Wednesday, September 13, 2006

And One More Thing...

Please check out this article to see how my school plans for next year have gone from definite to unlikely.

On one hand, I'm happy not to be stuck in the mess.
On the other hand, I'm sad for my friend who has gone before me, and who is stuck in the middle of everything.

I have some big decisions to make. Maybe this is the sign I need to trade in my quill pen* for a firefighter's hat.


*Note: Let's be honest, I'm really not good enough to even have a quill pen. I couldn't let that lie continue.

Writing Cojones

Every year (for a whole three years now), I make my students read an essay by Gail Godwin called “The Watcher at the Gates” from our first year reader - On Writing: A Process Reader. It’s one of several that I secretly subtitle: “Writers’ Neuroses Unveiled!”

In the essay, Godwin talks about our brutal inner critic who hinders us by providing a running commentary on our writing. I told my students that it’s my conservative grandparents who clucked at my pierced ears. When it comes to this blog, my students are my watchers. Some of my best stories, I’m terrified to tell. I already feel too vulnerable after facebook and myspace. They know too much. The healthy distance between teacher and student that I’d like to imagine exists is even more tenuous now.

I could probably also group my co-workers in this category. My work stories can’t show up here. When I think about telling a story, I mentally trace a path from the people in the story to my blog (the guy at work who is on facebook, which lists my blog, and so on…) Church people either. I can talk about close friends and family who wouldn’t mind showing up in my blog, but those aren’t really my best stories. I have a friend who was outed to her office by a nosy, googling co-worker. I’m a little traumatized by her experience.

So, dear reader, it is not that I don’t have any stories to tell; it’s that I’m still neurotic about hurting people’s feelings. Maybe I’m still too raw from my own wounds. But I am so careful, that my stories all have safety hedges of ambiguity. That doesn’t make for good story-telling.

For example – I have fabulous stories from my two half-summers working on the sailboat in Chicago [see above], but we are still good friends with the owners. My stories aren’t scathing or offensive; they contain a mix of good and bad. I’m scared to write the bad, so the stories remain unwritten until I one day forget them.

Here I sit, sans tell-able stories. Maybe it’s time to take some of the advice I give my students. Maybe it’s time to grow some story-telling cojones while I dance the line between the truth and full-disclosure.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Spite and Sundance

I love back-to-school. Everywhere I look are ads of clean-cut kids (ages 10-22) in their empty backpacks and most fall-iest colors. Except this year is a scary fashion twilight zone. In elementary school, I had three pairs of knit leggings. My favorite pair was white with lace trim. My legs were nicer then, and the oversized t-shirts were perfect to hide my increasingly self-conscious body. (The shoulder pads also completed the broad-shouldered chic.)

Leggings are back. When I first saw them in NYC, I thought there was just a disproportionate number of dance students roaming the streets. I don’t know if I can go back. I just can't believe that big on top, skinny on the bottom is really a fashion philosophy right now.

Outside of a gym, that much fabric should never cling that closely to anyone’s body. This is boring, but I’m responding to my roommate’s “constructive criticism” to post a new blog. Nothing is going on here. I’m all moved in, pictures are on the wall, and I’m down to two small bags of miscellaneous articles.

I’m in my second week of teaching. Somehow, I’ve always avoided teaching more than one class by working as a tutor or as a mentor. This semester, I am a non-waiver teaching assistant teaching two classes. If I had actually finished my thesis, I could be an ad junct making more money. Instead, I have to pay for the one hour of thesis I’m taking to keep my student status. And - the big blow - they took away my desk in an office. At the beginning of the semester, I verified that I was supposed to stay in that office. “No problem!” is what I was told. One week later, the line I got was that, “Since you’re not a teaching assistant and there aren’t enough seats for the other assistants.” Oh, but if it talks like a teaching assistant, walks like a teaching assistant, and gets paid like a teaching assistant and is required to hold office hours...then it deserves a desk in the Williams building.

Instead, I’ve scrounged up a desk in Dodd Hall Basement. I’m not above being in the Basement; I have many memories from my days there. It’s dirty, covered in pseudo-intellectual grad student graffiti, and floods occasionally. At least four different departments house all of their grad students in the Basement, making it the worst place on campus for holding student conferences or catching up on my own work. It reeks from the constant intellectual pissing contests. All of the romantic appeal - the grittiness - of the Basement disappeared after the first year.

And I actually used my office more than most. I had a regular buffet of quick-fix meals that I offered to other grad students. I sometimes spent more hours in my office in one week than people spent in theirs for an entire semester. I’ve already passed out my course policies guide with my office hours and location. I almost walked my students down on the first day. Now I have to tell them that I no longer have that office.

Returning to the Basement is especially humbling. In my small life, it’s ugly pride at its worst. In the grand scheme of things, this is nothing. I’m a little ashamed of my self-indulgent rant.


Really, it comes down to feeling a lack of validation. I thought that they were in need of instructors and that I was actually helping meet a need (and I needed the money). Now, I feel like I’m a burden, like I’m unwanted here. On top of that, they didn’t process my paperwork quickly enough and I don’t get paid for another two weeks. [Insert Debbie Downer “wah-waaaaaaah” here.]

On the bright side, I like my students. I spent an entire weekend planning my semester. I’ve vetoed all of the touchy-feely “tell me about your feelings” papers. I didn’t want to hear all about how someone’s high school prom showed them how they could be successful in life, blah-blah-blah. Critical cultural studies instead. In both of my classes, I can already guess which students will work the hardest, talk the most, or actually take my teaching to heart. I’m balancing the theoretical reading with the practical reading, and giving reading quizzes that invite discussion and ensure that they have read. And, these students are fun. Their energy is invigorating.

Other signs of aging - I bought a new computer, and I signed up for health insurance. I feel so big. After at least forty hours of research, and several designed-but-unbought additions to my virtual shopping cart, I bought the computer. She’s a sleek and sexy beaut. And when I start an application, I don’t have time to get a drink or take a shower while I wait for it to process. The old one was loud, hot, and hasn’t been the same since I launched it across the room in my sleep one night. This one has more power and features than I know how to handle. The only thing it lacks is MS Word, which means my thesis continues to be on hold while I work through my TO DO list. (READ: Watch all of Season 3 of Arrested Development.)

In other news, I will be making my directorial debut this fall in a documentary called “FCAT Packaging Instructions.” I got the job by default (I was the sucker who didn’t attend the meeting), and I have been dragging my feet the entire way. When it was announced to the entire Assessment team that I was in charge of the video, I realized it was time to put my bad taste and sense of humor to good use. Meet F.Cat. I’m thinking something very Conan O’Brien with the still picture and a moving mouth. Maybe a long furry arm can be used to point to the graphics throughout the video. I have one week to pull it together. And I have to make it simple enough that it will get approved. What is the line between amusing and disrespectful? How close can I get? Why are they letting the least technologically-able person do this? I think it’s age-discrimination. And it’s hard to do an image search at work when Google: Images is a forbidden site.

Now, my work beckons. Next stop – Sundance. (My delusions allow me to face the new day.)