The Rise and Fall of Me – part 5 of 8(?)

November 19, 2012

To review the end of part 4, I finished my first year teaching without really having a clue of what I was doing.  The second year didn’t get any better.

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The Freehold Regional District was a total of five high schools, no elementary schools.  Manalapan, Marlboro, Howell, Freehold Township, and Freehold Borough were the five high schools in five towns, each town having their own, separate elementary school system.  Within the five high schools, teachers were regularly shifted around without having any say in the matter.  After my first year in Freehold Borough, I was moved over to Howell, an upper-middle class town with a world-class golf course within walking distance.  Teachers often ran out of the building at the end of the day, grabbed their golf clubs from the trunks of cars, and headed over to squeeze in as many holes as possible before dark.  I was moved without an explanation, but it didn’t matter though because I was happy to be employed.  Many years later I learned about an unwritten practice called “Pass the Lemon,” in which schools will move problem teachers to other places so as not to have to deal with them for more than a year.  It happens with principals too, but in this case it likely could have been the reason for my move.  Regardless of the reasons, I was happy about it because I was working with a much more user-friendly staff and made a few good friends but also a couple of enemies. 

First and foremost was Bob Wheeler, a very happy, round, premature-gray haired guy who could talk about movies for hours, and we did.  Since I was thin and balding and he was round and  gray, we were usually referred to as “Siskel and Ebert.”  It was business as usual for a teacher to get up and leave the faculty room, roll his or her eyes, and mutter, “Siskel and Ebert are at it again.”  We argued and debated many films but also agreed on one very important thing:  seeing a bad movie was better than no movie at all.  We both taught English, so we spent a lot of time together and, I think, we even shared a classroom.  Bob influenced where I bought my first home, in Lakewood, NJ.

Someone who did not admire Bob was a social studies teacher, Frank Sninski.  Frank didn’t like Bob for one very important reason.  They were both Vietnam Veterans but with very different approaches.  Frank spoke often about his war experience, even bragging about the number of enemy soldiers he killed.  Bob did not kill anyone, at least not that he was aware of.  Bob was so against violence that he did not hesitate to tell how he often shot at cocoanuts in the trees instead of where the enemy was hiding.  He said he would only shoot at a person if that person were openly charging at him.  Frank felt that Bob’s attitude might have cost some Americans their lives, and he’s likely correct, but it wasn’t for me to decide.  Frank was rather sadistic at times.  He wore a very large college ring and would occasionally turn the ring so the stone was on the inside of his hand.  Then he’d stroll around the room and pat kids on the head with a little extra strength and an audible “knock” on the skull.  Frank didn’t like Bob and didn’t like me either, probably because I was friends with Bob.  Frank was obsessed with the JFK assassination.  Every year around mid-November he’d facilitate an assembly in the auditorium during which he’d show – frame by frame – the Zapruder film on a large screen and explain the details of what happened, according to the Warren Commission.  Frank held to the theory that it was an inside job and not the work of one wanna-be Communist.  I tend to agree with him, but that’s not important.

Aside from teachers, there were three notable students from my second year of teaching, two of whom I can remember names, but I’ll start with the boy whose name escapes me.  I noticed in his creative writing that he spent an unusual amount of time describing females.  He used many words to detail their physical appearance as well as their clothing, and I had to remind him to get to the story and spend less time on the visuals.  It didn’t appear important at all – until the day it mattered – that he sat right behind the one high school cheerleader in class.  She was the stereotypical pretty, blonde, and dumb cheerleader, which we all know only exists in movies and TV, right?  One random day I was lecturing a sophomore class about The Scarlet Letter when I noticed the boy behind the cheerleader.  He had loose-fitting sweatpants on, and he had his hand in his pants, and he was masturbating.  I can’t imagine my first thought, but my second thought was to keep everyone’s attention on me.  He was in the back left corner of the room, so I moved to the front right corner.  I let my voice grow a little louder and got a little demonstrative.  Instead of having the kids take turns reading, I started reading aloud and made efforts to act out what was happening in the story.  I know I looked silly, and the boy looked sillier, but the last thing I wanted was for others to see him.  If they did, and if they freaked out, it would have scarred this kid for life.  He’d be talked about and ridiculed to no end.  I don’t know if he deserved it, but I just knew that I had seen something like it before, and I didn’t want history to repeat.  In one of my earlier entries I mentioned a kid who was falsely accused of masturbating in school, and it totally changed the course of his life, so I thought about that and kept all eyes and ears on my until finally the whacking boy reached orgasm and collapsed on the desk in exhaustion.  Kids turned around and looked at him, not realizing what had prefaced the collapse, and they asked him if he was okay.  He looked at me.  “Can I use the restroom?”  I wanted to say, “You should’ve thought about that ten minutes ago,” but of course I just sent him out.  Later that day I told his guidance counselor and never heard another word about it.

Another student, also sophomore, was a wide-eyed, innocent kid named Ricky.  He liked to work on cars and tried hard to make friends, but he only did well with cars.  He didn’t have great grades and often missed his homework, but he was a good, genuine nice kid.  People made fun of him sometimes because his eyes always seemed to be popping out of his head.  Ricky tried hard enough to make friends that he’d do almost anything anyone asked.  Later that year he went to what was probably his first party, and popular at the time was something called “huffing,” when you’d fill a bag with gas from something like a whipped cream can or spray paint can, inhale it, and basically get a dizzy and temporary high.  If you inhaled too deeply, it could stop your vital functions.  That’s what Ricky did while just trying to fit in.  He passed out, and other kids just thought it was a case of a lightweight who couldn’t pace himself.  They figured he’d wake up eventually, and they just stepped over him and pushed him to a corner, not realizing he was dead.  Obviously, that’s the worst part, but what fueled me further was the reaction in school.

It’s common for schools to bring in grief counselors when a student passes away or suffers something traumatic.  After Ricky’s death, kids were visibly upset and crying in school, seeking to leave class and meet with these counselors, but it was all phony.  These kids just wanted to get out of class and get a little attention for themselves.  Not uncommon are copycat deaths, in which other kids see how much attention the deceased is getting, and their own instability drives them to commit suicide even though they’re not around to actually get the sympathy.  That didn’t happen, but what did happen was me yelling at students for their bullshit act.  I told a room full of kids that absolutely none of them, not one of them even knew Ricky’s address or even his birthday.  I told them they were all just little shits who wanted to gain a little attention from Ricky’s death and that if any of them even cared one ounce about him, they’d have stopped him from huffing because they would have known the boy probably never drank a beer in his life until the night he died.  Then I challenged them to go ahead and be one of those copycat kids, to go kill themselves, find Ricky on the other side, and go apologize to him.

The last student is probably the most regrettable moment of my 25 years in the classroom.  It was the last day before our Spring Break.  I often talked about what was happening in the news during class but not with essays, just with friendly discussions.  There was a murder case in New York in which a teenage girl was invited into the neighboring home of two or three boys.  They attempted to rape her, but instead they killed her when she put up too much of a fight.  They hid her body in their basement while authorities and volunteers searched the area for a few days, only to eventually find the body.  Although the boys denied any involvement, they later confessed.  So, just before Spring Break, I talked about that case and begged the students, especially the girls, to be careful during their week off.  During that week off, concert tickets went on sale for the band Bon Jovi, which was just becoming one of the most popular acts in the world, never mind the country.  In the local news was a story about a girl who was waiting overnight to buy tickets when they went on sale in the morning.  In the middle of the night, a guy shows up and tells some kids that he has tickets already, bought them in Pennsylvania where the rules are different and the tickets had been on sale the previous day.  All anyone had to do was walk over to his car and he’d sell them the tickets.  A girl waiting was naïve enough to believe him and followed him, only to be raped at knifepoint.  Beyond sad, but I made it worse.

The following Monday, after the break, I stood in front of the class and lectured them again, asking if they’d seen the story and shooting my mouth off.  “Didn’t you hear what I said last week?  Didn’t I tell you to be careful where you go and who you go with?  Look at this story about this poor girl and what happened to her.  Blah blah blah,” and on I went, all the while semi-noticing one girl with her head down.  I figured she was tired, partied too much during the break.  After class, she got up and left like most other kids, except one girl who stayed behind and looked at me confused.  “Didn’t you know?” she asked.  “Know what?”  “Didn’t you see Jen with her head down the whole time you were talking?  She was the girl who was raped.”  I don’t think I ever felt more stupid, not before or since, as I did at that moment.  Of all the things I’ve ever done that I wish I could take back, that’s likely at the top of the list.

Probably the only bright spot, aside from the friendship with Mr. Wheeler, was a trend that began and lasted to this day.  I noticed that there were certain kids who occasionally would come to my room after school, at lunch, or at random times during the day just to sit in my room, talk, or do nothing.  The troubled kids, the ones who were often in detention or cutting class would want to bring their situations to me for my opinion or just a sympathetic ear.  For some reason the bad kids looked at me as someone who could help or at least just listen.  It likely started when I overheard a conversation one day about hockey.  When I threw in my two cents, they were surprised to find out that a teacher knew anything about their sport.  When I told them I had been playing since I was about 10-years old, they were impressed and asked me if I could help organize a school hockey team.   That wasn’t possible, but a club could easily be done.  Not ice hockey as that was too expensive, just street hockey, sometimes called ball hockey.  We had an unofficial school team and played pick-up games a couple of afternoons a week, nothing official, but a bunch of kids staying out of trouble after school.  After the games, we’d hang around and just talk about anything, and it was the only bright spot I had felt.  They weren’t bad kids, they just needed direction, something to do, a focus or purpose.  Nobody paid attention to them.  I didn’t realize back then, but it was a clue to what

was going wrong with education.  Schools were focusing on information and tests instead of focusing on kids.  They seemed to forget that kids were people, not just names in a gradebook.

The plan was to expand the school hockey team and get a teacher in the other four schools in the district to organize a team, and then we could have a five-team high school hockey league.  I would have coached the Howell team, and I say “would have” because at the end of that year I was transferred back to Freehold, and I bet that’s not a surprise.

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Up next – the part when I get fired.  Nobody dies, but someone gets slapped.


The Case for Legalizing Marijuana

November 10, 2012

reposted in honor of the voters of Washington and Colorado

and also because you probably never read it

I spend a lot of time in an area of New Jersey in which hope, health, and happiness are low but drugs, hurt, and crime are high.  This has brought me to a conclusion that will not be greatly popular and doesn’t break any new ground; however, it must be said.  We must rethink some of the things that are illegal and consider making them legal.

I understand why most drugs are illegal.  I’ve never taken anything that I’ll admit to, but I am intrigued by the fun that people claim to have from using drugs.  I don’t have a great memory, nor do many drug users.  Thus, I often wish I had taken drugs so that at least I would have had the fun that everyone else had while still suffering the residual effects.  I knew a group of psychologists from the University of Pennsylvania who would gather about once a month for “research.”  About five of them would take one of the drugs on their checklist while another few would observe.  Those who were “off” that month would take notes, bolt the door, and strictly follow their policy of “what happens in research, stays in research.”

I understand why alcohol is restricted.  However, I remember a commercial from a Spanish television channel that I would watch when I was a kid.  There was a guy pushing what looked like an ice cream cart through a park.  He had a white suit, kind of looked like Leon Redbone, but instead of ice cream he handed out cans of “Schaeffer Malta” to a bunch of kids.  They were singing and dancing around the cart and having a damn good time.  Still, it’s kind of scary to think of kids walking into a 7-11 and sucking down a six pack as easily as they now finish off cans of Red Bull.  Although beer is much healthier than soda or those energy drinks, it still brings along that drunk thing.

The discussion I want to hear more about is the legalization of marijuana.  I’m not saying that the arguments for legalization or either solid or valid, but I am saying that they’re worth listening to and I can understand them.  I also understand long division, but that doesn’t mean I want to do it.

When it’s time to make controversial and significant change, four things must be weighed:  1. what are the detriments?  2. What are the benefits?  3. Do the benefits outweigh the detriments?  4. When is the next Springsteen album coming out?

Detriments:

  1. A mind altering substance becomes legal.  Does it alter one’s mind any more than alcohol?
  2. It is a substance that may have poisonous chemical additives due to uncontrolled production.  Are the chemicals added to marijuana any worse than the 43 poisons added to cigarettes?
  3. We are admitting failure by legalizing something that we’ve spent so much time and money fighting against.  I’m sure similar things have happened, like the rhetoric that was heard regarding casino gambling, prohibition, and our dependency on foreign oil.
  4. More people will have access to it, thus more people will use it.  As it stands now, anyone who wants marijuana seems to be able to get it without much trouble.  Prohibition didn’t decrease the number of users, but it gave them a cool place to hang out – but only if they knew the password.

Benefits:

  1. Legalizing marijuana will remove the criminal element.  By removing the criminal element, we will take the pressure off our already overcrowded penal system.  We will stop the violence that surrounds the transportation and commerce of marijuana.  Thousands of lives will be saved from the murders involving drug dealers, gangs, and the War on Drugs.  Thousands of people who make a living through selling drugs will be forced out of work but unable to drain our unemployment system.  We will deflate the image of the wealthy, urban drug dealer that is unfortunately greatly celebrated and admired in music and videos.  Many kids drop out of school because they can make a great deal of money working for drug dealers instead of Dunkin’ Donuts.  I don’t see too many rap songs coming out about middle-aged factory workers boxing up a shipment of state-grown marijuana.
  2. Legalizing marijuana will help the economy.  In the next ten years we’re either going to make cigarettes illegal or kick North Carolina out of the country.  That includes Duke Basketball.  However, there’s a way to save it.  Cigarettes are a major part of the economies of both the 12th state but all 50, plus Puerto Rico and DC, not necessarily in that order.  Philip Morris can now be called Philip Marijuana.  Let them grow, package, and sell it.  The tax income will be incredible, not to mention how much it will piss off a few South American countries that hate us.  We can even unionize it.  How cool would it be to join the Local 420 Friendly?  It will save jobs and money, but they’ll need a new state flag.
  3. It will decrease the number of Americans living in poverty.  This one is iffy.  Once marijuana is legal, the price will greatly decrease.  Now those who sit home, wasting 80% of their paycheck going up in smoke, will now have some money left when the “munchies” start creeping in.
  4. Decriminalization means control by the Food and Drug Administration.  This will greatly reduce the random people dropping dead because nobody knows what bathtub-mixed additives were laced into this week’s batch.

 

The biggest drawback I can see to legalization would be the concern for people driving while under the influence.  However, when you factor in the likely decrease of incidents involving aggressive driving and road rage, then it might be a wash.

-30-


The Rise and Fall of Me – Part 2 of 3 (or 4)

October 17, 2012
 
Inspired by true events that were based on something that may or may not have happened.

______________________

The Rise and Fall of Me – Part 2:

Deliver Drugs or Go Back to College?

To review the end of part 1, I had just gotten kicked out of college.

________________________________

One of the disadvantages I had while going to college was that I didn’t have a lot of time to study because I had to work a part-time job when I wasn’t in class.  That doesn’t mean that I devoted all other time to school, not a chance, but juggling college and working wasn’t easy.  I was not born in a wealthy family that covered my tuition like a certain female who I will not name but will refer to later.  In fact, my college tuition was paid by breaking the law.  Seriously.  College students could earn government grants for tuition based on two criteria:  1. You had very good grades in high school and 2. You had a great financial need.  I had good grades, but even THAT took deception, but not cheating.  Guess I’ll have to tell that story.  At this rate, all these side stories are really going to turn readers off.  Ok, here goes.

I was “Most Likely to Succeed” in 8th grade.  Yeah, that’s worth about as much as winning an award for urinating.  In high school, I was too distracted by sports and not (but trying) having sex.  Well, there was this one time when something sort of happened, but it was just wrong.  Halfway through high school, my guidance counselor noticed something – I sucked at school.  She called my mother and said, “We thought your son was smart.  WTF?”  Maybe my mother said that second part, not sure.  My guidance counselor came up with her one good idea in her 88 years of counseling.  I had a decently high IQ.  Well, high for me.  135.  My guidance counselor told my mother that I should be doing much better, to which my mother probably said, “No shit.”  They had a problem to solve, and part of the problem was that I was too busy playing with my pencil, but not the one that you sharpen.  Please don’t try.

You’re not supposed to know your IQ until you’re either 18 or have already graduated high school because they fear that knowing your score will affect you.  A kid with a high score might say, “Ha, I’m smart.  I don’t need to study.  And the rest of you are stupid.”  Or, if a kid has a low score, he might say, “I’m stupid.  Why should I even try?”  So they took a chance on telling me my score with the hope that it would inspire me to do better.  It worked.  I felt like an idiot for wasting my potential ability.  Of course, this opens up two possibilities.  First, that everyone else reading this is laughing because their scores are so much higher.  Second, that my guidance counselor is laughing because she inflated my score just to make me think I was smart.  Regardless, it worked, and my grades excelled from that point on.

So, the first criteria for college grant money was solved – good grades.  The second one was having financial need.  This is the law-breaking story.  Remember that cousin with whom I wanted to run the automotive garage?  Meet my new brother.  In order for my father to show greater financial need, he started including my cousin as my brother on the application so as to create a bigger family with greater financial need.  Also, this cousin who was now my brother, was also now going to college too, thus creating more financial need.  No, he wasn’t in college, but this was pre-internet days when it would have taken too much work to check these things out.  With better grades and poorer finances, I was not only given grant money for college but I qualified for so much extra that I actually earned about $500 a semester in extra money beyond tuition.  The leftover money arrived in a personal check at the end of each semester, which was perfect timing to pay for Christmas shopping and car insurance.  Your tax dollars at work.

In case you haven’t determined it already, I was one of those teachers who was great at getting off the subject and talking for a half hour.  Where was I?  Oh yeah, explaining that I got kicked out of college even though I really didn’t belong there in the first place because my father lied in order to get more tuition, and then explaining that I had to work many hours outside of school so I didn’t have time to study, even if I were going to study in the first place.  Then, I got kicked out so it didn’t matter.  Okay, pick it up from where I had just gotten kicked out of school.  Three, two, one – action!

The bright spot about having worked so much during college was that I had a lot of money saved up, and my sister had a house at the beach for the summer.  She and her friends would come down on weekends, and they allowed me to stay there all week to keep an eye on the place.  I was at the beach about five days a week from early June to late August.  By the way, the beach town I was in was the same town in which they taped that Jersey Shore show.  It was just as trashy back then, only the whole world didn’t know about it.   The automatic teller machine (ATM) had just been invented, so I didn’t even have to drive the 90 miles back home from the beach when I needed to replenish my wallet.  I just ate cheaply, I wasn’t a drinker, and I had learned to be frugal from a guy whose hobbies included switching price stickers in the grocery store.  If you’re counting at home, that’s only two times that I’ve incriminated my father for theft and deception.

Here’s to the summer of ’81.

On one of those summer days I was strolling the boardwalk with a few friends when I passed a wheel (those big spinny things where you place money and win something if the wheel points at your number) at which they sold towels.  More important than the towels was the hot blonde working there.  She looked like Suzanne Somers from before she was selling videos about bed wetting.   I was 19 and she was 16.  You do the math.  We had dinner, which was really greasy boardwalk cheeseburgers and pizza, and we went back to her apartment.  I was still a virgin going in – and I still was on the way out.  Don’t want there to be any false suspense.  I thought it was odd that a 16-year old girl had her own apartment in a beach town and a job on the boardwalk.  Turns out she was supposed to be sharing that apartment with her 19-year old sister, but she was never around.  The 16-year old was very mature for her age.  We started hanging out together all summer and stayed friends into the fall.  She’d invite me to her parents house on occasional weekends because, if you remember, I had to get out of my sister’s beach house to make room for her friends.  Also, I didn’t have a car, only a motorcycle.  If I had a car, I could’ve easily slept inside it for a weekend.  Hard to balance on a bike while asleep.  Long story short – we were dating by October of ’81.  We were married by July of ’88.  Divorced by January of 2000 with two kids to show for it.  I’m good with that.

Of all the complaints you might have read about my ex-wife, I must give her credit for one thing.  I told her that I had been kicked out of college.  She said she wasn’t going to date someone who wasn’t working towards a college degree, so she told me that either I went back to school or we went separate ways.  Pretty ballsy for a 16-year old who smoked a lot of pot and occasionally tried cocaine, but it worked.

I spent the next year delivering drugs.  No, not for a drug dealer but for a legitimate pharmacy.  My day included taking boxes off a truck, opening boxes, taking stuff out of boxes, putting stuff on shelves, putting extra stuff that won’t fit on the shelves behind little doors beneath the shelves, driving to people’s houses with their prescriptions, waiting 20 minutes for them to make it down the stairs because they were mostly senior citizens, returning with money, and figuring out excuses to call out sick.  Between that and the future ex-wife who told me that no college = no her, I was determined to return to school.  I kept sharp by helping her with research papers and other writing assignments because she was in her senior year of high school.  I got an A on a paper about slavery.  I was proud, but she thought I could have done better.

The year away from college and working full time had ended, and the application to return to college was simple:  write an essay explaining why they should let me back in.  Piece of cake for me because, just before I was shown the door, I learned that I could write stuff better than I could draw stuff.  My essay explained all that I’ve told you, except the part about the future ex-wife.  Or the beach.  I explained how I didn’t really know what I wanted to study, so I took various classes without really applying myself.  I explained about the writing class just before higher education and I parted ways, and I explained how the B earned in that class was notably better than all the other classes and that I was just finding my place in the sun when they turned on the rain.  I explained how I didn’t have a course of study at first, but I was well on my way to improving because I know knew that I could write stuff.  They bought it, so I guess I was right – I could write stuff.

Upon my return, I focused on two areas of study:  theater and writing.  Other than my kids and a few women from out of state who know me by a different name, nobody would know that I’m a brilliant actor.  I excelled at improvisation as well as screenwriting and poetry.  I also did very well in science classes, even the ones I cheated in.  C’mon, really, like you’ve never cheated in a class before?  Oh, okay.  Sorry.  I only cheated in two classes – Anthropology and Physics, but the cheating in Physics doesn’t really count.  If you’re smart enough to know how to apply the proper math so that you could figure out what was going to happen when the weight dropped and the pendulum swung to its furthest point, you didn’t have to actually do the dropping and swinging.  It wasn’t cheating, it was “preparatory information gathering,” and it allowed me more time to write stuff.  Anthropology – that was actual cheating.  I used a thin pencil to lightly write notes on the desk, keep them covered with the exam paper, and then wipe them away with a sweaty palm when I was finished.  I knew that Professor Choi would never notice because he never got out of his desk, and the surgical mask he constantly wore was probably making it hard for him to see anyway.

(stock photo of Asians doing math)

One class I never cheated in was Logic.  It is the only class in which I never made one mistake the entire semester.  I got every problem we ever did correct.  Every homework assignment, everything.  Logic is a lot like algebra, and I was always very good at math.  Ask Becca.  I’m her official mathematician.  The class was Tuesdays and Thursdays, and one particular Thursday the professor put a problem on the board that he’d been trying to solve for three years and asked us to give it a shot over the weekend.  If you recall, I had a motorcycle, and it was winter, so I had to take a bus to school when the weather was bad, and usually that meant I was late.  The following Tuesday I finished the problem on the bus en route the college.  I was late, running across campus to class to find the professor at the board working on the problem.  He could tell I had something going on because I pushed him aside and erased his feeble work, then I produced the solution.  I was starting to feel like a real student, like I actually knew things and could prove it.  Also, I pushed a teacher, and I liked it.

In my first year back I had two A’s, five B’s, one C, and one F.  That was in a film class in which I kept falling asleep from working until about 9 at night.  In my second year back, I had three A’s, three B’s, and three C’s.  I could have done better, but I thought it was more symmetrical to get three groups of three.  One of those A’s was rather interesting though.

To complete my Literature degree, there were required classes that I had to retake because I had failed them the first time.  On the first day of one particular literature class, I walked in and saw a teacher who seemed familiar.  I was back in the classroom of the Stay Puff Marshmallow woman for a second try at the course called Methods of Critical Analysis.  It was one of the most important classes I ever had because it taught me how to examine literature and poetry and really find what the writer was doing, why he or she was doing it, and also how to teach writing and poetry to others.  If not for that class, I wouldn’t enjoy short stories as much as I do now.  On the last day of class, after we had a final conference and I learned I was getting an A, I told the professor that this was my second attempt at her class and that I had failed it previously.  She said, “Impossible.  There’s no way that the same brain can both fail and also get an A in, this class.”  I sheepishly told her that the F was not so much from failing but from failing to try.  I was pleased that she neither hated me nor remembered me.  It is the only textbook that I still have from college, and I have used it quite often during my own teaching career.

You might have noticed a lot of C’s in my list of grades when I should have had the motivation and intelligence to do much better.  The problem is that I had discovered writing and it was all I wanted to do, so I spent a lot of time working on my own writing while in other classes like the afore-mentioned anthropology and physics.  And remember Dr. Cioffari, the writing teacher?  I was lucky enough that there was an Advanced Creative Writing class coming up, and that was where things really clicked.  His writing class the second time was like hitting fourth gear while going downhill.  I had never gotten praise for anything before the way it came in that class.  It was much like what I hear today on the Friday Fictioneers thing.  Please keep in mind that in my head, I was still a stupid redheaded, freckle-face kid just trying to stay out of the way.  Instead, I had people asking me when the next chapter or short story was going to be finished.  I was also writing for the school newspaper, covering the hockey team as well as occasional editorial contributions.  I wrote a well-praised piece about professors who barely spoke English and how the language barrier affected students’ grades.  I also wrote for and eventually edited the college literary magazine as well as won an election for student government to represent the humanities department.  Add to that, I won a poetry award that was presented at a fabulous gala that honored students from all departments.  It was the most interesting thing that had ever happened, I was about to graduate, and I was flying pretty high.

That year was my best with six A’s and four B’s.  The grades were about the best I could possibly ask for, but karma was about to kick me in the balls.


serena williams vs. barry bonds

January 30, 2010

hmmm…

 


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