the suspicion of me, 
the one raised ‘east coast, Catholic,’
yet it lingers askance
like framing on old weathered barns 

maybe I’m one of those little stone houses
staying put
strong and steady 

in their midst yet on the periphery
I love it here

dear ones open up to me
sharing confidences
the buttered biscuit on the side
taking all the juices in

now I’m remembering all the kudzu 
creating funny monsters against the Georgian blue
or is it simply keeping secrets
saying, no, not now, no light on this
keep quiet about that

let me think on this
maybe I’ll share more later

simply remember
the chortle of the littles
as they ran and laughed
together

family is precious
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Sentences Together

Hanging Sculpture with Beads by Nick Cave – Tampa Airport

I know I am not the only one who reads a great book alongside a vacation, and the two end up a couple forever – when I think of the book, I remember the vacation; when I reflect on the trip, I remember my reading. I just returned from a very special weekend trip, and Louise Erdrich’s The Sentence will be forever infused with this trek. On the plane ride to and from, traveling by myself, I got lost in her magical and thought-provoking story. 

My trip was a girls’ weekend, and a novel one at that. My cousin (Gem) and I traveled to Florida to visit our mothers’ last remaining sister – our dear aunt. Gem and I were close when we were teenagers; I have always adored her. We didn’t really keep close from our college years onward. Life is like that. No rhyme or reason, really. I’d say probably due to our physical distance – she lives in Massachusetts, and I am in Maryland. 

Then we dreamed up this trip. 

We had a very special travel companion, Gem’s twenty-year-old daughter (Vine). This was the first time that Vine had met a family member from this generation, since my cousin’s parents had both died before she was born. The three of us rented a car together in Tampa, and an airbnb in Ocala.  My aunt and uncle are in their 80s, and we didn’t want to totally exhaust them by staying in their home. This was such a fun setup! It was very, very special to be with my aunt, hearing and sharing stories, looking through photographs, and piecing family history. Remembering and wondering, together. In the car and back at our rental, Gem, Vine, and I were able to talk talk talk and talk some more – getting to know one another more deeply.

Let me share a few photos from our walks. It is always a thrill to see different animals and nature.

In a fun coincidence, Louise Erdrich’s The Sentence has a mother-daughter relationship woven within the plot (which involves a ghost in a bookstore). I won’t give too much away – you should read the book.  All weekend long, mothers and daughters and those who have passed were our themes, as well, with memories coming up over and over. No ghosts, though – thankfully. 

Oh – another fun thread of the book is the word ‘sentence’ and its multiple meanings, with a special emphasis on writing beautiful sentences; there’s also witty writing about new words. I dog-eared so many pages of this book, trying to hold onto passages. I just returned home from the trip, and I am still processing all that my loved ones did and discussed – sentences keep popping up in my mind, special things we shared aloud with one another. How to hold onto all this? 

Yes, it was emotional – in good, rich ways. So wonderful! Gem and I will not let so much time go by without getting together again. In fact, we have vowed to write letters to one another – to continue to build our close friendship (cousin-ship?).

A great weekend – with a great book, as well. 

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Taking A Ride

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

“Yes, sure, I’ll give you a ride.”

It was a split-second decision on my part. Whether good instinct or wild impulse, I am not sure. I simply said yes.

I happened to drive by after going on my weekly trail run with my friend. I slowed my car as I approached the intersection where she was waiting. To my eye, she was Vietnamese, older than me (elderly?), walking with a cane, and stuck at a bus stop on Memorial Day. (I wondered, how frequently do the buses run on holidays?) She lifted her cane and pointed at me, and I thought she wanted to cross the street. She called through my open window – 

“Will you give me a ride to Safeway?”

“Yes, sure, I’ll give you a ride.”

I cleared my things from the front seat and she climbed in.

I smiled at her,

 “Hi, I’m Maureen”

She smiled back, 

“I’m Kieu. I like your teeth.”

Her words send me into two places at once – no, not two places, many places. I’m conversing with this stranger in my car and simultaneously thrown into all these parallel thoughts inside my head. I’m trying my best to be fully present with her yet I can’t stop wondering,  

  • Anxious thoughts: She likes my teeth? What a weird thing to say. Is this person sane? Who have I picked up? No one even knows I’ve picked up this stranger; what was I thinking?! Breathe, Maureen. Center yourself. Remember: Choose kindness. You’ve got this. She needs help, you have time and ability to offer her some, just do this small thing.
  • Rationalizing my situation: This split-second decision of mine, was it BECAUSE it is Memorial Day? Is it BECAUSE she looks Vietnamese to me? Vietnam holds a tender spot in my heart. My Dad served there for an extended tour in the early 1970s. While he was posted in Saigon, my mother – raising five kids alone, ages 7-17 – began having severe mental challenges.  We children, not understanding what was happening, lived alongside her psychotic breaks from reality. ‘Vietnam’ is synonymous with tough, overwhelming times; Memorial Day makes these emotional memories all the more accessible. 
  • Tapping into more memories: Later, a family of Vietnamese refugees moved in across the street from us, in Norfolk, Virginia. One was a sweet little boy, orphaned from the war, now living in the midst of extended relatives – he was all of three years old. This little guy was fixated with sixteen-year-old me (and I, him – this was perhaps the genesis of my love for preschoolers).  Khunh didn’t speak English, he hardly had any language at all. Here’s the thing –  I kid you not, he loved my teeth. He wanted to sit on my lap and touch my teeth, to run his fingers along my teeth – and he’d give me this big smile with every attempt. Over and over, I would redirect him, holding his hands and speaking gently with him. This strange sensory movement of his was my first insight into what trauma looks like in young children. Is it not some bizarre coincidence that this Vietnamese woman mentions my teeth?
  • Fast forward to my sweet life now: Last week, I’m snuggling between Frog and Bird, reading book after book after book. The four year old holds my thumb as she sucks her own. The two year old burrows under my arm. This one book absolutely mesmerizes me – wishes, written by Mượn Thị Văn, illustrated by Victo Ngai. With precious and poetic words, the author shares her family story of migration, how they made the perilous trip across the ocean, filled with hope for a new homeland…think how many families experience such frightening journeys, fleeing dangerous worlds, in pursuit of a better life. 

“Can you give me money for groceries?”

I snap back into the present. I’m here in my car, driving this stranger to the store.

“I’m so sorry. I don’t have any money with me. 
I was on a run with a friend and
I didn’t bring any money with me.”
“How about a credit card? 
You could come with me in the store and 
use your credit card to buy my groceries.”
“I’m so sorry. 
I only have my driver’s license with me.”

Now, I can’t placate the anxiety within. This split-second decision of mine has me feeling on edge. When she goes into the store, I send my husband a text – letting him know where I am and what I am doing. (I’ve watched too many Law and Order shows…I need to leave a clue if I go missing, right?)

As I wait in the car, my thoughts are still firing in so many directions – Why do I feel fear and anxiety when faced with her needs? Was she ‘out of line’ to ask me for money? I don’t think so. That’s ‘my privilege’ talking. Yes, it was a bit uncomfortable for me – but, hell, maybe I should feel uncomfortable about my good fortune in life.  She simply “sized me up,” made a split-second decision, assessing me. Which is no different than what I did when I stopped to give her a ride. If this dear soul is down on her luck, living without means, why shouldn’t she ask me for money? That is called using her resources, isn’t it?  What are we doing as a society to make life easier for the impoverished?

When she comes out of the store, her eyes light up with a smile of relief, seeing I am still waiting. Truth be told, I thought about driving away and leaving her be. But, I didn’t. She tells me her address and I drop her off at her home. As she gets out of the car, she calls out –

“Thank you. I love you.”

As I retell the story here, my eyes are glistening. You know as well as I do: I did so very, very little for her. I am undeserving of her dear sentiment.

I am painfully aware of how fragile, uneven, and broken this world is.

Yes, sure, I gave her a ride.

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Talking Points

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

When we are out and about, here’s what I notice –

the bearded irises are still pretty even when lounging on the lawn,
the begonia blossoms into tiny angels, and 
I'm so happy the peonies bloomed after the rains came through.


She offers me an entirely different take on the world. What does she notice?

She discovers it on cars. 
It is also popular on the lawn’s edge.
She’s been appalled to find it lurking on the front steps. 
Sometimes she stops in the middle of the street to bear witness. 
As if this wasn’t enough, in recent days, it has begun appearing on the windows at the back of our house. 

Have you guessed her obsession? 

Animal droppings. 
Especially - bird poop. Aviary guano. Foul of fowl. 

This spring has dovetailed (ooh, there’s a pun!) with toilet-training and she is riveted. Yes, this is the number one topic of my darling grandchild. (I nicknamed her ‘Bird’ - so, I suppose I should have predicted this grimy interest.) 

She has laser focus for every sighting. On our neighborhood walks, she gasps with alarm, needing to pause and inspect. She demands that every soiled area be cleaned up, immediately - and has been less than impressed when I refuse to do so, steering her away from the find. 

The rule ‘out of sight, out of mind’ does not apply. Each of these moments is treasured in her mind, and shared as the primary gossip of the day. 

What did you do, today, hon? 
There was bird poop on the window!

Who knew the world could be full of such mystery and wonder? 


I offer a simple poem, to remember this developmental stage of hers.
window washing

the gutters 
at back of house
are a favorite stop
for winged loiterers

heralding
foul of fowls
up, in, around

all to her delight
each discovery
so exciting

Nana! Gotta clean!

and so
spray and towel in hand
windows flipped open
I scour scrub rub  
sparkle shine
polishing away streaks

and she 
is right at my side
inspecting

Mailing Muddle

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!
I walk through the small front lobby, open the doors to the main room, and find a long line at the counter. There are far more people in line than there are parking spots outside. Somehow, I always forget that most folks are on foot, walking over from the nearby bus stop. 

I can wait.
No big deal.
I’m in no hurry.
I just need to get a label for priority mail, fill out my friend’s address, and stick it on the box. Oops, dang it, I left my pen in the car.  I’m sure I can get one at the counter, or maybe I’ll see one in the kiosk in the center of the room, as I make my way in the queue.

Two clerks. 
The first window seems to be for mailing, buying stamps, etc., and the one on the right appears to be processing passport applications. 

My attention immediately swerves to the sound of anger. There is a man at this second counter, yelling at the clerk, dropping the “f” bomb, while she is explaining,
“I cannot use your birth certificate on your phone, I need to see the actual birth certificate.”
He is SO angry, yelling  “they’d never do this to a white person!”
His words catch me off-guard. I wasn’t even thinking about race. I was thinking about mailing labels. Now I feel a little uncomfortable. I know I could leave, but I’m not going to do so…just because I can doesn’t mean I should. 

I take a deep cleansing breath. His comment was not directed at me. He’s upset, he’s mad at the bureaucracy, not me. Breathe in ‘calm,’ breathe out ‘his frustration.’ Think peace.

There is a tall man with beautiful braids at the first window. The clerk steps away for a few minutes and we are all on ‘pause,’ waiting. 

The man at the passport window continues to speak angrily, and the passport clerk responds quietly. I am reminded of teachers with escalating students, how we use our voices to soothe, hoping to grow calmness and pass it on.

Clerk One returns with a large box from the back, hands it to the man, and shouts, NEXT!!  

A woman steps up to the counter, and speaks English with an accent; in a moment or two, the clerk sends her away, back to the front lobby, telling her she needs to fill out a different form to mail her package. 

As the queue moves up, I see the priority mail sticker I need and slap it on my box; now all I need is a pen to fill out the address.

Two women step up to the counter, speaking in halting English; they have trouble explaining what they need. The clerk speaks sharply, impatiently, directing them to collect new paperwork and fill it out in the lobby. 

Why does a post office have to be so confusing? I’m sure there is an easier way to organize and display these forms and boxes, so that we can find what we need.

All the while, at the second window, the passport man is still very angry - yelling about how he’s come across town, he took a bus, he has the birth certificate on his phone, she must give him his passport! The clerk explains again that she can’t; that he needed to read the directions online, when he made his appointment; he will have to wait a month for another appointment. He continues to yell in response.
“Sir, I’m going to ask you to be quiet.” 
He demands to speak to her manager. 
“Yes, I will get my manager. In the meanwhile, I ask you to be calm and keep your language clean.”

An uneasy silence begins, as the clerk slips into the back room. The man paces, unsettled, in front of the window.

Each of us 
with our own separate issues
mixed up together.

Now, there is only the clerk on the left. She seems very impatient with the lot of us.  Having directed the two women to new paperwork, she notices two men working at the kiosk in the center of the room and she begins yelling - “You cannot work there! Fill out your papers in the lobby. Move out of the way!” They look up in confused distress. 

Simultaneously, a man just ahead turns to me and asks, confused,
“To Vietnam?” 
and he holds out two mailing forms and his box. 
I apologize, I don’t know which form he needs to use; I tell him he needs to ask the clerk, who is now yelling to get his attention -
“You! You’re next! Come here!” and he moves her way, where she instantly dismisses him - 
“Neither of these forms are right. You need the black-and-white form; fill it out in the lobby.” He looks about in thorough confusion. But she has moved on, yelling “Next!! Next!!”

Next is - unfortunately - me. 

Almost no one has been helped at this point, nor have I found a pen… I know this clerk is going to yell at me, too. 
“He needs a form to mail his box to Vietnam; could you show me the form, so I might help him?” and I set my box on her counter.
She ignores my plea and looks at my box, declaring - “This box has no address. Go back to the lobby. There are pens there. NEXT!”

Just like that, I’m in the lobby with everyone else whose request has been rejected, confused students sent to the hallway by a scolding teacher. This small lobby is meant to be a place you walk THROUGH to get to the main ‘working’ section of the post office. To my surprise, things seemed to be looking up:

- My ‘friend’ who asked about mailing a package to Vietnam is holding a black-and-white form. 
- The two women who were turned away earlier are completing paperwork.
- The two men who were working at the kiosk, they are out here completing their paperwork, too.

At the side of the lobby, I see ‘passport man’- yes, he’s out here now, too. He's no longer so angry. He’s talking with two others (managers?) and the original clerk; they are all conversing in calm, normal voices. 

We are all squeezed into this tight little lobby, filling out forms, getting things done.

I find a pen, and write my address on the box. 

Honestly, all this shuffling - without any apparent success or conclusion for anyone - we were a human pinball machine, sent in haphazard directions only to return to start. Yes, most of us still need to go back inside and rejoin the long line.

I meet eyes with another woman, and we smile at each other.  “This is crazy!” 
“Yes!,” she says with an unknown accent, “and so unnecessary, I think. No one’s actually being helped.” She posts her letters in the box and slips out the door. 

With my box addressed, I head back into the main room. There is a person standing in my way, looking a bit dazed. 

“Are you in line?” 

“I have no idea. I think I’m waiting on my held mail - please, no worries - go ahead, see if you can get helped.”

Only entropy comes easy.

– Anton Chekhov
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Nature Triolets

It is Tuesday and time to write a 'Slice of Life." 
Thank you Two Writing Teachers for creating this supportive community
of teacher-writers!

We have been having a bright and sunny spring, day after day of low humidity and mild temperatures. (Also, our spring has been rather frighteningly bereft of rain – oh, but who needs to worry about such things when the sun is shining?) (I do, honestly, I do.) 

I glanced through my camera roll for inspiration for today’s slice, and realized – with the exception of countless photos of the grandchildren – I have three fun categories of nature photos from the past couple of weeks:

One: shadows, 

Two: trees touching the sky,  and 

Three: my favorite spring tree: the redbud (which is in full bloom right now, here in the Mid-Atlantic – you see these purple blossoms popping up everywhere).

Well, I can’t just share photos and call it a slice, can I? (I suppose I could.) 

Then, I saw Fran Haley’s inspiration on Ethical ELA’s Verselove, to write a triolet. Let me revisit those three categories of photos and share some happy spring triolets with you…and then I’ll call it a slice, lol. I hope you enjoy reading these as much as I enjoyed writing them. This poetry form seems just perfect for capturing moments in nature, I think.

water play

sun and shadow in water play
dancing bobbing moving
to happen upon this sight this day
sun and shadow in water play
honestly, it takes my breath away
the image all-consuming
sun and shadow in water play
dancing bobbing moving
how hope emerges

purple buds upon the branches
showing how hope emerges
each little blossom simply prances
purple buds upon the branches
unconcerned about their chances
following perceptive urges
purple buds upon the branches
showing how hope emerges
striving together

trees strive for the sky
holding onto one another 
gently stretching way up high
trees strive for the sky
look up, as you pass by
how they form a loving cover
trees strive for the sky
holding onto one another 
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