One Little Word for 2021: Inconceivable

Every January, my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I each choose “One Little Word” for the year. This year, I have delayed,

and delayed,

delayed some more.

I just can’t seem to wrap my head around anything these days.

Last year my One Little Word was humor—and that turned out the be pretty accurate on a certain level. 2020 was so terrible, so unimaginably awful, that sometimes you just had to laugh. Also, I really did take the goal of humor to heart, and starting in January of last year, I read at least one book written by a comedian a month, reading and listening to about 15 books by comedians in all in 2020. Reading all those comedian-authored books lead me down this weird rabbit hole into a world of comedy-fandom that I hadn’t previously known about. It’s been great, and it has changed my reading life for the better.

But 2021…

I just don’t know. Maybe… Dumpsterfire? Craptastic? What’s something that captures just how unbelievably terrible things will most likely get before they get better?

INCONCEIVABLE


Inconceivable.

It feels really good to say it. I can see why Vizzini keeps using that word, even though it does not mean what he thinks it means.

Middle Schooler: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

Every night after dinner since my daughter was a tiny baby, we do dinner, bath, stories, and snuggles. With each passing year, as she gets bigger and bigger, I know that bedtime snuggles will someday be a thing of the past. When she was three, I thought there might only be a year or two of bedtime snuggles left. When she was seven and eight years old, I really thought each night might be one of the last. I would hold her a little tighter, feeling the bittersweet feeling of wanting her to stay little, but knowing she would grow up.

Now she’s eleven, and we still do dinner, followed by bath, stories, and snuggles. Her bedtime is still just as early as ever, and the whole routine still takes just as long as ever. In fact, if I try to sneak out too soon she gets upset and cranky (and loud), ruining our peaceful bedtime routine, and potentially waking up her younger brother in the bedroom next to hers. So now we have a ritual where I set a timer for snuggles. She makes me show it to her to be sure it’s for ten minutes and not a minute less (she caught on when I started sneaking out after five or six minutes).

Tonight, as I was reading to her and she was getting ready for snuggles, she curled up at the end of the bed, near my feet. Mid-chapter, she crawled around in circles, and pawed at the bed, just like our dog, Indie likes to do. She thought she was being hilarious (and she kind of was).

“Lily, stop being Indie. I’m trying to read to you.”

“Woof. Arf!” She giggled and wagged her butt.

I continued to read, only to be interrupted by a ridiculous level of dog-sounds, more pawing, more circling to make the perfect spot at my feet. Finally, she, rested her chin on my legs, the same way Indie would. I rolled my eyes and continued on.

Will my daughter always want stories and snuggles? Part of me knows that of course, someday she will outgrow it. But… maybe this kid just loves stories and snuggles!

She is a middle schooler now. She still plays pretend, and has storytime, snuggles, and still sleeps with a blankie. The difference is, she would murder me if she knew I was posting this! (Hahahahaha!)


Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.

Snapshots Of Our Week: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

My son, Jackson, takes a bit of teriyaki chicken and his six year old taste buds are appalled.

Lily, my middle school daughter, types out five pages worth of a detailed story based on Legends of Zelda gameplay. She’s just getting started. I already know she will spend the next several weeks working on this every chance she gets.

A pile of boxes from Amazon begins to form in the corner in my office. The kids clearly know that it’s presents but they don’t ask too many questions.

We visit our friends’ Christmas tree farm up the road to pick one out. It’s the first time we’ve seen anybody since Halloween. Lily insists on examining every tree before choosing, as always, the biggest one possible. The entire time, I’m thinking about how to keep our distance from the other people.

The elf arrives at our house. Sigh.

Indie has been sleeping all day, every day. Except when he’s at our feet, searching for crumbs and begging for treats.

It snows, lightly, all week. There is a dusting covering our yard. The mountain opens tomorrow! We have literally been waiting since March to get back to skiing.

Friends invite me to go skiing. I haven’t replied. Am I becoming germaphobic? Or a recluse? Or both?

I bake cookies. My kids each eat one. Brinton and I eat the rest.


Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.

Thankful for My Feet: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

Today I learned that one of my closest friends will have his foot amputated tomorrow.

It started with a hunting accident this past Sunday - he was pulling a gun up into a tree stand. The gun went off and shot him in the foot, and after several days in the hospital, undergoing initial surgery to remove the bullet, he’s decided that amputation is the best choice he has.

Bad news is - it’ll take a lot of time, PT, and learning to use a prosthetic or two before he can bike or ski again. But the good news - he might be walking again in as soon as three months, hopefully. He will bike and ski again, eventually.

I am lucky to have a large, very close knit group of friends that does everything together. We are all avid skiers and mountain bikers. We have weekly “Date Nights” on Fridays where we all get babysitters and night ski, or night bike, no matter the weather. We each do something outdoors nearly every day, in some shape or form. We are fortunate, and privileged, to live in a place with wide open outdoor spaces, where we have been able to continue to see each other throughout most of the pandemic (until recently).

Today, as I was working out by myself in my basement, I felt incredibly thankful to be able to move my body. I’ve had my share of injuries and illness, and being healthy is not something I take for granted. But today I felt especially thankful. As much as I hate working out - it’s a chore - today I was happy to be able to do it. I paid attention to how much work my feet do for me. I’m thankful for my feet. Thankful for my friends. Thankful for the outdoors. Thankful for my family. Thankful for all of it.



Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.

Copycat Kid: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

A very tiny slice of life from bedtime tonight:

Me: “Jackson, honey, go brush your teeth.”

Jackson: “Jackson honey go brush your teeth!” (Fit of giggles follows.")

Me: “No, really. Please go brush your teeth right now.”

Jackson: “No really please go brush-you-teeth-right-now.” (More giggles.)

Long pause.

Me: “Jackson…”

Jackson: “Jaaaackson! Hahahahaha!”

Another long pause.

Me: “My mom is the coolest mom in the world.”

Jackson: “My mom is the coolest mom in the world! Hahahahahahaha!” (Runs down the hall, toothbrush in hand.)


Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.

Falling Up: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

The trees were alive with bright firey red, orange, and yellow bursts of color. As my friends and I stepped onto our bikes, I said aloud, “Ooooh so pretty,” and then kept on saying it every three or four minutes. Around each bend, new views and more colors surprised us.

Even after a lifetime of living in Vermont, the fall foliage still amazes. It can’t really captured in photographs, though we all try. There really isn’t anything like being deep in the forest during peak leaf season, surrounded by vivid fall colors.

My friends and I zoom down the trail, even as the sun begins to set, the dust hanging in the air and sparkling in the sun’s golden rays. As the forest begins to darken, we turn on our lights and continue to twist and turn through the trees, over roots and rocks, across bridges, climbing and descending. The loss of daylight never bothered us.

Bike season is almost over and even though every fall I feel a little sense of loss - loss of the summer, loss of another season, a little bit older, another chapter over - I’m never really sad to see summer go and winter on its way. I’m always looking forward to winter.

changing of the leaves

bright popping red

candy color orange

vivid yellow

fireworks in slow motion

celebrating the summer’s end

and welcoming winter’s beginning

all at once very alive

at peak beauty

but eventually falling

breaking loose

and letting the wind carry you away


Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.

Almost Fall: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

Six of us ladies took off into the woods on our bikes. Pony tails whipped in the wind, and we shouted with glee as our bikes zipped around the first bermed turn in the trail.

The trees were dark green, in the fading afternoon light. A few spots of yellow, and even some red maple were beginning to pop.

We climbed and climbed. Me, in my preferred spot in the back of the pack, the caboose. The trail wound up and up, over roots and rocks, bridges, and logs. Switchback after switchback. All the way up to the lookout, a spot we’ve ridden to many times this summer.

At the lookout, we all hop off our bikes and sit on the a huge boulder facing a spectacular view of Mt. Mansfield. The sun is just beginning to set behind us, casting shadows on the mountain. The leaves near the peak are not quite red, but not quite green either. Fall is on its way.


Every Tuesday my Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I host the Slice of Life Story Challenge. Teachers from all around the world participate in sharing a story each week.





First Day of School: Slice of Life Story Challenge

As we pull our car into the parking lot at Jericho Elementary School, we are greeted by the sight of teachers waving and cheering. The sun is shining brightly, and Bob Marley is playing on our car stereo.

We roll down our windows and Nurse Lindsay asks us all some health screening questions, and then she takes Jackson’s temperature. “Okay, Jackson! All set!”

Jackson, six years old, is dressed in his favorite shirt (a button-down short sleeve shirt, bright red, with bright yellow bananas all over it). He’s got a tie-dye face-mask on, with sunglasses. He hops out of the car, and waves to us. His hair, grown curly and sun-bleached during covid, blows around in the breeze. “So long, amigos!” he calls, and walks confidently toward the school entrance.

Brinton, Lily, and I giggle. Jackson marches off, with his giant-sized backpack swaying back and forth. He’s guided by teachers who are cheering and waving him into the building.

Our little guy is going to be okay.

March 13th: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

Today I woke up thinking about the date March 13. Throughout the pandemic, I have hung on to that date as the beginning of it all.

Maybe I remember that date because I went to three different grocery stores that day to find toilet paper and took photos of empty store aisles at each one to text to my friends with joking captions. “This is getting serious [insert poop emoji!]” “Holy crap! No TP here either! [insert laughing emoji].

Maybe I remember the date of March 13 because we went out to dinner with friends that night and joked the whole time that it would be our “last supper.” And then a few days later we were horrified to realize how accurate we had been.

Maybe I remember because it was a Friday the 13th? And all the days that followed seemed to get progressively more dire.

I woke up thinking about this date, and what I remembered from that day. And in my sleepy haze I also counted back - one, two, three, four, five full months, plus half of March. Six months. SIX. MONTHS. We had no idea what was about to happen, back then, on March 13.

I live in Vermont. We COMPLETELY shut down this spring, throughout March, April, and May. NOTHING was open but a few gas stations and grocery stores. Nothing. And when you did venture out to get supplies, you went quick, wore a mask, doused yourself in hand sanitizer and got the heck out of there, apologizing and thanking the clerks profusely for putting themselves at risk. There weren’t even cars on the road.

Since then, we’ve slowly opened up a few things at a time. Group of 10. Then groups of 25. Then restaurants could do outdoor seating. Now they can do spaced out indoor seating. It is very rare to see somebody at a store or restaurant without a mask, at least in my part of the state. In a few weeks schools will open, mostly in hybrid models or distance models at first.

It is both astonishing to me that it has already been six months. It’s gone by so fast. Or has it? It also feels like it has been forever.

Performative Allyship: March Slice of Life Story Challenge

It was Tuesday morning, around 5:30. I woke up. Rolled over, and grabbed my phone to check the weather.

This is how almost every morning begins for me (though I’m not happy about it). I grab my phone to “check the weather,” but then I spend the next thirty minutes scrolling through Instagram and Twitter, down the social media rabbit-hole.

Right away I noticed the black squares. Friends who I look up to were posting black squares, muting their usual photos of food, dogs, memes, and selfies to make space for black voices. Yes. I thought. If ______ {insert names of friends whom I respect as leaders in the fight}____ is doing this then it must be helpful.

I am really good at following directions. I posted the black square, being sure not to tag it with "#BLM or #blacklivesmatter. No tag, no caption. Then I proceeded to share books by black authors, suggestions for action, suggestions for organizations to donate to, and video clips from black leaders. I invited seven of my friends to read How to Be An Antiracist with me and they all said yes (except one… that’s a story for another day).

I went about my day. I homeschooled my kids (as best I could). I went for a bike ride. In the back of my mind, I kept replaying video clips of police violence, feeling vaguely sick to my stomach, feeling paralyzed.

I live in a mostly white rural town, in a mostly white state. Our schools are mostly white. I am a white woman, from a mostly all white family. Local businesses, hospitals, everything, is mostly white. I left my diverse group of friends behind in Brooklyn, New York several years ago to move back to Vermont, and I’m embarrassed to say that since we’ve moved I only have one new friend in Vermont who is not white.

I’m also ashamed to admit this - in our tiny, mostly white state, there was a small BLM rally Tuesday in our state’s largest town, Burlington, but I was too afraid of the risk of covid-19 to go. Like I said earlier, I’m really good at following directions. I’m a rule follower.

In the days that followed, the phrase “performative allyship” started showing up in my Twitter and Instagram feeds and I had a sinking feeling. I have been practicing performative allyship. I had posted a bunch of stuff, the black square and everything, I was reading a bunch of books, and that was really about it.

I’ve posted information, book recommendations, doing what I can to amplify black voices for years. I’ve attended anti-racism conferences, and read anti-racist books. I am not new to the work. But I now know that’s not enough. I own my mistake. I need to figure out what actions I can take. (Please note, I’ve listed all these things I’ve done, not to toot my own horn, but to make that point that educating myself is not enough. Educating myself does not do anything to change racist laws and policies.)

At a conference I attended several years ago, hosted by Black Lives Matter, I learned that people like me should think carefully about where to put our energy. I can’t be all things to all people. If I try to tackle everything - donations, marches, joining organizations, volunteering - I will likely burn out. I also will likely only gain a surface understanding about any of it. So I need to narrow down, hone in on what I can effectively take on.

For now, here’s my action plan (until I know better):

  • For years as a literacy coach I’ve been taking small actions - diversifying and updating our classroom libraries, for example. But starting now, I am speaking up more in my curriculum meetings at the district level. Today I suggested we place a moratorium on our racist social studies units that have been in place forever in our K-4 classrooms. I was promised that the social studies curriculum is being revised and will continue to be revised next year. A baby step forward. I’ll take it (and keep coming back to it).

  • I’m making a goal to contact Bernie Sanders on a regular basis, one of my state senators, to urge him to continue rolling back antiquated “War on Drugs” laws that do nothing to care for people with serious addictions, and serve largely to put young black men in jail. (Pushing to pass the “Marijuana Justice Act” is one example). Bernie is a senator with a little bit of clout. I am one of his constituents - and we are a tiny state. He listens to us (I think). So I can do this and it might make a difference.

  • I’m concentrating on actively teaching my own children to be anti-racist. I’ve been reading aloud An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States for Young People to my daughter, and I’m going to follow up it up with Stamped. We watched the CNN/Sesame Street Town Hall for young kids on racism and that’s been a good conversation builder for my son and daughter as well.

  • I’m donating to Grass Roots Law Project. I’ve followed Shaun King for years and learned so much from his work, and it’s time I put my money where my mouth is.

These are things I can do. These are things I know a lot about. These are things I care deeply about, not in a general, “make change” sort of way, but in a very real way. I know I still have so much to learn, and I’ll keep reading, talking, and listening. But I can’t stop there.

WFH Update: Tuesday Slice of Life Story Challenge

W.F.H. Working. From. Home.

Not just working from home. Working from home with two school-age kids. Kids who I have to homeschool because of the covid-19 quarantine. My kids are young. Six and ten. My six-year-old, especially, needs me to sit side-by-side with him. All morning. Every day.

We’ve figured out a routine that works for us, but even with all my years of training and experience as a teacher, I can barely get my own two kids to do just a few simple school things each day. Those things are:

  1. A little bit of writing

  2. A little bit of reading

  3. A little bit of math

  4. A little bit of handwriting for my youngest, and keyboarding for my oldest

These few things take all morning long. From 7:00 am to noon. With literacy, we rarely do what we’re actually “supposed” to do. With math, it’s mostly worksheets and games. After that, I throw in the towel and send the kids outside for the rest of the day so that I can maybe get some work done. On some days I exercise instead. I can’t seem to manage to do both on a given day.

I’ve been waking up in the middle of the night nearly every night, so I’m also just SO TIRED. I haven’t been this tired since the kids were newborns. That’s how tired I feel.

My kids are outside right now, as I type this. I’m so exhausted I can barely think. I have a few things for work I need to get done. Sample comments for covid report cards to share with my colleagues. Videos to make. Emails to reply to. I’ll go do those now, and if I’m lucky, the kids will stay outside the entire time. Wish me luck.

Dear Kids: Day 31 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

Today is the last day of the March Slice of Life Challenge. Every day, for thirty-one days I have written you a letter. So much has changed in just one month. When I first started, I was only vaguely aware of something called coronavirus that had been in the news. On my last work trip to Hawaii in February, they asked extra questions at the airport: Had I traveled to China recently? Had I experienced fever or coughing? They swiped my hand with a cotton swab, weirdly.

But now, covid-19 rules our life. We have school at home, we have to stay six feet away from people when we do go out, which is rare. We have to watch out for how much toilet paper we use. Our basement is stocked with nonperishables.

Today, we all hiked Sterling mountain, as a family. Dad, Lily, and I skinned, and Jackson boot-packed. Jed and his sons came too, and we all made sure to stay at least six feet apart from each other the entire time. I imagine that when you two are all grown up you’ll probably have memories of Dad, Jed, and I shouting, “Distance!” as a reminder to all the kids to stay away from each other.

It was a beautiful sunny day today, and there’s still plenty of snow on the mountain. It was a perfect spring skiing day. On the way down, watching you all ski, I was so proud of all of you!

But… the entire time we were skiing I couldn’t turn off the little voice in my head that worries. What if one of you broke a bone hit your head? No one plans to get injured.

But nobody got hurt. We made our way down the mountain, one steep pitch at a time, enjoying the sun and fresh air. Hooting and hollering. Safe and sound.

Let’s hope that April brings plenty of sunshine.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 30 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

Man oh man today was a tough day. This was our second Monday of distance learning, and one thing I have discovered is that two of you hate Mondays. (And it didn’t help that your father and I both had stressful work deadlines looming while trying to homeschool you both).

At one point, Jackson burst into tears, kicked in frustration at his special “masterpiece” drawing that he’s been working on for weeks and shouted, “Nobody will play with me and I’m so angry about it! Raaaahhh!” The gigantic drawing, which is really five or six large drawings carefully taped together, crumpled a little under the weight of his foot.

Jackson, you paused momentarily realizing what you’d just done. I held my breath hoping that your masterpiece wasn’t ripped down the middle. Luckily it wasn’t.

Seeing that the masterpiece was mostly unharmed, he moved on to dump over a box full of Keva blocks, and tore down one of his lego creations.

Jackson, I want you to know first of all that I’m sorry nobody was playing with you. You must have felt so frustrated and sad. Second of all, I want you to know that I felt like kicking a masterpiece today too.

I love you both so much.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 27 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

Last night we learned that all Vermont schools will remain closed for the remainder of the school year. For me, your mom, this is devastating news. I’m not worried about the two of you. You mom (me) is a literacy specialist. The two of you are going to be just fine.

No, I’m worried about all your classmates who don’t have a grown-up at home who can make sure they have breakfast and lunch every day, who can get them up in the morning, and put them to bed every night, who can teach their kindergarteners and first graders to read by the end of the year. I just want to cry.

But we are going to be just fine. We’ve got a schedule and routines. Both of you have already learned a ton just in our first week and a half. Jackson’s writing folder is already overflowing with stories and books he’s made, and Lily, you’ve already run out of math practice sheets. You’re both doing just fine.

What you might not know is that on the inside, I’m doing constant work to remain calm. Here’s a trick that my therapist friend taught me called “grounding.”

Name five things you can see.

Name five things you can touch.

Name five things you can smell.

Name five things you can taste.

Name five things you can hear.

Here’s what I can see, touch, smell, taste, and hear right now.

I can see my laptop, a stack of handouts that were meant to be used this week on a work trip that was cancelled, earbuds for the zoom meeting I will have later this morning, my reading glasses that I’m supposed to be wearing right now, and a pack of post-its.

I can touch the keyboard, my favorite soft tiger striped sweater that I’m wearing right now, the handle of my coffee mug, my soft sweatpants that I’ve been living in all week, and my favorite slippers.

I can smell my coffee, the scented gel pens in Lily’s art supplies, the weird smell our basement always has, the smell of the wool my sweater is made of, and if I pick one up, I can smell the smell of my books.

I taste my coffee (thank goodness I stocked up on my favorite kind), which in itself contains all kinds of flavors. I taste chocolate, something bitter, honey-sweetness, something a little bit tart, and the taste of the tiny bit of milk I always add to my coffee.

I can hear the clickety click of my keyboard, your voices (Lily and Jackson) playing with legos upstairs, a random unidentifiable beeping noise (a toy somewhere?), the low hum of the fridge we keep in the basement, and Indie’s soft doggy snoring at my feet.

This was a stressful week for me and your father, and next week will likely be worse. Things are really just getting started, I’m afraid. But the two of you will be just fine. With a little work and creativity, we’ll get through this just like always.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 29 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

The other day I wrote about how my therapist friend gave me a strategy for dealing with anxiety and panic called “grounding,” where you name five things you can see, smell, taste, feel, and touch. I’m finding that I need to be more and more intentional about keeping myself calm these days, as the pandemic becomes more and more serious.

Today it became clear that we can no longer skin the mountain to ski. It’t not that we aren’t allowed to, per se. There is a “Stay Home, Stay Safe” order in place, which is basically shelter-in-place like they would do for a natural disaster. But until yesterday we were still skinning and skiing—just avoiding other people and keeping a safe distance from germs. But today, through text messages and chats, my friends and I all decided that it just isn’t responsible to skin and ski anymore. If someone were to fall and break a bone, or even just get a bad cut or head wound, we would be putting the EMTs at risk, and ourselves at risk for having to go to the hospital. So, sadly, I think our last day of skiing was Saturday. At least it was a good one. (Jackson, at six years old, bootpacked all the way to the top of Sterling Mountain and skied with all of us like a champ!)

So today, my coping strategy is to concentrate on things I am grateful for. I learned that gratitude is a powerful strategy for coping for stress. Here are ten things I am grateful for right now:

  1. I am grateful for the extra time I get to spend with the two of you during all of this.

  2. I’m grateful for our house and our yard that give us space to work and play.

  3. I’m grateful that your dad is a good cook!

  4. I’m grateful that Indie loves to snuggle.

  5. I’m grateful that we have good, strong, fast internet at our house.

  6. I’m grateful for my friends who text me funny things all day long and force me to come out of hiding.

  7. I’m grateful that everyone in our family is healthy right now.

  8. I’m grateful for the nurses, doctors, building custodians, grocery store and gas station employees, and everyone else who is still going to work despite how risky it is right now.

  9. I’m grateful for all of the teachers and principals I work with in our district. I am SO grateful I get to live and work in this district.

  10. I am grateful that we live in a beautiful place where there are lots of outdoor spaces we can escape to.

I love you both so much.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 26 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

As I write this, the two of you are in the sitting room, building a lego spaceship together. To specific, you are building a rocket ship for “Mohawk Man,” a lego character that the two of you created a few years ago using UniKitty’s tail as a mohawk for a lego mini-figure. (In case you don’t remember, UniKitty is a character from the Lego Movie). For the past three years, Mohawk Man has been a part of innumerable stories and lego creations. He’s gone missing (panic!), been found, and then lost again multiple times.

Now he’s getting his very own ship. The ship looks like something that came from a real lego set. It is white, with blue details. It’s shiny and professional. The top of the Mohawk Man ship has it’s own blue mohawk, just like the man it is designed for. In dry-erase marker, the side of the ship is emblazoned with the words “Mohawk Party.” The name of the ship has changed a few times, and will probably change a few times more. A lot of attention to detail has gone into this ship, the two of you collaborating on everything from the basic shape, to the special features, like the hidden inside chamber.

I’m counting this as your “STEAM” for the day, by the way. (That’s what teachers call Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Mathematics). You are brainstorming, designing, engineering, creating, problem-solving, communicating, wondering, collaborating. Playing. You’re doing all the things you need to do right now.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 25 March Slice of Slice Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

Today, after hiking the mountain and skiing down, Lily and I hopped into the car to go home. As I neared the far end of the parking lot, I punched the gas, and blew a couple donuts in the slick, packed-down snow. I thought it was pretty badass, but you know what?

Lily didn’t even look up from her book she was reading in the backseat of the car.

I guess all this is to say — I think I’m raisin’ you kids right.

Love,

Your mom

PS

I know this is a very short post. It’s been a long day, a long week. I’m doing the best I can, okay?

Dear Kids: Day 24 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

After our school stuff was all finished, Lily and I drove up to the mountain. It snowed a few inches last night, so we were both really excited to skin up and ski the fresh snow. We planned to meet one of her friends from school and his dad, and do the hike together (keeping six feet distance of separation).

Lily and I pulled into the parking lot at Morse, the smaller mountain, and got out of the car. A security truck pulled up next to us. “Hey,” the man driving the truck said, “Nobody’s here, if you want, you can park right up next to the trail.”

So, we hopped back in the car and drove up to the trail. The road wasn’t plowed yet, but my station wagon had no trouble making it up the hill. When we got to the top, I stopped and put the car in reverse to try to straighten it out for parking. But the car wouldn’t move. The wheels were just spinning on ice underneath the fresh snow. We were stuck.

I was laughing, but in my head I had vivid memories of my mom, your grandmother. Your grandma took us skiing in all kinds of weather, no matter what, and our car would often get stuck in the snow or spin on the ice. Your grandmother did NOT laugh when her car was stuck. Instead she would become very angry and strict, and expected us kids to be perfectly silent. I have one memory of her putting her forehead down on the steering wheel and punching the dashboard out of frustration, and scaring the pants off my brother (your uncle) and me sitting in the backseat.

Today, however, I laughed at how ridiculous our situation was. How had my car so easily climbed the hill, but was so completely stuck on top of it? Luckily right at that moment, a snowboarder just happened to be coming down the trail. He gave us a push, we got unstuck pretty easily, and we went back to our original parking spot.

Lily and I hopped out of the car again and started to put on our equipment as if nothing had happened, but the whole time I was remembering my mom punching the dashboard. And I remembered another time when we kids had to get out and push the car ourselves - we couldn’t have been older than Lily is now. And another time when our car spun around and got stuck in a snowbank. And another time when it slid backward into a snowbank on a famously steep road and we had to just sit and wait on a below-zero night, hoping for a snowplow to come along while my mom cried — she never cried and thankfully a plow truck did come along because to this day I think we might very well have frozen to death if it had not.

As Lily and I put our ski boots on, my phone started to buzz. It was Lily’s friend’s dad. They were parked at the big mountain, wondering where we were. Lily had never climbed the big mountain, so I let her decide if we should stay or if we should drive up the road to the big mountain. She chose the big mountain! I was so proud of her.

We drove up to the big mountain, climbed it, skied down it, and the memories of bad car incidents faded away. But, kids, I want you to know that sometimes, what you see me doing and saying on the outside might not always match what I’m thinking and feeling on the inside.

I love you both so much.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 23 March Slice of Lie Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

This afternoon, while your father and I were cooking dinner in the kitchen, the two of you played dress up in the basement. As we cooked up green and red peppers for a stir fry we could hear giggles and screeches downstairs.

Just as the rice timer went off, Lily bounded up the stairs. “Mom, Dad! Come see our performance! I did the costumes and the directing and Jackson is the star,” she said excitedly.

A moment later, with the lights in the basement dimmed, Lily commanded, “Alexa! Resume!” and Taylor Swift’s voice traveled across the room from “Alexa.” Shake it off! Shake it off!

Jackson jumped out from behind a couch, dressed in his pirate Halloween costume, leaping and swinging his arms, dancing to the music. Lily had used face paint to give him a beard and thick eyebrows. Haters gonna hate hate hate…

In a clearly rehearsed move at a certain point in the song, Jackson turned to us, his audience, and ripped off the pirate coat, tossing it aside. Woohoohoo! Under his pirate coat, his sister had used face paint to draw a six pack of abs and chest hair. Lily, Jackson, me, and your dad, we all rolled on the floor with laughter.

Love,

Your Mom

Dear Kids: Day 22 March Slice of Life Story Challenge

My Two Writing Teachers colleagues and I are hosting the 13th Annual March Slice of Life Story Challenge, in which hundreds of teachers participate in posting a story per day.

Dear Kids,

Today was Sunday and it felt really sad not to be skiing. It was sunny and cold today, and there was plenty of snow on the mountain - though it has all turned to ice at this point without any groomers working to maintain the trails. This morning I went to the grocery store first thing in the morning, hoping there would be more things in stock if I got there early. I got everything on my list except for bleach, flour, and cooking oil. (I scored some toilet paper and it made me feel like today was going to be a lucky day). By now it has fully sunken in that our life will be turned upside down for a while now, though your father and I are doing our best to shield you both from the scariest parts of it.

Today was weird. The two of you played all day, I made granola bars, and went for a run outside. That was about it. It passed by in a blink, but also slowly. It felt like we were all waiting for something to happen, though none of us knew what, and then whatever it was never happened anyway.

At bedtime, after I read stories to Jackson, I was so tired I fell asleep right next to him and didn’t wake up for an hour or so. I actually got up out of bed and came downstairs to the kitchen to write this post. I can barely keep my eyes open as I do it.

So I guess what I’m trying to say is, we’re getting through this. One day at a time.

Love,

Your Mom