Those Amazing Teachable Moments

//www.starbeck.com/images/as_131_smile_mask.jpgIf someone had asked me why I wanted to teach high school students or to teach English, they would not hear me speak about my excitement over creating grammar trees or analyzing the conflict in the plot of a story or determining whether or not Hamlet is insane. I wanted and still want to teach high school students through literature and writing because I want to make a difference in their lives.  Literature and writing was the only avenue that allowed me to get in touch with my emotions in high school and college. High school is a terribly confusing time for most teenagers and many of them, I myself was one of them, couldn’t find solace at home. How much I would have loved to hear from someone willing to talk about the struggles of being a teenager and how they got through it. Someone who truly understood what I was going through and willing to admit some of the things they learned. Someone who could be a good example to me.

Of course, I have long stretches of time in my classes where all I do end up teaching them is how to analyze a character and how to determine whether a word is an adjective or an adverb, but every once in a while, I am blessed with an opportunity to teach my teenagers about life. Sometimes it may be through the theme of a story that everyone is into and I can hear their silence…but a different kind. A silence that screams thought and contemplation instead of boredom or apathy. But even better are those moments before, during, or after school, when I can teach them about something that is affecting them right now.

I had that moment today.

We just finished a unit on Poetry. I love poetry and I loved poetry in high school. But one thing I remember from poetry in high school is that I learned more from the poems that connected to my life than the poems that Walt Whitman or Emily Dickinson ever wrote about. Browsing through the curriculum that I was to teach this year, I couldn’t help but notice how quickly we would rush through poetry without ever having students learn how to apply it to their own writing or to have them share poems that make them think or feel something. So I made some adjustments. I required each one of my students to either bring in a poem that they wrote or a poem that someone else wrote, but that they liked. Everyday, someone would read their poem and we would talk about it before jumping into the day’s lesson. I even told them that I wanted this poetry unit to be meaningful to them. And as we studied poetry, I often asked them to think about how they could write poetry using some of the figurative language or techniques that the poets of our curriculum used. I saw many amateur poets excitedly practicing their skills on their college-ruled lined paper that they folded and stuffed into pockets or passed on to friends in the halls.

Today one of my students brought in a poem that she wrote. It was a free-verse confessional poem about the masks she wears and her desperation to be liberated from the lies she lies behind. She started to cry while reading it and the entire class was screaming the silence of complete understanding. We all gave her a big group hug and when I heard students whispering to each other about how they felt the sameway  and when I saw tears well up in a few empathetic audience members, I knew I had to set aside my lesson for the moment and use this opportunity to teach them something.

I asked them to raise their hand if they felt the way she did. Every single hand went up. Twenty hands from twenty 14-year-olds of every color and social group and intelligence level. Twenty teenagers who thought that no one understood them, but learned right there that they had more in common then they thought. For half an hour we talked about the masks we wear in high school. About how tough it is when we don’t know who we are. I shared with them how much I had felt the same way when I was a freshman. And then I felt called to take it to a deeper level and bring up how so many teenagers turn to drugs to find comfort in their confusion and how this just fuels the vicious cycle of not being self-actualized. I explained to them that what they are feeling is normal– about the development of their frontal lobe and what areas of our thinking and acting that it influences. Also coincidentally, the very same part of the brain that drugs destroy, slowing its development or preventing it from ever developing at all until they find themselves at the age of 35 and realizing they are at the emotional level of a 14-year-old and wonder if it is too late to ever figure life out. Students asked a lot of questions. Questions about alcohol and marijuana. About where to draw the line.  About what to do about “friends” who are abusing drugs. I had one student ask me what she could do to help herself not feel so lost and confused. She finally realized she was normal, but still wanted hope. I gave them both secular and spiritual advice. I told her and the rest of the class to write, to exercise, to stay active, to do more of the things that help them release emotions and energy. I told them to associate themselves with people who love and respect them no matter who they are, be it family or close, true friends. And I told them, that for me, Jesus has made a difference. I made sure to say “for me” so that I couldn’t be accused of telling them they HAD to develop a personal relationship with their creator even though I wanted to so bad. This is definitely one of the downsides of working in public education and I’m not sure if I will have a job tomorrow. But the atmosphere of the class had gotten so personal at that moment, I think it will stay indoors. If not, I have faith that I will be okay.

It was hard to change the subject to our analytical essays afterward, but we all made the transition. I told them that they could come and talk to me anytime they wanted and that I would listen and not judge them and to do my best to share my wisdom. I told them that our class was a family and I watched their heads nod in agreement. It was a powerful moment.

In the end, it really doesn’t matter if these kids walk away from my class knowing the difference between a simile and a metaphor. But if they walk our of my door knowing that they are not alone and there is light at the end of the dark tunnel of adolescence without masks or drugs or suicide, then to me, I have made a difference. I hope they all sleep a little better tonight. And maybe try writing another poem again soon.

Erica: a tale of best friends, childhood, and loss of innocence

 Some of you have read this memoir I wrote some time ago. I had yet to put it on here because it is a bit graphic and I was apprehensive at having family and friends read such things when they have not perhaps experienced that sort of honesty from me. Yet I was reading it today and I think it needs to be shared. I’m hoping we can all gain something from my experience. And if any of us have young daughters, I hope that we are good to them and also teach them to cherish their childhood and enjoy it because we will become woman very quickly. And once there, we can never go back. BUT DON’T READ THIS IF YOU FEEL UNCOMFORTABLE ABOUT READING GRAPHIC DESCRIPTIONS OF PUBERTY AND OTHER SEXUALLY EXPLICIT DESCRIPTIONS!

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She was my best friend from third grade through sixth. I wanted to be her because she had nicer clothes and fewer rules to abide by. She got to stay up until 10:30 on school nights when I had to go to bed at 8. She got to watch rated R movies and I was limited to PG. She started puberty before me.

I remember how jealous I felt standing in the girls restroom at Preston Elementary School, Erica lifting her salmon-colored sweater, exposing her turquoise training bra with two swollen nipples pushing out against the surface of the cotton material, pointing at me as if I were the only one who hadn’t yet started to change.

That was in the 4th grade.

I remember going to her house and watching her talk on the phone with Licelle Rios or Colin Nelson, the two boys of whom I had crushes. She told me how they liked her because of her butt and I turned, twisting myself around to look at the small round curve of my own, and wishing that it would do the same; then looking back up and  saw her dad lurking around her door way. He carried a heavy presence. And even though he was nice to me, I somehow felt nervous around him. He was always making sure Erica was doing what she was supposed to, making sure she wasn’t being too silly or not silly enough. It made me feel insecure about the way I acted. Was I too silly? Too serious? Did I eat the foods I should? Was I smart enough? Did he like me best out of all of Erica’s friends?

In 5th grade, Erica and I took a bath together—once. That was when I got to see her pubic hair, dark and course, not full like my mother’s, but there just the same, just smaller and thinner—like the grass we grew in paper cups in the second grade for our dads on Father’s Day. She asked me if I used panty liners and I asked her for what.

                “For discharge, silly,” she responded as if it was a well-known fact and again, I had not known.

I remember reflecting back to the weeks before when I pulled down my underwear to use the toilet and found a whitish, slimy residue moistening the crotch of my lavender briefs. I scraped it off with my finger and brushed it onto my leg, smearing it in, wondering if it was like lotion, only to find a dry, flaky patch left in that same spot the next time I used the bathroom.

                “It is your bodies natural cleaning system,” Ms. Ivy said during 5th grade Sex Ed. And she passed out those pink boxes to all of us girls–the ones with sample pads and panty liners and a little calendar to record our menstrual cycles. The one I kept under my bathroom sink years after fifth grade, waiting, until 8th grade, when the calender in the pink box expired and I gave up, throwing it away along with the hope that I’d ever become a woman. 

But Erica’s discharge didn’t look like mine own. We both lay in the bathtub, she on one end, me on the other, our legs a tangle in between. She raised up her hips, I watched her patch of hair break through the surface of the water and then, she reached under, placing her finger under the surface again  right below her pelvic bone and pulled it back out with a large glob of pure white goop. I jumped backward, kicking my legs under me to pull away and she laughed out loud, throwing her head back.

            ” I thought you said you get it too.”

            “Yeah,” I said, “but not that much.” Seeing that scared me. Even at that age, I felt something was wrong. I didn’t take a bath with her again and turned around every time we changed into our pajamas when she or I spent the night.

Erica began changing around that time. She came to school meekly after being gone for a week because her dad “made” her go on a business trip. She put a baseball cap on and tucked her long brown hair into it.

              She said, “Call me Eric, I don’t want to be a girl anymore.” Then two days later, she showed up to school with her eyes lined in black kohl. She even put the eyeliner on the inner part of her eye. Diana, Marybel, Maricella, Lupe and I asked her why but she just put her head down.

             “You look ugly,” we said. But I really felt jealous because again she was doing something I was not allowed to do and secretly, too afraid to try. She even acted older when we watched rated R movies in her living room. Her dad made her watch The Accused and she told me it was good, so she watched it again, but with me too. I sat next to her, pulling the blanket up over me, covering my face and hugging her arm as we sat together on the recliner.

              “He’s got a cute butt,” she said, and I looked out to see the rear end of a rapist, thrusting into Jodi Foster, pinned against a pinball machine by 6 or so other men, and her screams muffled by a chanting audience. It scared me, and I wondered why it didn’t scare her.

I suppose I wasn’t the only one who picked up the feeling that something wasn’t right, although at that time, I didn’t know it was her father. So I was still quite upset the day my mother and stepfather told me I could not spend the night at Erica’s anymore.

             “She can spend the night here, but you can’t spend the night over there anymore,” Daddy Nick said, his beady black eyes narrowing and stern. His looks were ambiguous, and I often misinterpreted his stern eyes for anger. I felt I had done something wrong.

              “But why?” I asked, tears burning my cheeks.

               “There is something about her Dad we don’t like,” He responded.

And that was it. I don’t remember if I ever told Erica why. She asked me here and there if I could spend the night, and my parents instructed me to always respond with “why don’t you spend the night at my house instead?” I think she asked more often to spend the night at mine, although I didn’t understand why then. There were much more rules and I had chores that she often had to watch me do before we could play. Still, she’d spend time asking my mom questions about beauty and dieting. Daddy Nick would always joke around her and make her laugh. We were good friends and practically like sisters then.

Then my family moved to Alta Loma, a city only 20 minutes away from Rialto, but to me seemed like eternity. It was in this new town that I struggled hard to find friends. No one understanding me or loving me the way Erica did. We talked a few times on the phone. I got a card from her in the mail; the words smeared with tear stains. And then I called our mutual friend Diana to find out how to get a hold of Erica because her phone number wasn’t working.

            “You don’t know?” She asked, seriousness to her voice that made adrenalin rush through my veins within seconds. “She moved to Texas and her dad is in jail. He had been molesting her I guess. Even began raping her and gave her STD’s. She came to school one day with bruises all over her. The day before, her Dad caught her kissing Jamal. I guess, he didn’t like black boys.”

I was in seventh grade at this moment. And the last time I even thought of rape was when I watched that movie with Erica. I sat there in the hallway of my home, back against the wall as I tried to find balance, feeling cold and tasting the metallic flavor of  fear in my throat, listening to Diana go on about the details of the arrest, the rescue, and the move— news that both surprised me and didn’t.  Somehow, deep in the subconscious of my mind, I knew, yet it seemed like that just intensified the shock because with that, comes no denial to rescue me from the pain and turmoil of reality. I hung up the Garfield shaped phone and laid down right there in the hallway on my stomach, feeling the rough carpet rub against my face and I studied the memories flashing through my mind. They now seemed to make complete sense.

That night, I dreamed that Erica was strapped down onto a pinball machine at Straw Hat Pizza Parlor. I knew she was there, but I just kept eating my pizza, frightened and alone. That image still resonates in my mind, and with it, a new perception of the struggles some girls face growing up. All my childhood, I wanted to grow up and be a woman so much.  When I woke up from that fitful night of sleep, I couldn’t get the dream out of my mind. I won’t go as far to say that on that particular morning, I had become a woman, but I definitely was no longer a child. While it was Erica in my dreams who was violated,  I too had lost something protected and sacred that night . And now looking back at it all, how I wish I had stayed a girl much longer.

The Seven Skills of Mothering a 9-Month-Old

1. The ability to diaper and infant as he is crawling across the floor or cruising around his night stand (since he refuses to lay still now for even the quickest of changes)

2. The laser eyes with which apon entering any place, I use to immediately scan the floor  for any little thing my son may pick up and put into his mouth.

3. The quick hands with which after scanning the floor, I use with great speed to  move any items on tables or floors that are fragile enough for my son’s curious hand’s to break.

4. The 6 arms I miraculously grow at various times to hold my son, carry in groceries, shut the car door, hold a bottled water, my purse, a diaper bag, and car keys, and still be able to pull my son’s hands apart from the lock of hair he has decided to pull from my scalp before I unlock the door to our house and let us in.

5. The strong stomach which can now handle the sight of diaper blowouts, spit up, snot, and drool and the humility to even use my own clothes to wipe some of the liquids up in cases where there is no burping rag in sight.

6. The unconditional love which seems to withstand being woken up 10 times in one night because my son is sick and cannot breathe or just thinks that it is a good time to play. Or while few and far between, the ability to withstand even the most angry wailing child who does not want to be put down, but does not want to be held, and does not want a pacifier or a diaper change or food or a bottle or a kiss and yet is quite keen on making sure I know that he is mad and doesn’t know why.

7. The ability to laugh in hindsight at remembering a moment when my son had a lump of mashed potato still left on his bottom lip after he was finished and I, without thinking,  wiped it off with my finger and then put it in my mouth and ate it.  (huh?…why did I just do that?)

A Walk in the Barrio

Kanan and I take a walk through the barrio every morning and every late afternoon. It’s an enjoyable walk that is peaceful in the early hours and full of energy later in the day. Our morning walk happens around 7:30 A.M when the marine layer hasn’t yet burned off—giving the summer morning a cooler feel. I wear Kanan in a sling to make it a bit cozier. Together we smell the moist, salty air and feel the cool breeze off the shore. The cars in the streets are mostly gone, as their owners have left early to work. We look and smell all the flowers blooming from the random yards of homes not owned by slumlords. These flowers brighten up the neighborhood from the dull appearance it could have if every home looked like the one two doors down from us–Peeling paint, two cars parked on the dry dirt lawn with weeds tearing through the dead grass; rap music blaring through the windows and the coming and going of traffic through the doors from various people of all colors. That is until the cops come again and arrest them or threaten them for dealing drugs and then it is quiet again for a month or so. The neighborhood is rather a checkerboard. Every other square is a prideful palate of garden colors—greens and reds and yellows. Only broken up by the dull, yellow squares brought on not by humility, but by neglect.

On are way down to Division Road, we are about to pass the big house with the beautiful garden of lilies, roses, and bamboo, and hope to get a glimpse of the newborn kittens we saw two mornings prior. But are path is obstructed by our neighbors and my heart beats a little faster. A once hard-core Center Street gang member in his late 20’s is sitting in his wheel chair. His bullet wound scars splatter his body and explain why the rest of him looks the way he does. He has lost both his legs, and is paralyzed from the waist down, so he has to wear a colostomy bag. His gangster friend who pushes him around everywhere is next to him, kneeling down and waving a branch back and forth on the ground underneath the home’s rod iron fence. Once I see this, I know exactly what is going on and breathe a sigh of relief—it is unusual to see any gang member, former or active out at this hour and now it makes sense. I look again at my paralyzed neighbor and see his dark black clothes and arms scarred with prison tattoos juxtaposed by the soft, white and orange calico kitten wrapped snuggly between them. His friend is trying to entice the other kitten that is gleefully jumping from side to side and swatting at the branch. Maybe these guys aren’t as bad as they seem, I think,  and break the awkward silence by telling Kanan that even grown men like kittens. They smile and we talk in English about animals and share stories about the pets of our past. Then we say goodbye and Kanan and I continue our walk through the neighborhood. Continue reading