Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

WIP it Up: What I've Been Up To

I guess this blog is a WIP so I'm happy to give you this little update...

I love writing.  I started this blog in hopes of becoming more disciplined in it.  I thought if I made up themed days of the week I'd write more consistently.  Mentor Monday, Soapbox Saturday/Sunday but I haven't stuck to that.  I thought having themes in general like WIP it Up or Local Flavor would give me direction.  Thing is, I dislike discipline and I'm terrible at directions.  Truth is, I write when I feel inspired, when I have time, when I have something meaningful to say.

I have something meaningful to say, but I'm avoiding saying it.  I working on it and will show you soon.  Have news but not the news that most people expect (ie the news that a crying, pooping, spitting up mini human is moving in).  Stay tuned and I'll let you know.

What I have up to is creating hats for my friend's and family's crying, pooping, spitting up bundles of joy.  I feature them over at a different blog called Pumpkin Head Knits.   Below are pictures from that.  Right now I am working on Christmas hats.  If you see some cuteness you can't live without, shoot my an email with you order.  I am having fun and love the excuse of watching TV marathons while "working" on my hats.

Thanks for sticking with me, I'll be back soon : ) Until then, enjoy all this cuteness...









Sunday, April 29, 2012

Remembering a Teacher, a Community Member, a Friend.


When you live in the small city you grew up in, you go to a lot of wakes.  It’s not that more people die here, it’s just that more people touch each others lives.  Even when we think we are going to just to support one of our friends that lost a loved one, we find memories of our own reflected in the pictures on display in the funeral home.  We are all interconnected in a special way.  From time to time it feels suffocating, but more often than not, it is comfort in the connection.  These roots run deep and it helps us not feel as if we are floating on our own. 

 Today we said our final good bye to Mr. Richard Betz a teacher beloved throughout the community.  I stood in line for an hour with my husband who grew up golfing with Mr. Betz, my mother-in-law who took part in the healing touch ministry Mr. Betz and his wife led at the local hospital, and a high school friend a few years my senior who came on behalf of her classmates that live far away.  There were friends who met the Betzs through their yoga instruction and former athletes that can contribute their golf swing, wrestling moves and sportsmanship to Mr. Betz.  With wet eyes and crackling voices we told his wife our best memories of him.  They were all unique.  I was lucky enough to grow up as an extended part of his family.  My parents stopped by afterwards and they had stories of their own from family birthday parties, graduations and weddings.  Although his lifetime was far too short, it was a life time filled with people, stories, and community.

Mr. Betz’s teaching style was simple.  Love your subject, love your students, work hard.  His lesson plans didn’t come from the latest and greatest study on education.  They came from the nightly news, the New York Times, and the 3 Stooges.   He facilitated conversations by sitting at our level and just asking what we thought.  I took his AP Government class during the Impeachment of President Clinton.  Every morning he came in with a VHS tape from the night before of Cokie Roberts covering the latest phase of the saga.   His adoration for Cokie was contagious and we cheered when she came on the screen.  What better way to learn about government than to see it in action.  Reading the online guest book of his obituary a student shared a similar story of learning government through current news, but he had Mr. Betz during Watergate.  The political junky in me (that he helped create) is a bit jealous of that.  If they kept voter registration stats, Mr. Betz would be the all time highest recruiter in Montgomery County.  He didn’t care what party you registered for but you would register.  If you needed help, he had a political personality quiz or two that would help you find your party. 

Mr. Betz was notorious for cutting out New York Times articles he thought a student might be interested in.  A good friend who is a political science professor today remembers Mr. Betz cutting out articles for him even though their politics could not be more different.  Another online writer remembers Mr. Betz making her feel welcome as she adjusted to America and still brought her articles about her home country to the grocery store she worked at after graduation.  

When things got too heavy, Mr. Betz called on the 3 Stooges.  Most of us were too young to be that familiar with them so we found it hysterical.  Besides the laughter Mr. Betz also had a purpose to showing them through the moral of the story or a connection between Larry , Moe, and Curly and some of our current elected officials. When a student was having a hard day, Mr. Betz could tell.  He’d write a pass for them to stop by later or stay after class.  He was there to listen, there to help.  If you just needed some quiet time for yourself, he’d give you that too.  Love your subject, love your students, work hard.  In a day when teachers and students are drowning in educational jargon, there is a beauty in the simplicity of his teaching. 

Mr. and Mrs. Betz were before their time when it came to teaching the “whole person.”  They were into yoga before yoga was cool.  We were offered free and discounted student rates at the classes they taught at the local Methodist Church.  These classes were the perfect escape as we stressed over college acceptances, graduation, and high school life.  They began healing touch or Reiki style therapy at the hospital with Sister Rita Jean helping countless people.  The Betzs traveled to Arizona a couple of times a year for yoga and healing retreats.  It seemed a natural retirement place except for the dedication the Betzs had to their community.    What was natural to them was to stay here, continue yoga, healing touch therapy, golf, teaching youth golf clinics and being  active members of their families and community. Sure, Mr. Betz still lamented that it was harder to find the New York Times two hours away from NYC than two thousand miles away.  But home was where they stayed. 

After we gave our condolences to Mrs. Betz she turned to her brother-in-law and said, “Can you believe it?  Who would have thought such a big impact?”  Of course her brother-in-law believed it, we all believed it.  But to Mr. and Mrs. Betz, it was just part of living in a community.  Their daily activities were not for attention or accolades, but to be present where they were needed and to give where they could.  It was so simple that I didn’t realize the full impact he had until now.  I hope he knew how many lives he touched and what a better place this community was because of him.  I am glad we were all able to tell his wife and family.  Love your subject, love your students, work hard and go out and vote. Rest in peace, Mr. Betz, Namaste.  

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Finding my blogging groove



I so want to be a blogger.  I so want to be a writer.  I so don't care that these first three sentences are terrible writing form.  I am trying to find my voice as a writer and it seems lost.  For guidance, I've been reading a lot of other blogs.  Here is a little taste of what I'm reading:

1.  Mommy Blogs:  My two favorites are Jana @ An Attitude Adjustment  and Cristie @ The Right Hand Mom
These two ladies rock and I am proud to say that I know them in real life.  The thing is, I'm not a Mommy. Even though TheKnot.com sent me this lovely email last week:

Six months since my wedding.  No pressure.

2.  Fitness Blogs:  Since joining Boot Camp through Tina @ Best Body Fitness I've linked up with a lot of other bloggers who blog about food and fitness.  This is great and inspirational as the members are at very different places in their lives.  Here are some great ones: Lets Talk and Walk ,   The Splattered Apron ,  Brooke Not on a Diet ,  and local blogger Sweet Tooth, Sweet Life   But the thing is, most of the blogs are pictures of what they ate that day.  First of all, it is not good for me to be that obsessed with food.  Second of all, I can only look at some many pictures of Chobani with Love Grown Granola and "Overnight Oats" with nutbutter.  After awhile, I start to think that is what I ate that day. I assure you, most of my breakfasts look more like this:
Thank goodness for bootcamp.

3.  Funny People:  I'd like to be in this group.  Through bootcamp I came across Katrina @ 'Sota is Sexy  and through Jana Frogs in my Formula which is technically a Mommy Blog but it makes me laugh out loud.

4.  Crafty People:  I dream of setting up my sewing machine and trying a few creations from Make it and Love it  or decorating my house like Thrifty Decor Chick .  I also love all things I find on The 36th Avenue

Plus some wedding blogs, cooking blogs, politics blogs, and news blogs. Frankly, all these words and blogs are overwhelming.

Where do I fit in the scheme of all of these blogs?  Is there room for another blogger?  Is there a point to shouting over all of these voices?  Do I need to shout?

The thing is, I probably don't need to shout.  I don't need to drown in the words of others either.  What I really need to do is to write my own words.  Create my own niche.  It won't be filled with chia seeds, the latest plank position, or stories of my offspring (Dolly will have to do for now).  It's time to write.  Starting Monday, you'll see more of that with my first installment of "Mentoring Monday."  Stay tuned my friends. And while you wait, check out some of the blogs I posted above.  You won't be sorry!