matching tracksuits

fun in threes, sometimes fours

Opłatek 2020

It’s always the highlight of the school year for me, introducing American students to the lovely tradition of sharing the opłatek wafer. The kids love it; the administrators and counselors I invite in love it; I love it.

And I thought that we wouldn’t be able to do it this year. But I’m not one to give up easily when I think it’s something valuable for my kids, so I came up with an alternate plan.

Instead of sharing food, I had kids bring in their own snacks.

“What are we doing, Mr. S?” they asked.

“You’ll see.”

It’s important that they have a bite to eat during the process because that’s what the tradition is all about: breaking bread together.

So the kids divided into two groups, with the inner group rotating in sync, always maintaining social distance, and never touching any other seat.

I showed them pictures from previous years.

“That looks really fun,” one girl said.

Well, it is more fun than what we did today, but perhaps they got a little glimpse of the perfection that is the sharing of the opłatek.

14

Today is L’s birthday. She’s fourteen, which means there’s enough adult in her now to imagine what she’s going to look like in her twenties. When she was born she looked like just about every other newborn: squinting and wrinkly, she looked like the most helpless and pure being in existence. Her skin was softer than anything I’ve ever touched, and she smelled like nothing else in the world, a creamy, buttery odor with musky notes of sourness and a base of sweet, freshly baked bread. I held her in my arms for the first time and realized at an elemental though conscious level that we would never be the same again. We were three, with our latest addition being the most helpless member of our new family.

I was so nervous holding her, worried that I might hold her the wrong way, might grip too hard for fear of dropping her, might not support this or that appendage properly and thus allow grave damage. I spent the first several weeks worried that I was doing something wrong. Those weeks of “is this right?” worry stretched to months, then grew into years, and while the end of that worry is in sight, I know that I will worry for the rest of my life about whether or not I did it wrong.

I see pictures of her infancy now, and I find myself thinking that I’d give significant money to have one more opportunity to hold her as an infant, to have her head nestled into my neck and her feet not even touching my belt. Perhaps that’s the magic of grandchildren: it’s a return to a time of helplessness when we can appreciate it and not simply worry about it.

Trump and QAnon

I was reading an article in Newsweek about QAnon and McConnell’s congratulating Biden on his victory:

Supporters of the QAnon conspiracy theory have unsurprisingly turned their backs on Mitch McConnell after he finally congratulated President-elect Joe Biden on his election victory.
Followers of the radical movement who believe President Donald Trump is waging a secret war against satanic pedophiles, as well as pushing baseless claims that the election was rigged, were dismayed at the Senate Majority Leader and accusing him of being a traitor. (Source)

What if Trump were simply to say, “Look, I’m not doing any such thing, and any suggestion to the contrary is simply false. If you believe this, please do some more research and take into account that I am flatly denying it. Democrats are not a cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophiles.” To begin with, they probably wouldn’t believe him. “It’s all just part of his brilliant plan to keep the pedophiles on their toes!” But at the very least Trump could say in good conscience, “I’m not encouraging this dangerous, reality-denying conspiracy theory.”

The problem is, Trump doesn’t do anything in good conscience. Trump does what’s best for Trump, pure and simple, and to push back on the QAon folks would be almost certain to lose some voters (except for the ones who’ll believe it despite his insistence to the contrary.

14th Celebrations

The Girl turns 14 tomorrow. She’s taller than her mother, faster than her father, and (some days thinks she’s) smarter than us both combined.

Some things have changed in 14 years; some things have not. She’s still very particular (some would say OCD) about arranging things, and so she places the candles on her cake herself.

She’s still very particular about mixing foods (she doesn’t) and sauces (she doesn’t) and vegetables (except for peppers and cucumbers, she doesn’t), but she’s increasingly open to new things. For her birthday dinner, though, there’s only one option: crab cakes. I think we’ve done them for her three years in a row now.

Some loves have come and gone (dance and gymnastic have run their course and are now only memories) while others have stuck around (we’re now into our third year of volleyball).

Tomorrow she officially turns 14, but I might need a little convincing.

Alternate Reality

Original tweet source

Dark Room

“No, no! Don’t move it! There’s no need! I can use that,” I was almost pleading with the landlord of the new apartment in Boston. It was a duplex, and the owner/landlord had left a bit of kitchen counter in the renter’s side of the basement. “I can set up my darkroom there.” Which I did. And then took a picture of it. And developed it right there.

Then, the other day, I found the scan of it in a long-neglected folder on the computer, some twenty years after it was taken.

 

Sunday

Though technically not all the pictures are from Sunday...

Lipnica Wielka, 1999

The Tree

The Letter

We just started Romeo and Juliet, and a lot of the kids are quite excited about that.

I found this waiting on my desk at the end of the day. (“TDA” is a “text-dependent analysis” — the district requires us to give a couple of practice TDAs in preparation for the state-mandated one at the end of the year. No one really likes them…)