Showing posts with label In Real Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Real Life. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2012

What. A. Week.

Apologies for the slowness in posting this week.
There are lots of fine lines 
all over the place about
what is appropriate to share 
and what isn't appropriate to share
online.

This last week,
we had a big shindig at our place 
(that we do annually)
and I wasn't quite ready to invite the masses
(you know, all three people that read this blog)
to our place via a Facebook event invite.
Maybe next year.

photo from previous BBQ.
Couples withdrew with an injury this year.
Too busy socializing to snap shots this year.

Then, there are the two reasons 
that really knocked me offline.

One of them, I will share here although it crosses that
"this isn't house related" line that some folks flip out over.
But it is important to me, so I'm going to share.

The other, well it DEFINITELY crosses the line.
And I'm not going to write about it here.
I think I'm actually going to start another blog for that.
Because, you know I love to start blogs
(evidence here, here, here and well, not here because this one was private for our wedding)
...tell me you didn't try to click the "not here" link...

Anyhow.
All things said and done,
here's a rundown of 
a week full of life
and a heartfelt
THANK YOU
for sticking it out
and coming back day after day.

I appreciate you.


Life:
This really wonderful man
who taught my husband
much of what he knows about 
how to be a great husband
and someday
Good Lord Willing
a good father
decided that he was done here.



My father in law went in for a 
surgery to remove a mass.
They thought it wasn't cancerous 
going in and thought he'd be 80% back to his old self.

Turns out, not only was it cancer,
it was an aggressive form of brain cancer
that would require an aggressive form of treatment
that they do not do on people over 70.
(unless, I suppose, you're a President)

All said, my father in law didn't want any 
"extraordinary measures" at the end of his life.
He was a "put it in the God Can" kind of guy.

Let's interrupt this sad, vulnerable moment 
to getacademic for a second.

At Cornell, after I realized becoming a Geneticist 
was probably going to take way more time
than the Fed's and my scholarship sponsors were
going to give me money for, I wafted between
becoming a science writer and a biomedical ethicist.

Those last two words were so big
(50 cent words my granny would call them)
that Blogger's spell check is all 
"say what now??"

Anyhow. 
I digress.

On the ethicist side of the equation, 
we discussed all sorts of things like
DNRs and end of life decisions and living wills.

We talked about how it is always a great idea
to write that kind of stuff when you are well and able bodied
and leading a full life.

We talked about how it was always a good idea 
to update those regularly.

What we didn't talk enough about, 
was how intricate and specific 
you should be when talking about such a touchy subject 
as death.

We didn't talk about how what you want, might well change
if there are other circumstances in your life.

Case in point.
In the end, how coherent was my father in law?
There is no medical formula to calculate that.
There are med professionals who have their own opinions
(the whole, no one over 70 treatment),
there are family members - each who has their own opinion - 
trying to weigh in with what the patient might have wanted.

Your spouse knows you differently than your child does.


Your child who lives around the corner 
knows your differently 
than your child who lives around the world.


The child you raised 
knows you differently than the child 
who entered your life mere years ago.

All to say that in the end, 
it was rough for us.
Okay, for me.

Likely because I went through almost
the same stuff with my granny.

We hosted our annual TPC Boeing Classic BBQ on Saturday.

This after getting a call on Friday 
saying that after a visit to the ER
my father in law couldn't have anything more done for him
 so they were sending him home.

To make him comfortable.

In hindsight, the trigger words
"to make him comfortable"
in combination with
an extreme interpretation of "no extraordinary measures" should have clued us in
to the fact that he had mere hours.

But it didn't.

We got on a flight the next morning
and my husband arrived home
40 minutes after his father passed away.

I said it on Facebook and I'll say it here.
That is a cruel God.
He gives so much and snatches it right back away.

Yes, my life could be a hell of a lot worse.
I've been there, I know.

But sometimes I wonder what the point of all the material "riches" are
when things like this happen.

All said, we are blessed
to have been able to just go with two people
on essentially a same day flight.
If we would have had shot records
and a health report on Mary,
she would have come with us.

Yes, we would have flown our dog
to California.

Ms. Four Paws is an unofficial therapy dog.
I'm certain she would have helped
Robert and my mother in law
through all of this.

I know LOTS of people who couldn't do that.
And for that I should be grateful.

It's hard.
Not going to lie on that one.
Certainly not going to sugarcoat it.

In any event.
We'll have a memorial service
in Orange County
on October 6, 2013
at St. Andrews Episcopal.

I'll have to write another,
less raw,
post about the awesomeness
that was my father in law's life.


***

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Friday, April 6, 2012

In Real Life | The Bullying Epidemic



Thanks to The Bully Project for sponsoring my writing. 
Visit their website to join the movement and learn more.

Often, in the emails I get 
from those of you smarter than me 
about your online trail, 
I get asked what I do in real life. 
The common guesses are:


comedian
master gardener
puppy chef

No one ever guesses that I'm an educator. 
(well, in real life, that gets assumed often)

What I DO do in real life is kind of complicated.
The easiest way to say it is that I work for a school district
in the evil central office
(booo...hiss!! I know, I know)
and I get to "lead"
(trust me, there are LOTS of people "leading")
our work on family and community engagement.

I also have 2 years, 7 months and 9 days to close
the achievement gap.
But that's the half of my job that gets controversial 
and we'll leave that conversation for it's own little post.

Anyhow.
Back to the parents.

In my work with parents, 
we do parent education
about their rights and responsibilities
as partners in their child's education.

We also help to coordinate parent advisory groups
that help us figure out things like 
how to most efficiently get new products out to them
(ie, at the high school level,
we have a really neat "on track" website
that parents and students can look at
to see if they are passing their state tests,
getting enough credits, 
and attending enough school
to be successful once they graduate high school).

But the bulk of our parent engagement efforts at the 
central office/district level,
quite frankly,
is about family concerns.

And many, bordering on most,
of those concerns
are about bullying and harassment.

I work with a Family Engagement Specialist 
who does intake to hear what the situation is.
Often, parents are to the point that they have kept their kids 
out of school
(!!!)
because their child is just not comfortable
in the learning environment.

It's often hard to imagine the craziness we hear about
being remotely real.
Here is a great illustration of what we deal with.
This is the trailer for Bully.


***IMPORTANT NOTE: 
The rating for Bully has just been changed to PG-13
Go and TAKE YOUR KIDS***




So much of what is in that TINY trailer breaks my heart.
Every. Single. Day.

And the American school system's response to bullying
IS at a crisis point.

I see it in my own system.
I see it in my own state.

Just recently, 
our state Office of the Superintendent for Public Instruction
(OSPI for short, basically our state dept of ed)
released revised bullying and harassment reporting, training and investigation guidelines.

It was not a moment too soon.

When I see the Bully trailer, 
I see some of what I see everyday:

kids bullied on the way to and from school
really YOUNG targets- not just middle and high schoolers
kids so uncomfortable with school, they take their own lives
parents who ring the alarm and are told "nothing is wrong"
the pervasive belief that "kids will be kids"

What you don't see in the trailer
(but maybe it shows up in the movie)
and you definitely see all the time in my district:


bullying has no color boundaries - it isn't just a white kid thing
it isn't just the geeks that get bullied
kids so uncomfortable with school, they stop going
privacy laws rendering actions taken by a school "invisible" 

Like any issue,
there are so many layers to bullying.
I plan to see the movie and to promote it as a tool in my district
for talking with kids about what is going on.

There are lots of great things happening across this nation
to stop this now.
At the risk of getting too technical,
I'll note that we're a school district that uses 
a system that promotes sharing with kids what 
positive behavior is supposed to look like
and providing supports for kids that don't 
meet those expectations.

While that goes a long way towards ensuring
no kid ever skips school because he or she feels unsafe,
that hasn't eradicated the problem.
Especially given how much bullying happens 
online, on the way to and from school and outside of school hours.
The link is that the kids know each other from school
and that school is where they spend the most time together.
But it does get difficult when it happens off school grounds
(kids can be savvy that way)
and we need school partnership to intervene outside of school.

That's to say it takes all of us.
This is not just an issue for those who have kids
or work at schools.
This is an issue for ALL. OF. US.

Together,
we can all ensure
that kids never
get so desperate
that they take their own lives
physically, emotionally, or academically.

Why does this matter to me?


This matters to me because he thinks sewing (and rockets) are cool.
For a black boy in a society that generally says kids like him
only fit in if they're good at sports, hustling, or "music"
he sticks out.

And when you stick out - for being different, for being good at something, for being your own drummer on a different beat,
that makes you a target.

I don't know what I would do if he took his life because 
someone thought his joys and talents were "weird".

Check that.
I know what I'd do.
And though orange is my favorite color,
I don't need a new jumpsuit anytime soon.

That's how outrageous this bullying epidemic is.

Please.

See the movie.
At least watch the trailer.
Definitely check out the Facebook.com/Bullymovie page.

Please and thank you.


I was selected for this sponsorship by the Clever Girls Collective
Find showings in your area for The Bully Project 
and buy tickets here.

**

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Have a life and can't view the whole blog in one sitting? 
Then stalk us already! 
Scroll down, and become a follower!
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Promise not to stalk you back. Unless you want us to. 

***

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Charlie Harper Follows me on Pinterest | How About You?

While checking my gmail inbox, 
I came across this


and then this

Perhaps he is expecting

Or he just likes my woody style.
No matter.

Charlie Harper 
is following B3HDtheBlOG on Pinterest!

Never mind that I couldn't actually place WHO 
Charlie Harper was.
But aside from the fact 
that this was one of the 7 boys on Pinterest
who actually hit my radar
and I had a nagging feeling 
that I KNEW this "Charlie" dude
I did a little searching


Gotta say it was a much needed laugh.
How about you though?

Is Charlie stalking you on Pinterest?
And why are YOU not stalking ME on Pinterest?

Just. Saying.
What some people won't do
to increase their pin traffic.

Seriously.
Search Charlie Harper on Pinterest.
Out. Of. Control.


**

Loving b3HD? 
Have a life and can't view the whole blog in one sitting? 
Then stalk us already! 
Scroll down, and become a follower!
Or fan our B3HD Facebook page
Promise not to stalk you back. Unless you want us to. 

***

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Bloom Into Spring Exchange w/ OneHouse|OneCouple

Want to do something fun with bloggie people offline?

Then run (no really, you only have until Monday the 19th so RUN)
to OneHouse|OneCouple and sign up for the Bloom into Spring Exchange.



Because:
A. Who doesn't like giving perfect strangers 
(well, stranger singular in this case - you only get one partner)
your IRL mailing address?

B. Who doesn't like getting actual mail in the mail?

C. Who doesn't like shopping - especially for others?

D. Why the heck not?!?

Maybe we'll get linked up as spring buddies.
And I must say...someone (maybe me) is getting ready to open up an Etsy shop.
Full of Spring Stuff (and a bunch of other hoarded curated goods)
And though there is a $15 spending limit
If I already have it on hand, then any of those additions don't count towards the limit.
Right?

Don't you love how people interpret rules now a days?

I digress.
Get yourself over to OneHouse|One Couple and sign up today!
Who's in?



**

Loving b3HD? 
Have a life and can't view the whole blog in one sitting? 
Then stalk us already! 
Scroll down, and become a follower!
Or fan our B3HD Facebook page
Promise not to stalk you back. Unless you want us to. 

***