Saturday, December 23, 2017

Duggan Family Christmas Card 2017

Merry Christmas from Dan and Becky Duggan! We hope this greeting finds you in good health and spirits.

I am emerging from a busy season of Veterans Day Programs and Winter Concerts at my school in Boise, Idaho. I still teach K-6 General Music and conduct a 70+ member Choir at Grace Jordan Elementary School. This year, a half-day of PreK music at Madison Early Childhood Center was added to my schedule, and I definitely end my day on a fun-filled, energetic note (pun intended ♫). 

Last spring, the 5th and 6th graders presented an adapted version of Peter Pan. This year, we are tackling The Lion King. Over 100 of my music students have auditioned for a role.


Dan is still busy working as a software engineer at HP. This year, he volunteered once again for the Hour of Code, helping kids learn how to code at a Treasure Valley elementary school. He also attended a security hackerthon near Portland, Oregon in the spring.

We welcomed my brother’s and sister-in-law’s second child, Bennett, in April. Dan and I enjoyed spending time with our nieces and nephews throughout the year.


This summer, we vacationed on Orcas Island and in Leavenworth, Washington. We went whale watching and did some hiking and mountain biking.



Dan and I celebrated our 40th birthdays this year. Dan turned 40 in April, and I turned 40 in June. We are officially #adults now, although I guess we have been grown-ups for a while now anyway.


I have continued performing in studio recitals, and I joined the Cathedral Choir at the Cathedral of the Rockies this fall. We performed at a state choral conference in Sun Valley in October, and we are planning a potential choir tour in Belgium in 2019. I also performed with the choir in the beautiful Christmas at the Cathedral Concert this December.


Over Thanksgiving break, Dan and I ran with the Turner side of the family in the Turkey Trot 5K in Twin Falls, celebrating nephew Desmond's first race ever!


Dan and I will be celebrating our 14th anniversary and going on a few Nordic skiing trips this winter. Dan (and Dan ONLY) is looking forward to snowboarding too.

Have a wonderful holiday and a Happy New Year!

Love,
Becky and Dan


For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, December 09, 2017

How My Wrapping Paper Ended Up With an Identity Crisis This Christmas (RE-POST from 12/28/14)

Don't worry. I am no overachiever. I have yet to wrap a single Christmas gift. This is a re-post from three years ago. Enjoy the reread! 

The holiday season crept up on me this year. It usually does. As a music teacher, my holiday rehearsal and program season begins in September and doesn't let up until the first day of winter break. It can last longer, depending on the commitments I've made within the community. By Christmas, I'm ready to hole up in a room somewhere, away from the general public, until the second week of January.

I barely decorated my house this year, although I did put up a tree. Come to think of it, my husband, Dan, took care of that too. It wouldn't have happened if it had been left up to me.

I did wrap my gifts. Not well, but I wrapped them, nevertheless. If you have been reading my blog for a while, you will recall that I am a bit of a failed gift wrapper.

One night, I found the cutest Christmas ornament wrapping paper hidden away in our closet. Dan had gone snowboarding in Sun Valley, leaving me with the whole evening to wrap his gifts.

"I wonder why I don't remember this paper from last Christmas?" I thought.

Dan came home late that night.

"All of your presents are wrapped," I bragged.

"Cool."

A few minutes later, he joined me in the living room and asked, "Why are there birthday gifts under our tree?"

"There aren't any birthday gifts under the--oh shit!" I exclaimed and slapped my forehead. "Birthday balloons?! I thought they were ornaments! It took me forever to wrap those gifts."

"That's hilarious."

"Should I wrap them again?"

"No, it's fine," Dan said. "It's difficult enough for you in the first place."


A few days later, I saw this photo on the Internet. I showed it to Dan.

"Oh yeah, this is what I meant," I told him.

He didn't buy it.


On Christmas morning, Dan kept saying things like, "You mean, I don't have to wait until April to open this?" (Because Dan's birthday is in April. Clever, very clever.)

A couple of gifts later, he said, "Only one more birthday gift to open."

Then he paused.

"This is the last time I'll get to make fun of you," he said.

"I'm sure you'll find something else eventually."

He stared at the gift for a moment.

"You're going to miss this so much," I said, rolling my eyes.

Finally, he opened the last present wrapped in birthday balloons.

It's the thought, not the wrapping paper, that counts anyway.

Right?

For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, December 02, 2017

Top Five Winter Faves

In the past, I have blogged about my Top Five Fall Faves, but I have never written about my winter faves.

"Why is that?" you may ask. "You certainly like talking about yourself and your preferences and your opinions on every other subject, Becky. Why have we never heard about your favorites during the winter?"

Well, let me tell you.

This time of year, I am overwhelmed with coordinating programs and concerts involving 100+ children between the ages of six and twelve and, depending on the year, taking on the role of performer in various community events. Sometimes, I forget there are things I like about this season.

I figured I had better put my favorites in writing before the cynicism of being a musician at Christmastime takes over.

1. Fluffy Scarves and Hats


Need I say more? Part fashion statement, part concealer of winter hair static and turkey neck, I can't get enough of fluffy hats and scarves.

2. Christmas Decorations and Lights


Even though I whine like a baby while decorating my house, I do enjoy my month of festive decor.

I also enjoy looking at all of decorations and lights around town, even though last year we had to drive around in that crazy snow on Christmas Eve, which did not mix with someone who occasionally battles motion sickness.

Let's just say I took my husband's favorite expression, "It looks like Santa threw up on our house" a little too literally.

3. Holiday Music . . . ?


I feel like I should say holiday music is my fave, being a musician and all, but music teachers are kind of like the Walmart of school. We start teaching the holiday standards in October because it takes that long to put a Winter Program together.

I do love listening to my cute first and second graders sing their holiday repertoire though, especially when I announce the song we're going to practice, and they all exclaim, "YES!" for Every. Single. Song.

4. Comfort Food


My enjoyment in life is mostly determined by food, and during the winter, there are just certain dishes I have to eat.

Butter Braid on Christmas morning? Christmas Eve Taco Dip? Butternut Squash Soup? Mac and Cheese? Christmas Date Log? Hello Dollies? Veggie Lasagna? Yes, please!

5. A Winter Wonderland . . . maybe . . .

I would say snow is one of my favorites, but then I think about last year . . . Snowmageddon, anyone?


For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, November 25, 2017

It's Mammogram Time!

Warning: This blog post is about breasts but not in a sexy way. Viewer discretion (I'm talking to you, perv men who are obnoxiously obsessed with boobs, which is probably most of you) is advised.

In case you didn't already know, I turned 40 this year. When I went to the doctor for my annual appointment, the first thing she said was, "Let's get you scheduled for a mammogram."

Sigh . . . mammograms . . .

I remembered my forty-something mother (so old at the time) telling me about mammograms.

"They squeeze your boobs into a vice thingy," she told me.

"What if your boobs are too small?" I asked.

"Oh, they will find a way," she assured me, then added her PSA, "but it's worth it. It can save your life."

When the breast clinic called, the woman scheduling me asked, "Have you had any breast issues, or is this just because you're grown up now?"

"No issues," I said. "I turned forty. That's my issue."

I started to do some informal research, partially for blog material but also because I was nervous.

"It's uncomfortable, but it's quick," one friend told me.

When I asked another friend if it hurt, she answered me with a terrified nod.

Later she tracked me down and recanted guiltily, "It's not that bad. We go through a lot worse as women."

"My mother used to come home black and blue, but it's not like that anymore," another friend said.

Later that week, my brother texted me to tell me about an event he had on Monday, the exact day I was scheduled for my mammogram.

"I have my first mammogram because #I'm40Now. New experiences for both of us. I bet mine will hurt more," I texted.

"LOL. But we are both doing these things because we are older and more mature ;)," he responded.

The jury is still out on that one.

The clinic sent me a list of things to prepare me for my mammogram. I couldn't wear deodorant, powder, or lotion. (I didn't even use soap that day.) I was supposed to wear slacks or a skirt.

"No jeans? What about yoga pants? Who calls pants slacks anymore anyway?" I asked Google.

Google told me, "They want you to wear two pieces, as in 'not a dress,' so you don’t have to strip naked."

The night before my mammogram, I lay on the couch and found all kinds of lumps in my breasts. I started to panic. My husband, Dan, suggested I calm down by watching The Walking Dead with him.

The next morning, I killed time before my appointment by watching Act Three of La Traviata on PBS. That probably wasn't the best idea either.


When I arrived at the clinic, I was by far the youngest person in the waiting room. I noticed no one was in jeans, and I panicked for a second. Maybe I wasn't supposed to wear jeans after all. Maybe only slacks were allowed. Then I realized all the other women were in that I-only-wear-knit-pants stage of life.

The technician called my name and took me back through a maze to the dressing room. She handed me a pink floral gown.

"This lovely thing will hang to your ankles," she said with a chuckle.

Apparently, the gown didn't come in petite sizes. It actually hung past my feet and over my hands.

I learned I have dense breasts, and the technician was pleased that I chose the new 3D method because of my dense breasts. It felt strangely affirming that the technician thought I made well-informed decisions.

I also learned I have a "raised" spot on my left breast, although I still don't know what that means. I found out about this raised spot because she had to tag it so it wouldn't show up as a false positive on the image.

She also checked my skin to tag moles.

"I'm not a dermatologist, so don't rush to your doctor freaked out after this," she said.

"What? Skin cancer too?" I said, and we both had a good laugh.

I had heard that women with bigger breasts have an easier time with mammograms, and I always thought mine were fairly big. But, man, she really had to twist and stretch them to get them onto the platform.

The vice thingy compressed my boobs, and I was told to breathe, then not to breathe, then to stick my hips out, then to hang like a rag doll, then to put my elbow out, then to hold my gown tight with my other hand, then to press my cheek against the machine.

During one of the stranger body contortions, the technician asked me, "How are you doing?"

"It's not my favorite thing, but I'm fine."

A couple of seconds later, she stumbled slightly over the stool.

"Oops! Better watch where I'm going!" she said.

"Yeah, I can't do this on my own."

"Sure you could!"

We giggled at that.

 

For women who are nervous about getting their first mammogram, here is the bottom line. (Or maybe I am the only one who gets neurotic over these things.)

A mammogram feels a bit like your breasts are being closed slowly and deliberately in a refrigerator door. It's a feeling of compression and pressure, not really pain. It isn't any more uncomfortable than a pap smear or other exams we women have to endure, and I imagine it's nothing compared to labor pains or giving birth.

The only slightly painful part was when the machine pressed up against my sternum. I am kind of bony there where my cleavage should actually be. As my theater friends, who have seen me naked numerous times, know, you could drive a Mack Truck through my cleavage. I have no boob cushion there.

But it's worth it because, as my mother would say, a mammogram can save your life.

Plus, they let you keep this reusable bag.

Am I going to get one of these every year?

I returned home from my appointment (after stopping by Starbucks and The Gap since I totally deserved it) to find out I had left the garage door open for two hours. I was so distracted by whether or not I should wear jeans or slacks to my mammogram that I had forgotten to secure our house.

What's the biggest crime in our neighborhood? Bike theft!

By the way, no one stole our bikes, and my mammogram came back normal. I can breath easy . . . at least for another year. 

For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, November 04, 2017

Weezer Is Coming!

Guys, Weezer is coming to Salt Lake!

Wait! It gets better.

Weezer AND The Pixies are coming to Salt Lake! Now is the point where my Millennial friends say, "Who are The Pixies?" It's okay. I'll teach you.


Last summer, I saw Green Day.

This summer, I am going to see Weezer (AND The Pixies). It doesn't matter when it is. (It's in the summer. Thank you, God!) This is one of those take-a-sick-day, sleep-in-my-car-if-I-have-to, stay-out-all-night-on-a-weeknight kind of concerts.

The beginning of my sophomore year in college, I rushed out to buy Pinkerton on cassette because that is all that would play in my '95 Hyundai Excel back then. (I also copied the Blue Album onto cassette, so I could listen to it in my car. The struggle was real, kids.)

Pinkerton remains my favorite Weezer album to this day, probably due to the opera references. (Yes, I own the CD now.)

When my husband, Dan, and I were dating, he would burn entire CDs of music he deemed necessary relationship barometers. I'm not talking about a puny High Fidelty-esque playlist. I mean, I would receive hours and hours of MP3s compiled from his favorite indie bands.

One of these MP3-filled discs consisted of a bunch of obscure, unreleased Weezer songs downloaded from some website. He was a Weezer fan too. I decided to keep him.

During our dating years, Dan and I saw Weezer in concert. It was our first road trip and our first concert together. By the end of the show, even reserved and quiet Dan (who was even more reserved and quiet that early in our relationship) was cheering and making a "W" with his hands.

"They are such a good live band!" he exclaimed as we left the arena.

Weezer basically cemented our relationship.

Nowadays, I have a Green Album poster, given to me by my brother when I moved into one of my apartments, hanging in our music room right above a bag that is filled with Handel, Mozart, and Puccini arias.


We also own the Blue and Green Album guitar books, although I doubt we have any hope of ever playing like them. Well, maybe Dan has some hope. I gave up a long time ago.

I have stuck it out with Weezer through every album, EP, B-side, a Rivers Cuomo rarities CD Dan gave me for Christmas one year, even while they have been panned by critics and fans for expanding their sound, going "pop," and trying new things. People just need to chill and not take everything so seriously.

When the Weezer AND The Pixies tour was announced, Dan immediately texted me, "What are you doing August 1st?"

Five minutes later, my brother mentioned me on the tour's Facebook post, "Becky Turner Duggan, I know where you will be August 1st!"

My response to both: "WEEZER AND THE PIXIES? WHAT IS HAPPENING?"

The next morning, a friend of mine had commented on one of my Facebook posts, "Weezer is coming to SLC!"

"I have been freaking out for, like, the last 24 hours," I replied.

Then I proceeded to listen to every Weezer album ever recorded, something Dan and I call a Weezer Fest. We do this whenever we are preparing to attend a concert (or, less happily, when a band member dies).

A former choir student of mine, now in his twenties, posted this video on my Facebook wall one day.


My elementary choir does an aerobic warm-up to Weezer's "Buddy Holly" at least once a month.

"This brings back memories, doesn't it, Mrs. Duggan?" he said.

Oh . . . you have NO idea!

Ready to rock, friends!
For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, October 28, 2017

How I Rocked Halloween This Year (RE-POST from 10/29/16)





Don't get me wrong. I rocked Halloween again this year! I just haven't had time to write about it. So here is my post from last year. Imagine me as a cowgirl instead of a rock star, and you've pretty much got the idea. I even wore the same plaid flannel shirt. It's very versatile. Enjoy this reread from 10/29/16.


I used to hate Halloween. I mean, it was fine when I was a cute kid. Once you enter that self-conscious adolescent phase though, it's hard to know what to do with yourself on Halloween.

Teenagers in costumes, holding out pillowcases like they expect pounds and pounds of candy, aren't cute anymore. I didn't want to be one of those. I also didn't want to smash pumpkins or throw eggs, not out of some sense of civic duty. I just didn't like the mess it made.

Then I became a teacher at an elementary school, and Halloween became fun again.

My school sponsors an event called "Ghouls at School" every year prior to Halloween. The kids parade through the school, dressed in their costumes, trick-or-treating at the teachers' doors. Several of us teachers even dress up.

It reminds me of trick-or-treating at the mall in Ohio when I was a kid. The store clerks would lock up their businesses and hand out candy, and our parents didn't have to worry about crazy people putting razor blades in caramel apples and popcorn balls.

Ghouls at School is like trick-or-treating at the Ohio mall except we're teachers, and we actually know the kids because they are our students. It's super fun.

This year, I even came up with a rock-star theme. I decorated my door for Red Ribbon Week with rock 'n roll stuff, and I dressed up like a rock star for Ghouls at School. I am the music teacher, after all. My next door neighbor joined me both in decoration and costume, and we were rock stars together.

I was dressed up, ready to go, and I had to attend a meeting at another school (in full costume) before the festivities. They were fellow music teachers. They would understand.

One new-to-the-district colleague did say, "Um . . . don’t take this the wrong way . . . but I don’t know you that well. Are you supposed to be from the ‘80’s . . . or do you always dress like this?"

Best. Question. Ever.

Of course, handing out candy meant I was standing by a full box all evening long. I love candy. What else am I supposed to do between trick-or-treaters?

This year, I couldn't eat any candy because I was fasting for a blood draw. To get decent numbers, I have to practically go vegan for a month, shunning sugar and saturated fat.

Here was my situation: I was fasting, and I couldn't eat any candy even though it was right in front of me, and I was still starving after my meager dinner salad. In other words, I was one step away from bitchy.

I pulled myself together and ended up having a nice evening.

The kids asked, "What are you, Mrs. Duggan?"

And I asked, "What do you think I am?"

And they answered, "A rock star!"

And I said, "Yes and yes! I'm dressed like one, and I am one!"

Then I mumbled as they walked away, "Actually, I'm an opera singer, but who's keeping score?"

 

For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, October 21, 2017

That Time the Opera Came to School


I have sung opera for my students since I began teaching elementary music. A poster from Pavarotti's concert in Boise hangs in my classroom. (I am asked if he is my dad and Jesus on a semi-regular basis.) Former students tell me the thing they remembered most about my class was when I would sing opera for them.

I'm not just joking around like Elmer Fudd and Bugs Bunny. (Confused Millennials, please Google What's Opera, Doc?) I have sung some opera in my day, even been paid for it. I guess that would make me a professional opera singer (but not really, ha ha!)

Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, Carousel in Concert with Opera Idaho, Recital Time
Nowadays, I mostly stick to musical theater (the more classical musical, the better) and the occasional vocal recital.

When my principal told me Opera Idaho was scheduled to visit our school for the first time this year, I said, "Great!"

When she told me the kids at her previous school started laughing at first when the performers sang, I said, "Don't worry."

"I was mortified," she said.

"That won't happen here," I reassured her.

I was also given the task of preparing a student chorus to perform with the opera singers, so I assembled a crack team of fifth graders, and we rehearsed every week at lunch for the first month of school.

I made sure I prepared the students for the visitors by singing opera in my classes.

"We are NOT allowed to laugh at opera," the kids told one of our playground helpers.

"We are NOT allowed to try to sing like Mrs. Duggan. Our voices are NOT ready for it," the kids told the teachers.

One student cried when I sang because he said it was so beautiful.

By the time the opera visited our school, my students were neither scared of nor disgusted by opera. One of the performers happened to be a good friend of mine as well, and that ended up being a ton of fun for the students and for me.

When the opera singers asked the kids to raised their hands if they had ever seen an opera, the whole school raised their hands.

"Really?" the performer asked, a little taken aback.

(I mean, they hadn't really seen an opera, but they were letting him know they knew what was up.)

When the opera singer asked if they knew what to shout if they really liked something, the kids knew the answer: "Bravo!"

Oh yeah! That's what happens when your music teacher is an opera singer! Of course, I never got around to, "Brava" for a female or "Bravi" and "Brave," but the performers didn't ask about those.

When the program began, you could tell a few of the younger kids were working really hard to not "laugh," but all it took were a few dirty looks from the other kids sitting around them, and my school settled into being a very good audience.

My cute fifth grade chorus spent the entire production onstage with the opera singers. They also had a quick clinic with the performers fifteen minutes before the show, an invaluable experience, working with true professionals.

At the end, my chorus kids insisted they hadn't "met" the singers.

"You just spent a whole hour acting with them," I said, "and they worked with you beforehand."

"But we haven't met them yet," one girl said.

"Can't we at at least shake their hands?" another asked.

As my friend in the cast put it, "The answer is always, 'Yes!'"

So they did.



For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Sunday, October 15, 2017

The Day My Husband Was Proven Right (RE-POST From 10/9/16)

I am happy to say that I have been riding with a properly adjusted saddle ever since I wrote this post. In fact, I make sure it is the right height every time I hit the trails or greenbelt. Enjoy this re-post from last fall! I know Dan will.

My husband, Dan, and I went for a fall bike ride on Boise's Greenbelt last week. It was beautiful. We will probably go for another ride this weekend. But this story is not about what a gorgeous city Boise is during the fall or how lucky we are to live in a community with so many wonderful trails and recreational areas. All of that is true, of course.

But this is a story about the day my husband was proven right.

Dan has been bugging me for years to raise my bike seat. I like it when my feet touch the ground. I am short, and my feet don't touch the ground very often when I sit on things. It's kind of nice that my feet touch the ground when I am sitting stationary on my bike.

But, alas, you are not supposed to be able to do that.

Dan and I were attempting a selfie on one of the Greenbelt bridges, when a woman walking a cute bull dog offered to take a picture of us.

"You need to raise that saddle," the woman said to me. "I used to own a bike shop. You're not getting enough extension." 

She turned to Dan, "You're extending perfectly. She needs to raise that saddle."

"I tell her that all the time," he said with a satisfied (but slightly hesitant What-Will-Becky-Do-To-Me) smile, "don't I?"

I nodded.

"Seriously, you'll have more power. Your legs won’t be as sore. You'll have better extension in your knees. It will feel weird at first," she said, "but you'll be able to keep up with him."

She gestured toward Dan.

(Unlikely. I’m too chicken to keep up with him.)

“Raise that saddle!” she recommended one last time before she left us.

“I think it’s been sinking," I said to Dan as we started to ride off. "It wasn’t always this low."

Dan rode behind me in silence.

"Okay! You can raise my seat but only because she had me at my legs won’t be as sore. And only because she told me as an expert, not because of anything you said.”

He continued to ride behind me in silence, but I could feel the grin creep across his face.

We raised the saddle as soon as we got to the parking lot. Another downside to raising the saddle? I slam my crotch against the seat every time I stop.

“How does that feel?” Dan asked after I had ridden around for a few minutes.

“Fine. My vagina feels fine.”

That night, Dan caught me taking notes on my laptop about our encounter with the bike shop lady.

“Are you writing a blogging idea?" Dan asked, "about how your husband is always right? He is often right. You must admit that.”

I groaned. 


Biking experts, don’t judge me by the saddle height in this picture. It’s adjusted now!
For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Sunday, October 01, 2017

More Funny Kid Stuff

Last week, I wrote about some of the funny kids I have encountered this school year. But did you know kids aren't just funny at school? Yeah, go figure. Here are anecdotes from my kid adventures outside of school, the ones that didn't quite make it into my blog post last week because they didn't fit into my school days theme.

Becky goes to summer camp.


This summer, I led the music at a children's camp, and I had an interesting conversation with a couple of spitfire, redheaded first graders.

First Grade Girl: I like your backpack. Where did you get it?

Me: My husband got it for me for Christmas.
Girl: Where did he get it?
Me: I don't remember exactly. Probably online.
Girl: Lazy.
Me: What?
Girl: Lazy.
Me: Lazy?
First Grade Boy: Yeah, lazy!
Me: What do you guys mean?
First Grade Boy: He can't even go to the store and pick it out for you?
(He couldn't say his "r's" very well, so it sounded more like, "He can't even go to the stowah and pick it out fowah yo?")
Girl: Like I said. Lazy.

Later that evening, after I had sung a few Taylor Swift songs for the kids, one of the girls said I was a rock star.

"Oh yeah!" I said. "Rock and roll!"

"No, not rock and roll. Rock and roll is noisy. You're a rock star, but you don't sing rock and roll."

The wisdom of six-year-olds, I guess.

One of the teenagers told the other kids he thought I looked like Katy Perry (not in this universe), and the kids started calling me that Music-Lady-Who-Looks-Like-Katy-Perry.


Will the real Katy Perry please stand up?
The resemblance is astounding. #NotReally

Aunt Becky disobeys the rules. 



Don't let the innocent face fool you. This kid is a criminal mastermind.

Last weekend, my brother and his awesome family stayed with Dan and me. Those of you who have been faithful readers know I love hanging out with my brother's family, especially my nephews.

I was playing in the backyard with the two-year-old, Desmond, when he threw a ball into our bushes. Earlier that weekend, my brother, Steve, had told him he wasn't allowed to do that.

"You had better go pick up that ball before Daddy gets out here," I told Desmond.

Desmond gave me the strangest sideways glance I have ever received from a two-year-old and walked to the other side of the yard. A few minutes later, Steve joined us outside.

Desmond immediately called out, "Aunt Becky threw blue ball!" and pointed at the evidence nestled in the bushes.

Desmond tries to lift a tree.
Along the not-so-evil-genius, just-plain-cute lines (although his evil genius streak is pretty cute too), Desmond created a new game while he was at our house.

We have these white columns in our dining room, and Desmond went from pillar to pillar trying to lift them. He would wrap his arms around them and say, "UUUUGGHH!"

Then he would announce, "Now Aunt Becky try" or "Now Uncle Dan try," and Dan and I would attempt to lift the columns too, sound effects and all.

The next thing we knew, he was trying to lift the trees in the park by our house.


Our home was pretty quiet this week. We missed having those little guys around, even if Desmond does enjoy getting me into trouble.


For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

School Days Are Here Again




Here we are again: Another school year. My seventeenth to be exact. Surely, I am not old enough to have been teaching for this long.

I have a poster hanging in my classroom that says, "Music keeps you young." Maybe that explains why I feel like I can't possibly be going in to my seventeenth year.

That and I am still not always sure what I am doing . . . 

However, the students and I are up to our old shenanigans, no matter what our age.

PRESCHOOL  
Out of the blue, one little boy in my music class announced, "Don't call me Ty. Call me Batman!"




Another girl started babbling about Copy Cat (the feline puppet I bring out for a song or two every week). I didn't catch most of what she said, but I am pretty sure it had something to do with Copy Cat having puppies.


In a different class, one boy yelled out, "Honestly? l wanna do Itsy Bitsy Spider!"

When we sang the "Itsy Bitsy Spider" a few minutes later, he belted it out at the top of his lungs.




The preschoolers have started sitting by me when they come to music, and they leave me enough room for a four-year-old's body.

"Miss Becky needs more room than you!" I always say to them.


About halfway through class this week, one little girl looked up at me with sad eyes and said, "I will miss you."

KINDERGARTEN
Have you ever tried to explain to kindergartners where to go for a lockdown drill? It's not the easiest thing to do.

Mostly the kids just stared at me blankly until one little girl asked, "What if we need a hug?"


Another day, we were getting ready to line up and one kindergartner sighed, "I wish I could spend a little more time with you."

FIRST GRADE
We have a lot of new students at my school this year, and I am still getting to know their names.

I called one of my first graders by a name, then second guessed myself and asked her, "Is that your name?"

She shook her head. I checked my roster. From what I could tell, I had called her the correct name.

"Is that your name?" I asked her again.

This time, she nodded. 

Yesterday, one of the first grade boys barked all the way through our steady beat song.

SECOND GRADE
I have a second grader who gets very emotional about music.

Once he told me, "I heard you playing the piano today. I really liked that."


He also cried the first time I sang his class opera last year . . . and not because it was terrible. He thought it sounded beautiful and was moved by it.


Speaking of opera . . . One of our faculty members said the kids were out at recess talking about opera and they took on a very serious tone.

"And we are NOT allowed to laugh at it!" they told her.

THIRD GRADE

One girl entered my room with puffy eyes. It was after recess, and she was holding a broken pink and white polka dot umbrella.

"Is there someplace I can put this?" She started to cry, "Like in the trash?"

The umbrella was broken and so was my heart. (P.S. We didn't put it in the trash. She took it home to see if it could be fixed.)



CHOIR
"Choir puts me in a good mood," a sixth grade boy told me while he was waiting in line for music class. "It makes me have a good day."

My fifth grade choir members kept on whispering, "SLIP AND SLIDE!" every time a student would sneak in to put a contract in the bin during their class.


"No one is doing it!" one fifth grade girl said.

"Doing what?" I asked.

"You told us to 'slip and slide' into the room to turn in our contracts if you had class. No one is slipping and sliding," and she and a few of the other choir kids did some kind of '80s dance move that they had collectively decided was the "Slip and Slide."

"Did I actually say that, slip and slide?" I asked them.

"YES!"  they said in unison.

"Huh, that's kind of clever."

I guess they really do pay attention to what I am saying . . . even if I don't.



For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Saturday, September 16, 2017

It's Time to Start Acting Like an Adult . . . Sigh (RE-POST from 9/15/13)

 I have to start #adulting again now that the school year has begun. Here is a post I wrote a few years ago about coming to terms with my apparent professional competence. I'm way more mature now that I'm forty though. Enjoy this re-post from 2013!


This year, I have had to accept the fact that I am now an adult. It's probably about time considering I'm thirty-six years old. But it's amazing how easily one can put off adulthood when one does not have children.

I have flown under the radar for about twelve years. It helps that I still look pretty young, so people are often unaware that I have been living in the adult world for a while now. But I guess a person can only be "new to the profession" for so long.

Over the past year or so, I have been encouraged to take on more adult responsibilities in my job, such as leadership and organizational roles. Occasionally, people even come to me for advice . . . to me who still feels like the young, new kid on the block. What's that all about?

When I was given the choice between two columns of professional duties—a mentor column verses a need-to-be-mentored column—I was encouraged to sign up under the mentor column. I did, a little flattered and a little under duress. My "But I don't know anything" protestations were met with "You silly girl" shakes of the head.


Just in the last month, I have received asked three times for my input on department issues. I have been asked to explain and present on two different occasions in front of my peers. I hate speaking in front of adults. I will perform, sometimes half-naked, on stage in front of 1000-member audiences. But when it comes to sharing my expertise, if it could be called that, I much prefer the younger generation (i.e. five-year-olds, etc.)

One of my former student's parents caught up with me this year and was telling me how much her children missed me at their new school.

"Mrs. Duggan was the best . . . " they would say when they came home.

"You have quite a reputation, you know," the parent said.

I guess I should just accept the fact that I finally know what I'm doing, and I should also be flattered that other people think I know what I'm doing.

I read once that every professional's biggest fear until retirement is that he/she will be found out, that he/she will be revealed to be a fraud, that everyone will eventually know that he/she never really knew how to function in his/her job.

I've got a ways to go until retirement, and that just doesn't sound like a very pleasant existence, so I guess I had better sit back and start enjoying this adult responsibility thing.



For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.

Monday, September 11, 2017

My Life is Taken Over By Yellow Jackets . . . Again

We have a lot of yellow jackets in our backyard in the summer. Earlier in the season, my husband, Dan, removed a few nests from our patio umbrella. We moved our trap closer to the umbrella, hoping it would discourage the yellow jackets from building more nests in their favorite place.

Yesterday, we noticed several wasps circling the trap, which hadn't caught anything all summer long.


"Maybe they are more aggressive this time of year, and we'll finally get rid of them," I said. "Go in there, little wasps. Follow your friends."



The new location of the trap was right above our back door, and it freaked me out to walk under the swarm to water my outdoor plants.

"You stay there and distract them while I go inside," I told Dan.



I squealed and ducked into the house, accidentally locking him outside with the circling insects. He didn't seem to mind. He stood there, examining them like they were a science experiment.

I have a mild case of PTSD when it come to yellow jackets.


Before Dan and I were married, I lived in an apartment. A bunch of wasps also decided to make my apartment their home, and they sneaked in through a tiny crack in one of the balcony supports and built a nest.

The apartment managers sent an exterminator to spray the post a few times, but because it was hidden inside the infrastructure, they couldn't get to the nest to remove it, and the queen bee thrived and continued to bring more and more wasps into her humble abode on my balcony.

The yellow jackets crawled into my apartment via the light fixtures and the sliding glass door. I would hear a "bzz" over my head, and that was my cue that another wasp had dropped into the dome covering my living room light.

I lived across from three Boise State football players, and one day, when a couple of wasps crawled through my screen door and lit on the glass inside my apartment, I knocked on their door.

I handed one of the guys my Birkenstock, "I have a wasp problem. Can you kill a few of them for me?"

He obliged, but not without a lot of jumping around and shrieking . . . from both of us.

Eventually, I bought some spray, the kind that really should be used outside, and Dan sprayed the entire perimeter of my balcony door and light fixtures. (That's when I decided to keep him.) It helped for about a day.

The yellow jackets never completely died off, but they did slow down once the temperatures dropped. Dan and I got married in December, and I moved out and away from my yellow jacket friends forever.

Meanwhile, in my present situation . . .

The yellow jackets disappeared this morning, possibly and hopefully dead.

I looked up and past the yellow plastic trap.

"Dan," I called to him shakily, "I think I know why we have so many wasps in our backyard right now."


"Whoa!" Dan said. "Did they just build that overnight? I swear it wasn't up there yesterday."

He glanced over at me.

"Why are you standing so weird?"

I was wiggling my lower half and jutting out my right hip.

"I'm getting chills up my butt," I said.

I get "chills up my butt" when something scares me, mostly creepy-crawly or heights-related things. It's hard to describe the sensation. Just go with it.

I wriggled my whole body as if trying to rid it of some demonic presence. Then I squealed and ran inside, leaving Dan outside, mystified and alone with the wasp nest and all of its eggs.



For the latest blog updates, visit and "like" Rebecca Turner-Duggan.