by Nasoosie » Sat Mar 27, 2010 8:09 am
GOOD MORNING ALL!
Nice to see that someone else started the coffee pot today! I slept and slept and slept, until I could see the sunlight hitting my front deck! It's only 5 degrees out there, but my woodfire has it toasty inside! I am hoping the nasty winds of yesterday will not develop today, and that the sun will warm things up enough to allow me to spend some time in the trailer, getting things arranged and re-arranged for the summer season.
I watched a lot of Lily and Hope yesterday, and saw her playing with the elastic band that holds the camera in place----was hoping it didn't get around little Hope's neck and necessitate a rescue by Lynn or Sue. I see by their daily log notes that they discovered why Lily is getting that elastic band more often now as she is using that very tree with the camera tube elasticized to it to haul herself out of the den each day. I love that we all are learning new things about bears each day, including the ones involved in the study who have the hands-on-bear contacts with them. This is the way all classrooms should be-----perhaps some day in the future. A movie of the Battle of Gettysburg is so much more informative and true-to-life than the reading of the facts in some dull textbook. Something I could have done without yesterday, however, was a TV show depicting the hideous torture devices and killing devices the old English used on people who had done wrong! Actually hearing about the workings and seeing a device used to 'draw and quarter' people to death is vastly different from a mentioning of it as a manner of punishment in a book. ACK!
Liz, how wonderful that you saw your former student in a position of importance in the competitions you attended! And that he mentioned your name as being one of the major teachers/people in his life who actually made a difference for him! Now that's the kind of feedback that has to make you feel so good, and makes you realize that what you did back then when he was a kid actually enabled him to become an active, productive adult! And in a position where he has to speak to the public, as well, after his being a child who never talked-----amazing! Congratulations! Teachers don't get enough of those days, and, when you do, it makes your day and lets you know how important you were to someone along the line.
I am not sure what's on the docket for me today, but maybe I'll take a drive to Chazy and spend a night with my mother-in-law who is also all alone now. I could watch her new HUGE screen TV her son gave her for Christmas! And Molly and I could get out where the snow is now long gone and walk through the apple orchards behind her house. The more I think of it, the more I think it sounds like a good plan.
Thanks for checking in with us, Carol----and WELCOME HOME!
I, too, always feel at a loss in a big house for the winter as I live in my trailer all summer, mostly just out in the yard! But I am still glad I have a rooted house in the world----although a house-on-wheels will give me freedom when I retire, I will still appreciate my 'roots' here. I can't imagine my being so free and wafting in the breezes that I won't love the knowledge that I DO have roots somewhere! I like to think of myself as a melkweed plant, with seeds that ride the breezes in the fall, but with roots to grow again the following spring!
Safe travels to those of you on the roads today!
Happy Saturday to all!
Life is about learning to dance in the rainHappy travels!