Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Slice of Life - Wonderings Inspired by Books

  I love participating in Slice of Life, started by Two Writing Teachers and writing a story, reflection, or musing at least once a week.
 
     I'm reading a book right now called Dash - Life Between the Numbers, written by Greg Armamentos, a Twitter friend of mine. I am loving it.   I'm also loving and listening to The Boy on the Wooden Box: How the Impossible Became Possible...on Schindler's List by Leon Leyson.  You wouldn't think a book about a boy with cancer and a boy trapped in the Holocaust would have much in common, but I keep seeing parallels as I read and listen to both.  In addition, I see how they connect to my own and my students' lives.
 
     In Dash, there is a scene in which Dash is thinking about how weak and afraid he feels in the hospital.  "Somewhere right now Forrest is probably running.  Strong.  With a stupid grin on his face.  Thinking of Kelly.  She is probably with her girlfriends shopping.  Laughing. Smiling.  Everyone else is moving on.  Being normal. I'm stuck here between these walls of wiz feeling wimpy and wispy and wondering when I can get back to my own normalcy before everyone else has left me behind." In another scene, he overhears a man on the phone yelling at a cabinet company because delivery was going to be delayed, and he was throwing a birthday party. Dash can't believe the man could be so angry about such an inane problem when he, Dash, has cancer.  "He was so angry.  Over a relatively small hassle.  Stuck in his own little myopic world.  Oblivious to the pain all around him."
 
     Leon, in The Boy on the Wooden Box, also notices life going on as usual in the middle of his own personal experience.  "As I walked out of the ghetto with its tombstone-crowned walls and along the streets of Krakow, I was dumbfounded to see that life seemed just as it had been before I entered the ghetto.  It was as if I were in a time warp...or as if the ghetto were on another planet.  I stared at the clean, well-dressed people, busily moving from place to place.  They seemed so normal, so happy.  Had they not known what we had been suffering just a few blocks away?  How could they not have known?  How could they not have done something to help us?  A streetcar stopped, and passengers boarded, oblivious to our presence.  They showed absolutely no interest in who we were, where we were going, or why.  That our misery, confinement, and pain were irrelevant to their lives was simply incomprehensible." 
 
     I've had two profound experiences like Dash's and Leon's that I remember distinctly, one joyful and the other devastating.  When my daughter, Libby, was born in March of 1993, I can remember looking out my hospital room window, gazing at the spitting snow and gray skies.  How is it that the world didn't stop, just for a second, to acknowledge that a new human being had just entered the world?  Why were pedestrians around the hospital not looking up at my highrise room window and giving me a thumbs up for a job well done?  How could the world go on as usual?  It was unfathomable.  I just smiled and turned away from the window, that feeling of disbelief already passing. 
 
     In May of 2011, I experienced this moment again, but in an entirely different situation.  I was standing at the brim of my dear friend, Bobby's, grave.  His casket was already lowered into the ground.  My girls were debating on whether or not to place roses they had been given in Bobby's memory on the casket or to keep them as precious mementos.  I looked up, again wondering how the world could still be spinning.  People were walking, driving, and biking past the cemetery, oblivious to Bobby's passing out of this world.  Why were they not stopping to give him one last salute for a life well lived and hugs to us, his stunned and devastated friends?
 
     What do these moments of otherworldliness teach us?  I think they teach us to pay attention to those around us.  What if one of someone stopped what they were doing and visited Dash at the hospital?  Or at least called?  What if that man with the late cabinets took a deep breath and recognized that his problem wasn't as important as the patients hurting and dying around him?  Could some of the ordinary citizens around the ghettos of the Holocaust have stopped the systematic killings of Jews if they were willing to reach out? Some of them did, but not enough.  I don't know the answers to these questions (some may be answered as I continue both books), but they are still worth asking.  I also know I spend a lot of time in my own myopic world and not enough time paying attention to others. I know I've missed things in the lives around me.
 
      As we walk into our school buildings every day, what monumental moments are our students experiencing?  Are they wondering why no one is stopping to find out what is going on in their lives?  Could we give them a thumbs up or a salute?  Could we reach out a hand or give them a hug?  How would the world change if we all took the time to notice?
 
$slugfordisplay
 

12 comments:

  1. Holly, what a beautifully written post. I hope you are able to share it with friends and family and beyond. Students? You touch on many areas of life moments. I'm going to take another read before I leave. So much to digest :)

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  2. Thank you, Bonnie. It was hard to write! I read it over and over myself, trying to get it right. Ha. I'm still not sure it says exactly what I wanted it to, but I needed to just go ahead and publish it. ;-)

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  3. Love this. Especially to the connection to our students - because they are walking stories, waiting to be asked questions, and receptive to making connections. Great post, Holly.

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  4. My husband made me listen to "This is Water," a commencement address by David Foster Wallace. He profoundly speaks to the students about every day life and how we can make a difference in our own lives and those of others if we just pay attention. Mary Oliver says, "Pay attention, this is our endless & proper work."
    My experience like yours with the birth of your daughter was the day I got married. I looked out the window driving to the church wondering how the world kept going when my life was about to change forever. Love reading your thoughts and connections.

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    1. Yes - wedding days are like that, for sure! Thanks for the heads up about the commencement address. I will definitely look for that and watch it. I love Mary Oliver!

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  5. It's true, we don't always know, or pay attention as we should. I like the making of connections always, Holly, & have those 2 books down on my list to read. Do you know this Auden poem? Here's the beginning, & you can find the rest by googling: "Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
    Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
    Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
    Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come." This poem reminds me of you thinking about your friend's passing, wondering why the world was continuing on. Thank you for this heartfelt post.

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    1. I LOVE that poem - it's the perfect connection. Thanks so much for sharing!

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  6. Well written post and so many questions. We all seem to get caught up in ourselves and what is happening to us. If only.... we'd look around and notice all that is happening and reach out to those around us. I really like how you brought it back to home, by looking at your students and actually seeing what they need. Thank you.

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  7. The line that went straight to my heart was "Are they wondering why no one is stopping to find out what is going on in their lives?" Do I stop? Do I need to pay more attention? I think know the answer to that. Thank you for making me think. By the way, my trust issue is professional and not personal. I don't want you thinking it has to do with my husband. :)

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  8. This is so lovely and poignant, Holly. And such important questions for all of us to ask ourselves each day. Thanks for such a vulnerable post.

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  9. It's so important to stop and take the time to listen and pay attention to the worlds that are below the surface. This is a beautifully written post, Holly, and I am so glad that I stopped by to read it. Loved the part about the birth of your daughter and the thinking about how sometimes our greatest moments go unnoticed by so many.

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