Saturday, October 23, 2010

Yeh, maybe I'm not a blogger...

I want to write witty, insightful, engaging blog entries with regularity. I just find it hard to slow down sometimes and journal.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Blessed



Truly.


Stay warm and enjoy the company of the people you love.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

My daughter's 8th grade promotion...


SO I am sitting here in a sort of strange state of shock. It took a minute to really sink in. In fact, I paused to acknowledge and honor the huge significance of this day.

Today I became the mother of two high school students, my son is a junior as of today and my daughter was promoted from 8th grade becoming a freshman this afternoon. My daughter and son have grown into amazing young adults before my eyes, and today I saw so many familiar children also coming into their more grown selves. I chaperoned the 8th grade field trip to the amusement park. Many of these children attended my kid’s after-school program, where I taught for a couple of years. My children have grown up in this neighborhood. I’ve volunteered for parent stuff, visited classrooms, performed and done workshops, you name it…And to see so many youth that I hadn’t seen in awhile: taller, adolescents, at various stages of comfort and discomfort with themselves and the world around them heading off to their futures gleefully on rollercoaster rides.

Then, there is the other layer that always happens at these monumental landmarks… I remember my mother and I reaching these same milestones and it saddens me that she can’t be here. My mom would have been hollering about her brilliant grandchild who was one of the MC’s of her graduation! She was beautiful and amazing, and at some point she giggled near the microphone and to hear my daughter’s laughter made me so happy. She held it down sitting in front of a packed auditorium the whole time. She was also one of about 5 people who got straight A’s all three years of middle school, and her class was about 250 strong.

Earned a little mommy bragging rights so I wanted to get that out. YES! That is my child!

The big question now… what will I do with two teenagers and summer break! Madness!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Turiya made a you tube video

So it isn't sundance or cannes film festival material, but it was my first real attempt to use imovie and create something using my digital camera which also records snips of video. Check it out. I think I am entertaining, perhaps you will too. And don't worry, this is only the beginning!

Check it out!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKYr68ujaBs&feature=channel_page

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

St. Helens Middle School

The students at St Helens Middle School have shown me a lot of love over the last few weeks and have inspired me with their words. Working with about seventy-to-one hundred students every day was intense at times, (5 sessions in a day) but the great attitudes and energy of the students kept me going each day. Today was my last day and I am already sad to say good-bye. Students would greet me in the hall when I walked past, murmurs would go through the lunch line that snaked around the wall, “Is that the artist?!” “Isn’t she famous?” The students say things like how much they like my poetry, or ask me for my autograph not really realizing that, to me, they are the superstars. All that talent and potential bursting forth from their minds to the page!

I love helping writers with feedback when they are stuck, or they know they want to change something but aren’t sure exactly what. I give them suggestions and invite them to incorporate my feedback, ignore it or come up with different revisions- whichever makes the most sense to them. The best part is when they choose to change or add something, for whatever reason makes the most sense to them, and can see improvement for themselves. At the end of the day that is truly the key to being a better writer, being able to try out different things, revision what you started with and make choices that you like. The more a person does that, the stronger their writing in the long run.

Today we had outstanding final day readings. The uniqueness of each voice and the quality of writing, regardless of where students are at, always inspires and motivates me. Some of the students had written pages of stuff in the sessions and struggled to decide which piece to share at the end, from so many options. Others really took one piece through revision and added vibrant language. Many read their pieces even though they were seriously afraid to speak in front of a group, but they fought their nerves and pushed through. We even played games and got silly too!

All the teachers and staff impressed me with their interest and support and told me stories of how excited students were about the writing workshops every day, which meant a lot. (I know there was also the added bonus of the students getting out of class to come, which lent itself in my favor as well!) I just want to say a big thank you to everyone. Every visit to a school is a group effort dependent on the synergy of everyone involved to be successful. So I thank all the students, teachers, and staff for welcoming me so warmly to the campus. I enjoyed every conversation and workshop with the students, my chats with the librarian (yay books!), my morning and afternoon carpool/coffee runs, the teacher’s lounge informational sessions, the teachers who sat in on workshops throughout the residency and brought classes in for the final readings. Thank you for the wonderful experience, and I loved the gifts: the cards signed by the students, the photo signed by the teachers, and the school t-shirt which I will wear with pride!

Have a great rest of the school year SHMS!

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Tolerance is Not Enough

I asked the high school students I am working for to do a writing exercise. We started by writing directions to something that we do regularly, then I asked them to think if it could be a metaphor for something else and to adjust their writing accordingly. I started by writing about the process of paying bills, then made it a metaphor for tolerance. People misuse the notion of tolerance the way folks glaze over diversity. Tolerance for many is about putting up with something they don't like in a PC way to not be perceived as jerks, rather than truly accepting difference and embracing others. Here is my poem for them.

How to be a Tolerant A**hole
By Turiya

Toss all frustration into a huge pile
and leave for weeks unattended.
Once your ignorance is pouring over
the edges of your surroundings,
threatening to take over,
go through your "isms" one by one.

Tear open your past and dismiss the content.
Attempt half-heartedly to analyze your preconceptions.
Groan as you realize your debt to society
is more than you'll ever be able to repay.
Write an I.O.U. for less than you owe.

Complain about how miserable it is
to share a country with those less worthy.
Choose who won't get respect this month.
Shred every piece of evidence
that points to the problem being yours.
Add the issues you don't want to acknowledge
to the growing stack marked
"things to deal with 11 days after never."

Pat yourself on the back
as if you've accomplished something monumental.
Avoid growth at all costs!
Mumble about how change is overrated.
Smile, assuming you really are right after all and
continue making the rest of us miserable.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

My favorite things from the last 7 days...

I will do it sort of chronologically, Monday through today:

1. Discussion with teenagers:
I am doing a residency at Lincoln High School and one of the classes I am working with is an African American studies class. This is their first year offering it, so it is definitely a work in progress. This week when I visited I was explaining one of my pieces, "Freedom and Justice Are Not Optional." The conversation led me to get into the criminalization of the poor, the war on drugs, and the prison industrial complex. Before I knew it the bell was ringing to dismiss for lunch and there were still hands in the air. A couple of young brothers even stayed after to talk to me more. It wasn't that we were all on the same page, several of them had bought into the tough on crime mythology. But to be in a high school classroom with predominately Black students talking about stuff I usually discuss with college students was amazing! So much potential!

2. Recording for KBOO with 4th graders at Rosa Parks:
OK, since we were gathered in larger groups than usual, in order to take a couple students at a time in to record, it was hectic for sure. (Our "studio" was a classroom and the set up was super simple.) But being there to witness kids recite their own writing and have an opportunity to record for radio for the first time was fantastic! To be able to share resources with them and give them opportunities we didn't have at their age, to support their creativity, is so inspiring! It will be on the air in late March. (If I have finished rebuilding my website by then I will add the link to the calendar.) And Erin, the KBOO volunteer who agreed to come out and do the project was so great with the kids. She was patient, and even gave them an opportunity to check out the equipment. We are talking about 25 or so kids around 10 years old. That takes patience!

3. Achieving some success at fundraising for my daughter's exchange program to China:
I was on the verge of giving up. Folks hadn't been getting back to me, plus its a recession. But I really hated the thought of squashing my daughter's ambitions and goals over money, when she is really doing such a great job in school and being really involved all around. Then, this week, people actually started getting back to me and pledging support. While it is still only a fraction of what we need, it makes a huge difference in my level of overwhelmedness and came just in time before I was going to have to say a definitive "No" on the whole thing. So we are not giving up and my daughter will hopefully have her first opportunity to see another country with classmates and teachers from her school.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO HELP OUT, send me a message and I will gladly send you more info! Every bit helps, $10/$25/$50. (If you can give $100 or more my daughter will send you a piece of her art.) We will send EVERYONE who contributes pics and a letter from the trip.

4. Free Wine and Cheese:
There was a function around student learning in our modern era, which I knew about because the organizers are also doing this training I am involved in this term. I am learning more about pedagogy and techniques for teaching on line in preparation for my on-line summer courses. So they had free wine, fruit, cheese and crackers. Free snacks gets me excited. Adults really need more snack times, it shouldn't be just a kid thing. Also I saw someone I hadn't talked to in ages who really inspires me and is super supportive.

5. Lebanese Food:
A good friend, whose company is like sunshine on a cloudy day, took me out to dinner at this incredible Lebanese restaurant downtown. We shared chicken shwarma and this amazing lamb dish. I really like lamb when it is well cooked, which this was. I always mess up lamb when I make the attempt, so I rarely eat it. Oooh and the dessert was fantastic!

6. Teaching 4th Graders at Glencoe elementary:
I was battling a cold throughout the residency this week and last, but they kept me energized. For the first time, I did in class poetry slams with elementary students. They were awesome! Their skills and styles covered a pretty wide range, but they stepped up and took on the challenge with contagious enthusiasm. Over the course of the residency, I talk to them a little about African American oral tradition- from Brer Rabbit trickster folktales, to blues and jazz, to hip-hop. They wrote a variety of pieces in a range of styles and almost all of them performed the last day. I loved it, and I gave them the full on slam host vibe and had them cheering and rowdy. FUN FUN FUN!
As an important side note- there was a day this week where we listened to a hip hop song to find examples of alliteration, metaphor/simile, and internal rhyme. I said they could use highlighters if they had them. They were so excited about highlighters! Some of them just highlighted everything! Remember being young enough to be excited about the little inexpensive things? A new box of crayons... a cool barrette... getting to color in class? Maybe subconsciously that is why I still get excited about office supplies.

7. My son brought me breakfast in bed today:
He made me a breakfast sandwich with a perfectly fried egg, cheese and turkey bacon. Yummy!

8. Having the weekend to rest:
While I was originally supposed to be in Eugene this weekend doing a workshop/performance/ panel at U of O with Walidah & Boots from THE COUP (among others), because I have been so sick and over worked I cancelled. I am bummed that I don't get to see Boots, who I have known for almost 20 years... : ( But my body is glad to be resting after a whirlwind couple of weeks where I couldn't take a day off since my schedule was so insane and I couldn't reschedule anything. Also, my blankets are warm and toasty and I have time to lay here and blog. If only weekends could be longer...
ok, wait. As a parent of school age children in Oregon I maybe shouldn't say that, cause there have been schools talking about going to a 4 day school week due to the budget crises. But I'm sure people know what I generally mean about wanting more days off to relax!