Saturday, May 26, 2018

End of the School Year Recap (RE-POST FROM 5/30/15)

The school year is wrapping up once again. Enjoy this reread from 5/30/15! 
 

I finished my final concert this week, a sure sign that the end (of the school year, that is) is near. I thought I would share a few of my moments of amusement from the past nine months. Never a dull moment in the life of an elementary music teacher . . .

1. The Music-Literature Connection
My upper grades performed the musical Oliver! this spring. Oliver Twist was checked out of the school library for most of the year. Go me!

2. The King of Pop Visits
One day, a second grade boy showed up for music class wearing one white glove.

"What's with the Michael Jackson look?" I asked his teacher.

"I don't know," she said with a sigh. "I choose my battles carefully with that kid."

3. Translating Kinder Speak
When I demonstrated how to play a cabasa one day, a kindergartner exclaimed, "That's like a ramaca!" (Translation: maraca)

4. Selective Singing
During the Winter Program, the first graders sang, "Oh Christmas Tree."

One little girl belted out louder than everyone else, "Oh, Christmas tree! Oh, Christmas tree!"

But those were the only words she knew, so she would just stopping singing and click her pointer fingers at me until it came back around to, "Oh, Christmas tree! Oh, Christmas tree!"

5. Rock Star Music Teacher
The kids were singing "This Land is Your Land," and I was accompanying them on guitar.

"Mrs. Duggan, you should be in a band!" the kids told me.

"You have to know more than three chords to be in a band," I said.

6. What Does the Fox Say?
My sixth graders make music videos at the end of every year. One boy insisted that he was making himself a fox suit. I wasn't quite sure I believed him until he showed up last week, carrying in a pair of red, long-john pajamas with fur sewn on the front and a tail pinned to the back. He also had a fox-ear headband.

What song do you think he recorded?

(Hint: see below)



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Sunday, May 20, 2018

So . . . I Might Be Slightly Neurotic

Early in our marriage, I called my husband, Dan, at work. I had found our interior door, the one inside the garage, wide open, and I refused to go inside. I parked the car in the driveway and waited outside until he came home from work. It was pouring rain.

I don't exactly remember this incident. But Dan does. He thinks it's funny. I think it's a little crazy.

"To be fair, you had just moved in. It was a new house and a new neighborhood," Dan said while I listened and worried about my mental health. "I felt bad for you because you were scared of intruders, and you were soaked. But I also thought it was kind of weird."

"Is that when you realized you had married a crazy person?" I asked.

"No, I already knew that."

I can be neurotic.



But I can also step back and say, "Man. That was crazy of me. I'm glad I'm not like that now."

That objectivity has to count for something resembling mental stability.

As a kid, I had a recurring dream that a guy dressed in dark clothes would enter my room at night. If I was sleeping on my stomach, without a blanket or sheet covering me, he would stab me.

Even into my early adulthood, I avoided sleeping on my stomach without being covered because, you know, a blanket would totally prevent me from being stabbed.

Then, there was the other time early in our marriage that the airline lost my luggage, and Dan came back from the lobby only to find me in the hotel room crying and hyperventilating into the phone.

"I know it's not your fault! I know you didn't do this. I'm just very emotional right now!" I was sobbing at the dispatcher.

Boy, I'm glad I have better coping skills nowadays.

Maybe . . .

When the CD player in my classroom opens and closes over and over, I don't think, "My CD player must be wearing out."

Instead, I think, "It must be the music room ghost," which is a real thing and not neurotic at all.



When Dan and I returned home one evening and discovered that the twenty-year-old VCR/TV combo in our bedroom had turned on by itself and was making strange noises, I assumed that someone broke into the house, turned on the television, and left it on before stealing nothing and exiting the premises.

When the fence door swung open because of the wind, I immediately thought someone sneaked into our backyard.

Not too long ago, Dan and I were lamenting the way the steam from our shower had caused our ceiling to mildew.

"Maybe we should let open the door to let the steam out while we shower," Dan suggested.

"But how can I leave the door to the bathroom open while I shower? I don't want Norman Bates to kill me."

Sounds logical to me.

Just last week, I tried to close the garage door, but it popped back up like it had sensed something underneath it.

"I thought a person, or maybe a cat, slipped in. Hopefully, nobody's hiding in there," I told Dan.

"It's more likely that the garage door sensor was out of alignment, or you pressed the button twice."

"Yeah, I don't think so," I said. "You're going to be sorry when you find a scary man, or maybe a starving cat, in our garage."



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Sunday, May 13, 2018

Mom’s Top Ten Life Rules

In honor of Mother's Day, I am posting an essay I have submitted to various publications. Of course, it's been rejected every time because #lifeofawriter. I did want to share it with the world eventually, so here it is. I'm taking the publishing of it into my own hands. Enjoy!


My mother taught me several life lessons. She was a bit quirky and neurotic, qualities that I inherited in abundance. But she was always genuine. My mother had a knack for boiling life down to simple truths. Here are my mother’s top ten rules for a content and happy life.

Life Rule #1: Don’t buy anything that hasn’t been around for at least a few decades.
My mother shunned certain products that she perceived as "new." These things ranged from oral contraceptives to tampons to soft contact lenses.

"They haven't stood the test of time yet. We don't know what the side effects will be in the long run," my mother said. Then she would add, "I guess you can try using them . . . if you want . . ."

(Most of the time, I did.)

Life Rule #2: Churches should have one rule for its members. Be kind to everyone.
This life rule appeared around the time my father, a Baptist minister, had a few bad experiences with troubled congregations.

"You can believe whatever you want. Just be nice to people for goodness sakes!"

Life Rule #3: If you start feeling sorry for yourself, volunteer!
During my awkward teen years, whenever I started complaining about my weight, my looks, or my unpopularity, my mother would send me off to do community service. Case in point: One Christmas, I spent my winter break wrapping gifts for the Salvation Army.

"That will teach you to feel sorry for yourself," she told me.

Life Rule #4: Ice cream makes menstruation better.
My mother swore that ice cream relieved menstrual cramps. She would buy me Mickey Mouse ice cream bars, the kind with the chocolate ears, from the ice cream truck that passed by our house during the summer. To this day, I still believe in the power of ice cream during that time of the month.


Life Rule #5: No more jeans after age fifty.
My mother quit wearing jeans in her fifties.

"I've come to the conclusion that, after a certain age, you should only wear comfortable clothes."

She only wore knit pants, sometimes knit shorts in the summer. She would buy the same style in every color of the rainbow.

Life Rule #6: Before eating chicken sandwiches at fast food restaurants, one should remove the breading and mayo with a napkin.
Yes, my mother did this every time she ordered something fried—probably a smart move. I became a vegetarian during my adult years though, so I don’t worry about this life rule much anymore.

Life Rule #7: Educated people should subscribe to newspapers.
Maybe this one had to do with job security. My mother was a journalist at the local paper. But it stuck. The first thing I did after graduating from college and landing a job with a steady income was subscribe to the local newspaper. When I started dating my (future) husband, he thought I was nuts.

"Why do you need a newspaper when you can read everything online?"

"Daniel," I replied, using his full name to illustrate my level of sophistication, "educated people subscribe to newspapers. You want to be intelligent, don't you?"

Now we both read the newspaper every morning.

Life Rule #8: Wearing a bike helmet means he will use protection at other times in his life.
My mother told me this when I was fifteen years old. I had just pointed out my crush from my safe distance in the front seat of the family minivan. The boy had ridden past us on his bike and into a church parking lot where he had stopped to talk to some friends.

"Good. He's wearing a helmet," my mom said.

"Why is that so important?"

"It means he will use protection during other . . . activities."

I gave my mother an incredulous look, "Are you talking about—?" I stopped. I didn’t want to know.


Life Rule #9: There is a lot of sadness in this world.
My mother would sigh and say this if someone (mostly me) was whining about trivial (often times, teenage-related) problems. But sometimes she was sincere about this statement, like when she saw injustice or tragedy happening in the world.

When my mother died of cancer at age fifty-seven, I realized that there is, indeed, a lot of sadness in this world.

Life Rule #10: But always be funny.
Just because there is sadness in this world, it doesn’t give you an excuse not to be funny . . . always.

My mother had this milk carton with an eye pasted on it. It was a half-gallon that had been in our fridge forever, way past its expiration date but, for some reason, never went bad. After it was empty, my mother called it, "The Milk That Won't Go Bad," and she hid it in different nooks and crannies around the house. When my brother or I would stumble upon the one-eyed carton, she cackled, "It's Zuh Miiilk Zat Von’t Go Bad!"


Then there was the time she won a journalism award at a banquet. She came home and twirled around the living room, holding her award, while I sang "I Could Have Danced All Night" at the top of my lungs.

That's how I like to remember my mother, practicing the most important life rule of all.

Just live your life.

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Saturday, May 05, 2018

Mrs. Duggan the Glasses Wearing Hipster


Wearing glasses is a big deal in elementary school. Maybe I should rephrase that. Going from not wearing glasses to wearing glasses is a big deal in elementary school.

I am qualified to make this statement because a) I work in an elementary school and b) I have been wearing my glasses at work for three days.

I normally wear contacts. I see better with contacts. My glasses are heavy even though I have the special sci-fi lens that's not supposed to be heavy. All lies. My glasses are heavy.

I have REALLY BAD eyesight, and I absolutely cannot see without corrective lenses. (P.S. Don't suggest Lasik. I'm not a candidate. Besides, I'm super cute in my heavy sci-fi lens glasses.)

I have anxiety about being in some natural disaster or plane crash on a desert island and not having access to powerful enough glasses or contacts. I wouldn't make it twenty-four hours on the TV show Lost. Those wimpy glasses they found for Sawyer . . .

Last year around May, after mountain biking in the Boise Foothills and practically bathing my eyes in pollen, I scratched my cornea. I wore my glasses for a week and fielded a bazillion questions from six-year-olds about my eyesight history.

This week (I am seeing a pattern emerge in May), I got a stye in my eye. I self-diagnosed my stye because Google said I could. (Also, I have had one before.)

The day before I wore my glasses, the students pointed out the obvious . . . with some disgust.

"Your eye is pink!" one of my fifth graders exclaimed. "And it looks like there is a bump on it."

I didn't think it was that noticeable, but it seemed like I was frightening the children. Plus, it was painful by that time. I took my contacts out.

The next day, the questions began.

"When did you get glasses?" the kids asked.

"Second grade," I told them.

(Flashback to standing in front of my fifth grade class at a new school and hearing the kids whisper, "Her glasses are soooo thick!")

The conversation with my second graders was the most entertaining though.

"Why are you wearing glasses?"

"Her contacts ran out."

"Contacts don’t run out."

"Yes, they do."

"You could get laser surgery."

"Take off your glasses, Mrs. Duggan. How many fingers am I holding up?"

"I can't see you at all," I told them. "You are one big blob."

"Come on! Just guess."

"Are you holding up fingers?" I asked.

I also teach music at the district preschool once a week, but I got less reactions than I expected from that age group. I thought they might cry, but most of them didn’t even mention it.

At the end of the day, one little boy called out to me, as his class trailed down the hall, "Miss Becky, is that you?"

But that was it from the preschoolers.

My husband, Dan, does occasionally call me "Four Eyes" when I wear my glasses. Mostly, he just says I look like Lisa Loeb, especially when I play my guitar.

With my guitar after the great cornea scratch last May

"I listened to Juliana Hatfield tonight in honor of wearing my glasses," I told Dan when I came home from rehearsal Thursday night.

"Juliana Hatfield doesn’t wear glasses."

"I know, but I didn’t have any Lisa Loeb on my phone."

Channeling my inner '90s singer-songwriter diva

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