Sunday, January 27, 2019

Mom’s Top Ten Life Rules (RE-POST from 5-13-18)

Yesterday was the fourteenth anniversary of my mother's death. It's strange how milestone dates stay with us after so many years, like we're supposed to move on at all other times, but we're given leeway on birthdays, anniversaries, holidays. What if you feel sad on March 6th or July 31st or thirty years from now?

In honor of my mother's death date anniversary, I thought I would rerun my Mother's Day post, mostly to remind myself of her character because . . . 

Gone from my sight. That is all. She is just as large in mast,
hull and spar as she was when she left my side.
And, she is just as able to bear her load of living freight to her destined port.
Her diminished size is in me -- not in her.
--Henry Van Dyke



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.

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

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

Monday, January 21, 2019

For the Love of the Pea Coat


I love pea coats. I have owned a pea coat since my college days in the late nineties. But just like many romances, I didn't set out to love pea coats.

The first time I bought a pea coat, I had actually planned to buy a leather jacket. I had seen several ladies on campus donning leather jackets, and they didn't look like they had plans to wave flags at a drag race later that afternoon. In fact, I thought these young women possessed a rather sophisticated fashion sense. Leather was no longer only for greasers and bondage stuff anymore.


Being a college student, I couldn't afford to buy my own leather jacket, so I asked for one for Christmas. I received a gift card. Oops! A gift certificate. (That's what we called them in the nineties.)

One afternoon, still home from college on winter break, I went shopping. I tried on a whole bunch of jackets—leather, suede, wool, fleece, bulky ski, etc. It was on that shopping trip that I found and fell in love with my first double-breasted pea coat.

When I showed up at my parents' house with my new pea coat, my mother said, "A leather jacket didn't quite fit your personality. This is much more you."

Fast forward twenty-plus years, and I am only on my third pea coat. This should tell you three things about me:

1. I have pretty much worn the same clothing size for almost two decades.
2. I buy the exact same thing and wear it until it's in really bad shape. This is my buying philosophy for tech products too.
3. I still dress like I did in the nineties, give or take a few floppy Blossom-style hats.

I don't think the pea coat will ever go out of style though. According to the totally accurate historical source, Wikipedia, the pea coat has been around since the 1720s at least.

All this to say, I just bought a new pea coat. I had owned my old one for over ten years. I tried to make it work, but the coat was pilling. The material felt rough and worn, and the lint it collected refused to come off with a roller. It was time to upgrade to a new pea coat.

My husband, Dan, tagged along. We just celebrated our fifteenth wedding anniversary, so this most likely wasn't his first pea coat quest.

At the store, I picked out a few styles and sizes. Dan stood in front of the mirror with me and acted as my coat rack, meaning I would hang the coats I had already or was getting ready try out on his arms, and he would say nice things like:

"That one looks awfully big. Are you sure you shouldn't try the smaller size?"

After finding the perfect pea coat (which was, in fact, the smaller size), I found a register and joined the checkout line. When it was my turn, the clerk looked at it admiringly.

"I love this coat," she said.

She was quite a bit older than I was, but that didn't seem relevant until she added, "I just got one of these for my mother."


Dan choked back a chuckle and attempted to cover it up with a little cough.

"I'm sorry," I hissed to him as we left the store, "but I don't look like an old woman in this coat if you ask me."

"No," Dan responded in haste, "of course you don't!"


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Sunday, January 13, 2019

The Most Popular Door


When I returned to school after Winter Break, I was greeted by a few sixth grade students, loitering around my classroom door before the first bell even rang.

What on Earth could cause sixth graders to want to get to school early and rush to the music room the day after a long vacation?

Why, Mary Poppins. That's what. Now spit spot!

The fifth and sixth graders perform in a spring musical every year at my school. It has become a tradition. And those sixth graders hanging around my door were looking for the cast list.

"It's not up yet," I told them stoically.

"Oh . . ."

"Go to patrol," I said without giving anything away.

They left in a daze, and I posted the list.

I think I get just as excited about the play. Last year, I dressed up as Mary Poppins when it was Dress-As-Your-Favorite-Book-Character Day.


I used to put on musicals and plays with my little brother. I dressed him up like Wee Willy Winkie and Raggedy Andy. Now, I just have a bigger group of kids to boss around.

Speaking of a bigger group, 120 kids auditioned this year, 67% of the students in our upper grades.

I try to make the audition process difficult in hopes of weeding out some of the less motivated kids. In order to be considered, they have to get a contract signed by their teacher saying they are getting their work done and behaving in class. They also have to do a singing audition if they want to audition for a speaking part. It is musical theater, after all.

Even with those stipulations, 120 kids tried out.

I couldn't have planned it better with the Mary Poppins sequel in theaters over Christmas. The truth is though, I had it scheduled before I knew that was a thing.

The bottom picture is a Christmas gift from brother and sister-in-law. Even my family gets in on the action.


A few years ago, some of the kids would get discouraged about not getting the main roles and would act out in unhealthy ways, but we have worked hard at our school at reiterating the importance of all parts in a theater production. The students have learned to be gracious regarding the casting and dealing with their disappointment.

"I was so nervous over break!" a sixth grader said. "I couldn't wait to get back to school!"

(I was nervous too. Casting 120 kids is no small feat.)

"I just wanted to be in it!" one fifth grader told me. "It looked like so much fun last year!"



So that's how my door becomes the most popular door after break. The kids camp out outside my classroom that first week, studying the cast list. And, let's be honest, a few of the teachers come by too. 

Then I post the lunch rehearsal schedules, and the kids hang around and study those. Sometimes, they get sad when they don’t get called in for rehearsal.

Of course, they are still fifth and sixth graders. Occasionally, I still have to “pull teeth” to get them to sing. But I just offer candy to the group who sings the best, and they usually do okay.

A couple of years ago, I read an article featuring, Lin Manuel Miranda, coincidentally one of the stars of Mary Poppins Returns.

In the article, he talked about his elementary music teacher and how she directed the students in a play at the end of their sixth grade year:

"The entire sixth grade culminates in doing a musical and the whole elementary comes to see the sixth graders perform. I saw Westside Story when I was in kindergarten. In first grade, I saw Fiddler on the Roof. In second, I saw a mash-up of the Wizard of Oz and The Wiz. By second grade, you’re already thinking, ‘What’s our play going to be when we’re the sixth graders?’"
I read this and thought, “I do that! These are my students!”

Here is the conclusion Miranda came to about this early musical experience, “The impact of arts education on my career is complete, total, and it saved my life."

And there it was. Purpose.

 


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Saturday, January 05, 2019

Becky's Twenty—Ahem—Eighteen-Book Challenge 2018


A couple of years ago, I read an article about a 100-book challenge, and I decided to create my own challenge. Knowing I couldn't possibly finish 100 books in one year, I set the bar a little lower and challenged myself to read twenty books.

The first year, I read twenty-one books. The following year, however, I only read eighteen, causing a severe dip in my reading self-esteem. I started this year off strong, challenging myself to read twenty books once again but revised that number in December when I realized I was setting myself up for failure again.

So . . . my twenty-book challenge morphed into an eighteen-book challenge. I am happy to report that I did, in fact, complete eighteen reads even if I did finish the last page of the eighteenth book on December 31, 2018.

It still totally counts.

Becky's 2018 Twenty—Ahem—Eighteen-Book Challenge


JANUARY
1. Girls by Emma Cline
Notes and Favorites: On the surface, this book is about a Manson-esque Family cult in 1969. But it also brilliantly tells a coming-of-age story: the societal expectations and oppression females experience, the strange competitive dynamics and intimate connection between females, the insecurities in adolescence. All of this against the creepy backdrop of one of the most notorious true crime narratives in modern history, yet still feeling very current during this era of #metoo.

2. Spoon River Anthology by Edgar Lee Masters
Notes and Favorites: I listened to this book, performed on Audible by several voices, while running in the winter on our Greenbelt. It was the perfect setting. Both my maternal and paternal family hailed from central and southern Illinois, and I felt a certain kinship to it. "What is this I hear of sorrow and weariness,/ Anger, discontent and dropping hopes?/ Degenerate sons and daughters,/ Life is too strong for you—/ It takes life to love Life."

FEBRUARY
3. The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran
Notes and Favorites: "And if there come the singers and the dancers and the flute players,—buy of their gifts also. For they too are gatherers of fruit and frankincense, and that which they bring, though fashioned of dreams, is raiment and food for your soul."

4. Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
Notes and Favorites: I have had this on my reading list for a long time (and not just because I share my name with title). I was not disappointed, twists and turns and surprises galore. No wonder Hitchcock took this one on.

APRIL
5. Hamilton: The Revolution by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jeremy McCarter
Notes and Favorites: I read this on the road trips we took to see Hamilton . . . twice . . . in less than a month. Once in Portland, once in SLC. Yes, we were like Deadheads for Hamilton this year. And we would probably see it again if given the chance.

MAY
6. Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon
Notes and Favorites: I especially enjoyed Gordon’s take on the various music scenes, underground, No Wave, punk, Grunge, during the '80s and '90s and the musicians she collaborated with and encountered throughout the years.

7. The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
Notes and Favorites: Is it morbid that I wanted more serial killer, less World's Fair? Don't get me wrong, I liked the Fair and its characters as a historical backdrop. I just expected the focus to be mostly on H.H. Holmes.

JUNE
8. A Grief Observed by C.S. Lewis
Notes and Favorites: "For in grief nothing 'stays put.' One keeps on emerging from a phase, but it always recurs. Round and round. Everything repeats."

9. The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
Notes and Favorites: This book reminded me of A Christmas Carol, especially after he meets his "teacher," George MacDonald. Interesting allegory regarding heaven and hell.


JULY
10. Little Men by Louisa May Alcott
Notes and Favorites: I enjoyed this iteration of the Little Women series. I know a lot of people think these sequels don’t live up to the original, and the original is one of my favorite books of all time. But as a teacher, I loved this snapshot of an unconventional, experimental boarding school, a reflection of Alcott's upbringing around some of the greatest transcendentalist intellectuals in American history.

11. The Other Alcott by Elise Hooper
Notes and Favorites: This book (the reason I read Little Men and Jo's Boys this summer, having reread Little Women last summer) was not only an interesting snapshot of the quirky Alcott family but was also about the rise of women artists in the late 1800s, a historical phenomenon I was not familiar with.

AUGUST
12. A Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Notes and Favorites: "But once you began admitting explanations in terms of purpose—well, you didn’t know what the result might be. It was the sort of idea that might easily decondition the more unsettled minds among the higher castes . . . that the purpose of life was not the maintenance of well-being, but some intensification and refining of consciousness, some enlargement of knowledge." (p. 177)

13. Jo’s Boys by Louisa May Alcott
Notes and Favorites: The subtitle to this sequel of Little Women and Little Men is "and How They Turned Out." It was, indeed, a lot of fun to revisit these characters and a little sad to say goodbye to the March family for good.

SEPTEMBER
14. Riverside by Miriam Poe Ryan
Notes and Favorites: We toured this house during our trip to Montana this summer, and I found this book in the gift shop. It calls itself a "historical novel," but I wouldn't go that far.

OCTOBER
15. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Notes and Favorites: I watched the HBO version of this recently and felt something was amiss. After reading the book, I realized the (very relevant to our modern society) themes were not developed, which is kind of the point in this riveting novel about technology addiction and authoritarianism squashing people’s ability to think. Also, how can you preserve the musicality and rhythmic drive of Bradbury’s use of language in a television show? Apparently, not well.

DECEMBER
16. Mary Poppins by PL Travers
Notes and Favorites: I read this book because my school will be performing the musical in the spring. In the book, the title character is quite vain and slightly rude to the children, not quite as compassionate as Julie Andrews’ version. But the Banks children love Mary regardless. Also, Jane and Michael aren’t the only Banks children in the first book. They also have twin infant siblings, John and Barbara.

17. "The Story of the Other Wiseman" by Henry Van Dyke
Notes and Favorites: My Christmas Day read this year . . . I highly recommend it.

18. 1984 by George Orwell
Notes and Favorites: This quotation seemed especially relevant during this build-the-wall era. "If he were allowed contact with foreigners he would discover that they are creatures similar to himself and that most of what he has been told about them is lies. The sealed world in which he lives would be broken, and the fear, hatred and self-righteousness on which his morale depends might evaporate." (p. 201)

Whew! 1984! What a way to end 2018. Until next year, happy reading!



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