Thursday, January 16, 2025

Get The Cat

(h/t, Margo) 

Actress Samantha Rose Baldwin was trying to get home in the Palisades fire to save her 10-year old cat. Traffic was at a standstill so she abandoned her car and ran for 15 minutes straight to get home. 

She found her cat who was hiding, put her in a blanket, put her in a cat backpack and fled the house. At this point the route where she had left her car was on fire. So she ran for her life down to the ocean carrying her cat on her back and a roller bag. 

She made it. She saved her cat. 

From the photographer Ted Soqui:
"Samantha Rose Baldwin escaped the Palisades Fire with only a roller bag full of belongings and wearing her pet cat in a backpack. She is standing with the sea to her back in the Gladstone’s Parking lot, and facing the acrid smoke from the fire. Shot this image with my Leica M6 film camera using Kodak Portra 400 film."

RIP, David Burmester


Left: Rachel Rycerz with her mentor, Dave Burmester.
The Grand Old Man of Yolo County Theater. I barely knew you, but I greatly enjoyed your company!

Teaching The Kids

Being a substitute in the Montessori educational system is an adventure. My opportunities were sparse as Christmas approached, however, but there were two vignettes, revolving around my limited understanding of the rules and the complexity of elementary schools, in general. Such a strange environment! A place that operates by rules and clocks. 

In early December, I was a playground monitor during “Club M” (child care for the students as they wait for their parents to take them home after school). I approached a Kickball game in order to monitor the action. (Sixty years ago we played Four Court – I don’t know where this Kickball game came from.) Two giggling 9-year-olds, a boy and a girl of identical weights and heights, approached. “I’m upper EL; he’s lower EL. Can we switch places? Please?” the girl asked. She leaned in conspiratorially and whispered: “Just say yes!” I said yes, because it made no difference for the Kickball game. Still, I think I misunderstood the context. They were probably asking permission in regards to Club M, not the Kickball game. Older upper elementary students (upper EL – grades 4-6) wait in a separate room from lower EL (grades 1 – 3) students. The boy and girl wanted to switch rooms, just for fun. In the greater scheme of things I still think it made little difference, but it illustrated my limited understanding of how the school functions. 

Among the upper EL students at Club M, I watched as a girl, on her own initiative, retrieved a microscope from a box, collected a rainwater sample, and studied it. Then she thought to ask me if she could retrieve glass slides from the same box. I said, yes, of course. There was no need to ask me. But in her mind there was a need to ask, because the slides were a “resource”: items in a separate mental category from the microscope itself. One must always ask permission before using any resource. Mental categories: we all have them, but people in schools have more. 

Tuesday (1/14) was my first day as a substitute school teacher. I received a lesson plan in advance from the school, but I found it cryptic. Fortunately the Teaching Assistant arrived early in classroom “Ruby” to assist me. 

There were several school rituals that needed to be done at the start of the day. First, the students assembled in a circle, on the floor of the open classroom. Roll call surprised me – the students routinely respond “Ruby” when they hear their name, not “Here.” Then it was time for what I called “The Ritual of the Silence.” I recited a poem about the virtues of silence, then just before finishing the poem I turned over an hourglass. For a minute, the students had to maintain complete silence as the sand ran out. Then I completed the poem. (I thought for a moment about using a much larger hourglass that I had seen stashed in the bookcase, but didn’t). Then the “Student of the Week” (a small but well-spoken young girl) led the “Pledge of Allegiance.” Then, using a monthly calendar display, the little girl announced the day of the week to the assembled students. 

Work in earnest started, with three groups of students using different resources at separate stations (iReady computers, Math Facts, and actual instruction) for twenty minutes before switching to another station. I taught at one station and the Teaching Assistant taught at the other. Math for grades 2 and 3 wasn’t too hard, but I found first grade math to be a challenge. 

The subject concerned subtraction from numbers larger than 10 and less than 20. There is a multi-step procedure that was supposed to be used, for example, for the problem 12 – 5 = 7. For the first step, 12 – 10 = 2. Then, 5 – 2 = 3. Finally, 10 – 3 =7. There were several steps here that were a challenge for first-graders to understand. (And me too, until I puzzled it out. How did I learn to do these kinds of problems in the first place? It’s like I always knew how to do it, but it must be a learned skill. The steps are lost in the sixty-year-old sand dune called my brain.) 

For their part, the first-graders stayed patient as I repeatedly went through the steps with them. Fate had decreed that they would spend much of their life puzzling out inscrutable math problems, and the best way to do that was get together with their friends and patiently slog through them as best they could. 

I was warned about two students, in particular. The first was a Total Cynic, who refused to do any work at all, and used the class time to socialize with his few friends. The Teaching Assistant put together a packet for his parents to use to teach him, but who knows if that will happen? The second student was antsy at first, but as the day worn on he got more and more absorbed in a book. The Reader proved to be the best-behaved student of the day. 

One of the girl students craved attention and seemed too Handsy. She was pushing the other kids around, including one girl who kicked back in response. The meanness on display disturbed another girl, who tattled on the Kicker. So, there was low-grade friction among the kids. 

The Tattler seemed acutely sensitive to the slightest variations in the ordinary flow of the day, which proved helpful to me. When the Teaching Assistant took a break and I escorted the students out to recess, the Tattler informed me that I was out of compliance with standard protocol, that I should be wearing a backpack of first aid supplies. This was the first I had heard about any first aid equipment. When the Reader fell and hurt his face, all I had to offer were condolences. (He toughed it out.) When the Teaching Assistant returned she donned the first aid backpack. She monitored lunch as well with it. Two other students managed to get kicked in the face during the day. A well-used ice pack was floating around the room. 

As always, kids could be distracted by gruesome stories. One student almost poked himself with a pencil. I told them how I stabbed my palm with a pencil back in the second grade and the broken pencil tip remained visible under my palm’s skin for decades. They all had stories to share about stabbing themselves with pencils. Another student gave himself a paper cut and I told the story about a coworker who gave herself a paper cut on her eyeball while adding paper to a copier, but even though it hurt like crazy it was OK, because eyes heal fast. 

Before recess ended, one student lined up early to return to the classroom. No horseplay for her. She seemed introspective and muttered a rambling story about how she sang Christmas songs, and a Hanukkah song, during the holidays; woke her brother early on Christmas to get presents, and how the presents were placed in a big, blue bag. The story had no apparent point. This girl worried me. 

In the afternoon, a group of girls got together, to do schoolwork socially, and they made many appeals for help to the Teaching Assistant and me. The Reader continued reading. The Kicker avoided interaction with me or the Teaching Assistant and busied herself with filling out coloring pages on a Valentine’s theme. I assisted the Handsy girl and she gave me a surprising compliment, that she wished I could be her teacher. Ah, sweet! She just needs attention, and I was apparently giving her more attention than her teacher usually has time for. 

At the classroom circle at the end of the day the “Student of the Week” shared her RC robot car with the other students. 

A good day with a sweet class. Maybe I can substitute-teach in the class again sometime.

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Trial By Fire


Today is a kind of trial by fire: my first day ever substitute teaching (for grades 1-3). It’s been 57 years since I spent time in elementary school. I don’t remember this stuff. I couldn’t sleep much, in anticipation. The hardest thing so far is first-grade math. It confuses me; it confuses them, but we’re working through it. Fortunately there is a teaching assistant who knows all the things I don’t.

Traitors

"Hamilton" - One Glorious Show!


Thank you, Gabriel and Eleanor for the tickets!

The Republicans Have Sacrificed Any Remaining Connection With Human Race

Evil:
During an interview Monday on Newsmax’s Chris Salcedo Show, Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville was asked why people who’d lost their homes, belongings, and businesses deserved help from Congress. 
“Senator, why should other states be bailing out California for choosing the wrong people to run their state?” asked Salcedo.
“We shouldn’t be,” Tuberville replied. “They got 40 million people in that state, and they voted these imbeciles into office, and they continue to do it.”
As Tuberville explained, he didn’t blame all Californians. Just the liberal ones living in cities.
“And it’s just a very small part of ’em in that state that’s doing it. If you go to California, you run into a lotta Republicans. A lotta good people. And I hate it for them,” Tuberville explained. “But they are just overwhelmed by these inner city, uh, woke policies, with the people that vote for ’em.” 
“And it—you know, I don’t mind sending ’em some money, but unless they show that they’re gonna change their ways, and they’re gonna get back to building dams and storing water, and doing the maintenance with the brush, and the trees—everything that everybody else does with the country, and they refuse to do it—they don’t deserve anything,” Tuberville said.

Outrageous Lies About The California Fires

Lies, lies, right-wing lies, and more lies out there. Time to start informing people of the truth, like this post does:
By now, you have undoubtedly seen the devastation of the wildfires in California this week. It's hard to imagine the situation that they are facing, but this may help put it in perspective. The last estimate of the Palisades fire shows more than 31.2 square miles completely destroyed. That's 2.40 times the size of the Town of Normal. Here is the outline of the Palisades fire, scaled, and placed over the Town of Normal.
The systems needed to fight a fire on this scale do not exist. No municipal water supply is designed to handle the kind of strain that the firefighting efforts in California are putting on it. When a fire hydrant is opened, it takes a large volume of water out of the system rapidly, which affects the remaining supply and lowers the available pressure elsewhere. Eventually, the pumps that refill the tanks won't be able to keep up with the water that is being pumped out and pressure will drop.
This is an area larger than the corporate limits of the Town of Normal with thousands of structures burning simultaneously. That's what they're fighting with out there... Not to mention the 80+MPH winds creating a firestorm through homes and dry vegetation. Firefighting on the ground is virtually impossible in this scenario, and the aerial tankers (planes and helicopters that drop water and retardant) initially couldn't fly due to the high winds.
Remember, this is just one of several major fires burning, too.
There is a plenty of misinformation being spread, so we encourage you to get information from multiple sources and from experts. In a 24-hour news cycle, there is a lot of time to fill, and sometimes there's a LOT of filler and opinions and not a lot of actual facts being shared. 
This fire is eight times larger than the Great Chicago Fire. It's a disaster on a scale that is just hard to comprehend. We are thinking of all of the firefighters, and everyone trying to mitigate this disaster, and our sympathies go out to the lives lost, and those that have lost everything.

Sound Travels

Returning to the house after walking Jasper at 1 a.m., I heard what sounded like stone slabs being dragged around. The scraping sounds were emanating from St. Joseph’s Cemetery, behind the Catholic Diocese. Hmmm, worrisome. Loose spirits afoot. 

I took Jasper over to the cemetery fence to investigate further, something he fully supported, since it helped prolong the walk. After awhile, I realized that what I was hearing was construction on the W-X segment of Highway 50, off in the distance, beyond the Catholic Diocese. 

As I recall from graduate school, sound tends to travel better under conditions of a surface temperature inversion. Sound travels faster in the warmer air aloft, and so bends down to the ground over distance. I could hear other sounds well too, like a person walking several hundred feet away. 

So, no spirits. Just science at work.

Monday, January 13, 2025

Rachel's Nostalgic Tour of Davis Senior High School


News came that David Burmester, the grand old man of Yolo County theater, and the founder of Acme Theater, is very ill. I met him for the first time only just recently. Rachel wanted to visit him, and indeed met his family just briefly on Jan. 11th, but a longer visit wasn't possible. So instead, Rachel took a nostalgic tour of her alma mater, Davis Senior High School.

At the Vet's theater, and where Acme performs too.

Student Center.

The door where David Burmester used to post cast lists for upcoming shows.

The place used for Improv Theater.

Pleasant open space.

"Hamilton" - June 12, 2025 (Evening)


One glorious show!