[REDACTED]

I don’t want to create a me vs. them mentality in the class. I don’t want to have separate teacher supplies and student supplies. I want all of us to use the same markers and pencils and whatnot. I want my class to be a happy little socialist microcosm.

But last week something happened to make me reconsider.

[REDACTED]

(Ed. note: I can’t in good conscience post what I just wrote. If you’d like to read it, email me at amy@avidbruxist.com or whatever email address you use for me, and I’ll send it to you.)

Fingers Crossed

I was supposed to go in to work today. It was on my to-do list and everything. See?

  • laundry
  • mow lawn
  • weed-eat
  • unpack one box, just one—you don’t have to do all of them, Amy!
  • Home Depot
  • clean out fridge
  • work (plan lessons, get stuff from school fridge, feed hermit crabs)
  • clean out car
  • take stuff to Goodwill
  • cut lattice

All the kids have been have been peeing themselves with excitement about getting the hermit crabs. We set up our crabarium—ha!—early last week. Six or seven of them met me at PetSmart Thursday after school to pick out the hermit crabs. We got one small one, two medium ones, and a larger guy. The big guy has what was clearly supposed to be Big Bird painted on his shell, but wow, at first glance, he’s a dead ringer for Homer Simpson.

On Friday, all the kids looked at the hermit crabs and held them and switched them from the tank to the climbing cage and back. They couldn’t get enough. A fourth grader’s dream.

I mean, I put out water for them. And some food. A little food. Probably enough water.

Man, I hope those little fuckers are still alive tomorrow ’cause I am just not going in to work tonight.

Ambushed

in·sid·i·ous \in-?si-d?-?s\adj. (Latin, from insidiae ambush)

1. gradual, cumulative, and treacherous in effect

2. developing inconspicuously, with seeming innocuousness, as to belie its grave effect

That’s the thing about depression, isn’t it?

Dear Grandma

Whenever I get a new cell phone, I scroll through the ring tones to find the absolute happiest one, and that’s the one I set for family members. On this latest LG phone, it’s a jaunty piano tune called “I’m Fine”. My phone sang out that cheery melody yesterday morning, and I thought, “Wouldn’t it be ironic if it were Mom with sad news?” Sure enough, it was her, and she said you had passed away Friday night.

It wasn’t a surprise—a few days ago, the hospice lady said you probably had less than a week—but now I find myself so tremendously sad. I’ve had episodic crying bouts, sudden and forceful, over the last week, strangely not after the strokes or when you were so agitated and tried to pull out the tubes or when they transferred you to hospice care. It was when Mom said that she, Grandpa, Uncle Matt, Cousin Jan, and the minister stood around your hospital bed and sang your favorite hymns. And every time I’ve thought about that moment since. That image just gets me.

I’m going to miss you. You were my grandma. My friends and cousins have always referred to “Grandma (insert name)” and “Grandma (insert other name)”, but I never had to differentiate. Granny Scott died when I was 2. I don’t remember her. You were it. And the truth is we were never terribly close, yet you loved me and I loved you, and who you were in the world, how you occurred to people, was truly lovely.

You were kind and gentle and warm and humble. You were active and thoughtful and social and thrifty.

I remember when recycling became a phenomenon in this country, my first thought was, “Oh, right, what Grandma does.” I thought you had invented it. After all, a Cool Whip container was good for ten years of food storage, and then the kids were allowed to fashion it into a water-balloon launcher; tin foil got rinsed out and reused; you darned socks. I guess a lot of people who lived through the Great Depression were thrifty or careful, but I didn’t know. I just knew you, and you taught me how to reduce, reuse, recycle.

You were surprising too. I was chatting with you one day when I was about to graduate from Carolina. At that point, I had watched you make Grandpa’s bed and serve him supper for my whole two decades, while he did the handy-man stuff. You were the picture of early 20th century gender roles. You knocked me over when you said, “I didn’t want to graduate from college because I didn’t think there was life after basketball.” Turns out you were point guard at Pembroke.

I mean, I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised. You cross-country skied, you swam in Buzzards Bay every day from June to October, you learned to windsurf when you were 58. But you darned socks!

Grandma, I’ll think of you often. Swimming laps off Churches Beach in your swim cap. Sitting in your special spot at the table on the porch, savoring your blueberry cake while the rest of us would sit, envious, wondering how you could makes yours last that long. Singing, your voice soft and sweet, in the church choir. Sipping your gin & tonic—well, your tonic with a splash of gin—on the deck, and looking out over the harbor. Sailing Tursiops, and when the breeze picked up, your holding onto the tiller and the main sheet and defying your ever-vanilla mouth by saying, “Damn.” Twice!

When Nate heard the news that Great Grandma Flora had died, he said, “I don’t like dat.”

Me neither.

Damn.

Damn.

I love you, Grandma,

Amy

“Give three cheers for Cuttyhunk—          our spirits all are free.”

Deuteronomy 25:11-12

I mightily offended a friend of mine yesterday.

This friend is a born-again Christian, but she also has a snarky wit.  (I’m making those things sound like mutually exclusive qualities, aren’t I? Well….) Moreover, she has an easy laugh, even about difficult topics. We’ve had any number of theological discussions. She has always been understanding and generous in the face of my doubts.

When the topic of acceptance of homosexuality came up, her argument was that she couldn’t “pick and choose which parts of the Bible to believe in”. So I posted this internet meme that’s been making the rounds on Facebook and tagged her. I thought she’d find it hilarious. I certainly did. My favorite part:

Lev. 25:44 states that I may indeed possess slaves, both male and female, provided they are purchased from neighboring nations. A friend of mine claims that this applies to Mexicans, but not Canadians. Can you clarify? Why can’t I own Canadians?

My friend accused me of trying to persuade her not to believe in God, being disrespectful, and antagonizing her.

(…Naturally, I freaked out that SOMEBODY WAS MAD AT ME—ACK! and apologized profusely. She accepted my apology, and then a funny thing happened.

I got pissed. A swirling rage gurgled up inside of me, and I had no idea what was generating it. So I sat on it for a day. Here’s what I came up with:

I was really offended—oh, the irony!—by her accusations. I mean, I was upset that she could even interpret my action in that way. She clearly thought that I had malicious intent, and I was taken aback that a friend of mine could believe that of me.

At that point, I had some very middle-schooly thoughts.)

My point was—my POINT was, we do pick and choose which parts of the Bible to believe in. Lots of people smarter than me have said this before, but the Bible was written centuries after the death of Jesus Christ (a dude I believe existed, a dude I believe was totally righteous, a dude I believe wasn’t the son of God—sorry—but you can believe that! Rock on ’til the break o’ dawn!) by folks who may have been inspired by their Creator but who were also products of their era and geographical setting.

Thus, we might-could extrapolate the messages presented in the Bible and apply them as appropriate in our own time and place.

Anyway.

I really did think she would laugh.