Tuesday, March 31, 2015

COW BILE AND OTHER FASCINATING FACTS ABOUT A SUPERBUG

"Hear ye, hear ye.  It hath been decreed that a medieval mixture of onions, garlic, and cow bile doth cure everything from a stye in thine eye to the superbug MRSA.  Take heed, ye serfs and ye other lowly!  Medicine hath just reverted one thousand years."
 
Okay, modern medicine may have its marvels and miracles, but it still fascinates me when old-school, blatantly heathen remedies are used with success at the hospital level. 

Truly. 

C-Diff got you down and out?  The hospital can now transplant someone else's crap (and by crap I do, indeed, mean crap) into your butt, and, if you're lucky and still sane after the procedure, voila ... new bum for you!

What about leeches?  There are times when leech therapy is effective and necessary.  Of course, I cannot think of any time that would be appropriate for me, but I'm saying possibly for some people.  Maybe.  Yuck.

Now it seems that the superbug MRSA might be conquerable, and all we need is some cow spew and garlic with a dash of onion.  I can see it now:  research students and medical staff alike will run out into fields, prepped and ready for a day of fact-gathering.  Instead, they are handed buckets and told to go forth and gather cow bile. 

I can hear it now.  SPLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCHEEEEEEEEE. " Goddamnit, Kent, you messed up another batch by stepping in the sample again.  Stay the frig away from the cows!"

As weird as it sounds, though, I am fascinated by this story.  Oh, and somewhat creeped out; I'm not going to lie.  The good news is your MRSA will clear up.  The bad news is you'll have an undeniable urge to eat hay and poop cow-patty-sized piles in open fields.


Monday, March 30, 2015

HTFAISTKTS



Today is a beautiful yet breezy day.  I should know.  I open the door exactly once to check it out.  Other than that, I have been working at my desk and at the kitchen table all day.  Sometimes life just rolls that way.  Hopefully, if I don’t crash later on the way to or from trivia, I will live to see another beautiful day.

Today is spent uploading pictures from my son’s lacrosse game yesterday, heretofore to be known as Snow Fest.  The pictures are grainy because the snowflakes were coming down fast and furiously, and they were flakes the size of cinema popcorn kernels. 

Then, I have to organize all of the classwork I brought home to see who owes me what out of the six assignments I have still to correct.  I even manage to do some correcting, but, with almost a hundred students and several essay assignments, I should probably just put my head through a brick wall right now.

I have a mini panic attack when I realize that I didn’t do the laundry today, and I really must because I have to wear something clean to school tomorrow.  While the laundry is in, I probably ought to do some time on the treadmill since I can’t leave the house while the laundry is going lest I accidentally burn down the house with my dryer or something.

The bulk of the day, though, is completely ruined by PARCC testing prep.  In case anyone lives under a rock, PARCC is the new MCAS, which was the new Iowa test here in the state of Massachusetts.  It has taken me no less than four hours to go through the manual.  I discover that the directions to the two math tests are going to take about twenty minutes just to read out loud to the students, and there’s no way anyone is going to remember anything I say.  I will become Charlie Brown’s teacher … mwaaaah mwaaaahaaaaaaa…

The best part of the manual comes when it says, “Say to the students, ‘Do you have any questions? If so, answer their questions.’”

Dude.  I have questions!  I don’t understand a frigging word of this manual except “pass the booklets out … collect the booklets.”  The rest of it just sounds like horseshit.  Don’t get me wrong; I’m not saying it is horseshit; just that it sounds like horseshit.

So, being the smartass that I am, I highlight the part about student questions.  I write in highlighter, “Move along” because that’s what I intend to do.  Then, in pencil, because I suspect someone will be collecting these manuals eventually, and since my name is stickered on to the front of it, I write: HTFAISTKTS

It’s code.  It’s a very special secret code that anyone who truly knows me will be able to figure out.  It’s special PARCC language that only we professionals will get.  It’s not some universal thing like SOS or HOMES or PEMDAS or ROYGBIV.  This is edu-ma-cated ciphering, and I’m going to crack the code for anyone who hasn’t cracked it already.

You see, when students ask me questions about PARCC, I have about as much information as they do, so my stock answer to them will be, “Gee, let me check on that and get back to ya later.”  In reality, though, my true professional answer is: “How The Fuck Am I Supposed To Know This Shit?”

So, now that I have completely obliterated the sunny part of my Sunday, and since Monday is biting me in the ass as I type, I am going to go to trivia and attempt to make my brain do something other than PARCC prep.  After all, the truth hurts.  HTFAISTKTS, indeed.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

HOLIDAYS AND A MAN WHO CAN KEEP A SECRET

I like finding bizarre holidays to celebrate.  Truly, every day should be a celebration, and lately I haven't felt like I've had very much to celebrate.  Okay, that's not entirely true.  However, work and other pressures are certainly getting in the way on my road to happiness, so I decide to find out what biazzaro holidays happen on this Sunday.

It is during this search that I realize it is Palm Sunday.  Since I don't teach Sunday school anymore, and since I stopped going to church years ago for personal reasons, I completely forget about this.  Oh, sure, I know that this is Holy Week and that it's Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, then Easter.  For some reason I cannot explain, I space out about Palm Sunday, though. 

I feel a little guilty about this, so I start wondering what other holidays today holds that I've managed to miss.  This brings me to the following important March 29th holidays and events:

1.  National Mom and Pop Business Owners Day -- We celebrate small businesses owned by families

2.  Festival of Smoke and Mirrors -- Honoring things that are not what they seem to be

3.  National Lemon Chiffon Cake Day -- Celebrating Lemon Chiffon Cake's invention

Wait.  Lemon chiffon cake needs a national holiday?  Apparently so.  I do a little research.  Turns out some guy named Harry Baker invented this cake in the 1920's, sold the recipe to a restaurant, then guarded the original recipe for twenty years like it was the first edition Declaration of Independence.  After two decades, he suddenly decided to sell the recipe to General Mills.

The amazing part of this story is not that lemon chiffon cake is wonderful; personally, I couldn't give two shits about it.  It's not special that a man invented it, nor that he sold the original idea to a local restaurant.  What is amazing about this holiday is that a man actually managed to keep his fat mouth shut and resist chest-beating for twenty whole years, protecting the integrity of lemon chiffon cake.

If only men treated women like the recipe for lemon chiffon cake (guarded with love and passion), the world might be a better place.  Oh, well.  We'll always have the Festival of Smoke and Mirrors, if all else fails, which many men celebrate daily, anyway.  ;)


Saturday, March 28, 2015

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT DAY -- WHY I'M RUNNING FROM THE LAW



Oh, boy.  It’s painfully obvious why very few people are willing to sit near me during professional development activities.  But first, let me tell you a story. 

It all starts Sunday.  I spend the entire day correcting papers.  It’s my own fault – I’ve been assigning a lot of work that needs to be graded because we lost so many days to snow and because we are up against a bunch of homework-free evenings and weekends, some at the necessity of state-mandated testing and some at the whim of administration.  Term #3 is all but a giant semi-melted slush pile.  This all puts me in the start of a pissy mood.

Tuesday I lose my mind at a lacrosse game when lousy reffing contributes to the loss of one of my son’s teammates to a broken collarbone.  I have not behaved that outrageous badly at a game in years.  I am semi-ashamed of myself and semi-relieved to have partially released the stress valve on zebras (refs) I don’t know and hopefully will never see again. 

Wednesday I am up against a district-wide battle in which I have somehow become an unwilling and unwitting pawn.  This wonderful experience gives me a massive headache, bordering on a full-blown migraine.  I suck down acetaminophen tablets like they’re juju beans.

Thursday is going well until I intercept yet another battle-laden email.  Who am I kidding?  Thursday sucks all day long, and the email is just the straw that snaps my already semi-busted back.  I cancel all plans to stay late and catch up on work and/or go grocery shopping.  Bullshit.  I’m hitting the medicine cabinet again, maybe even the liquor cabinet.  Yup.  Definitely the liquor cabinet.

So, you see, by Friday, I have totally set myself up for failure and bad behavior, which brings me to today’s professional development activities.

A few weeks ago we have a presenter come in who is about as communicative as Charlie Brown’s teacher.  Today he is back!  Oh, frabjous day!  Callooh!  Callay!  Personally, I think Charlie Brown’s teacher is leaps and bounds more enriching than this guy, but he has a job to present, and by present I actually mean read wicked slowly off his own power point word for word until we are all drooling mindlessly and waiting for the nurses aides to feed us strained peas.  I am contemplating taking a nap until I realize that the principal and superintendent are standing behind me, so I bumble along, pretending to take notes while passing them to my coworker instead. 

Suddenly, the presenter perks up and starts scanning the room with his beady eyes.  “Who remembers what was written on the board the last time I was here?” 

Uh … bullshit?  Stupid crap?  Um … your resignation?  While all of these things sound good inside my head, I doubt very much that I should voice them publicly.

“It’s like stabbing in me in the heart,” he laments.  “You’re killing me.”

So, if I remember what you wrote or if I don't, that is like stabbing you in the heart?  Killing you?  “Write it again!” I say, hoping this alone will do him in because I don't know what he's talking about. 

“Oh, come on.  It’s the F-word!”

It’s the … what the … did he just say F-word?  I clamp my hand over my mouth.  I’m not going to laugh, I’m not going to laugh, I’m not going to …

(Not my hands ... Don't start with me!)
You know that sound a giant balloon makes when you hold the opening of its neck, pull it apart a bit, and the air rushes out with a giant wet-fart sound?  Well, I try, I tell you, I really and truly try.  Suddenly a noise erupts from my mouth across the silent cafeteria where we are all gathered, a sound that starts as a snort and ends up a stifled but incredibly loud guffaw.  It sounds like the air rushing out of a giant balloon neck. 

And then, well, then I start laughing.  So do several other people.  I am fully aware the superintendent is behind me, but, christalmighty, I can’t make this shit up.  One of the teachers on the other side of the cafeteria pipes in, “You shouldn’t say ‘f-word’ in a room full of middle school teachers.”

Truth.

Apparently the correct answer is fidelity.  Who knew?

The coworker next to me shakes her head.  “This guy isn’t saying anything.  Any of us could say the same thing.  He might as well be saying ‘spoon, brick, coffee pot… dialysis.’”

Another coworker a few tables over starts questioning the presenter’s fallacious statistics and data.  The coworker next to me also chimes in.  A few points later, I get involved.  Before anyone realizes it and long past the point of no return nor hope for the principal to rein it back in for the poor presenter, the three of us form the Devil’s Triangle of Professional Development Days.  If we keep at it long enough, we’ll be victorious and emerge with the gorgon’s head.

The show goes on, mwuuuhhhhhaaaahhh mwuuuuhaaahaaahaaa mwuuuuuuuuwah  Any moment Charlie Brown is going to come and sit next to me in class.

“Flower pot,” my neighbor says.  “Feather.  Lipstick.”  She’s right.  There is nothing but a series of disconnected words streaming out of this guy’s mouth.  “Candle.  Gypsum.”

Finally, hours later, the shtick wraps up, and the principal delivers the benediction with all the subtlety of Jonathan Edwards’ Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.  She glares at me. “Well, weren’t we an ornery bunch today?”

Oh, fidelity my life. 

This, folks, this is why people won’t sit near me at professional development activities.  I try to behave, I really and honestly do, but there’s only so much bullshit a person can tolerate, especially on a Friday afternoon.  If my superiors want me to behave, we should probably have professional development on Monday mornings when I’m still semi-comatose.  I blame it all on Sunday.  If I hadn’t had to correct papers in the first place, none of this would have started.

That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it.  Unless, of course, the union intercedes; in that case, I was with you guys the entire time.  Right?

Friday, March 27, 2015

PISSY MOOD



I’m in a pissy mood today. 

My work printer breaks, I can’t get ahead of the correcting at work, my lunch gets cut short when I am reminded I have a meeting later for which I am somewhat unprepared, I’m trying to check in the backlog of new books to my class library, and I’m having a bit of a shoving match with the administration. 

On top of all this, I just don’t feel well.  I had a massive headache yesterday that is coming back today, I can’t stop sneezing (big sneezes – the kind that even scare the kiddos), and I need to catch up on some sleep.

My lesson plan for the day leaves no down-time, so I’m on my feet all day long.  I’m run down and in no mood for a run in, so when I see the boss in the hallway that separates me from the wing where my classroom is, I try cutting through another way.  Unfortunately, the cut-through circles right back to where my boss is standing.  Just as I walk toward the corner, my boss comes around the same corner, having also used the cut-through.

Making it look like I forgot something, I quickly turn, make a stop at the main door where two of my teammates are chatting, pretend I am part of their conversation, then I dart back toward the original path to take me back up toward my room.

I’m just not up to it.  I’m really not.  We all have those days, and today it’s my turn. 

I make it safely back to my classroom without further incident, fix my printer, get set up for tomorrow, go through some of the work that is piling up on my desk, and consider staying late to check in the library books.

In the end, I opt to come home on time, instead.  Do not pass go; do not collect $200.  After all, tomorrow is a half-day with an entire afternoon of sitting on my ass on a cafeteria bench seat while listening to some speaker drone on and on and on like Charlie Brown’s teacher.  I can probably catch up on my sleep then.

In the meantime, apparently there is no cure for my pissy mood.  I guess I’ll take it with me to the presentation and hope no one asks me to volunteer my opinion lest they actually get it … along with a massive sneeze or two.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

WINTER ... SPRING ... WHATEVER YOU'VE GOT

First day of spring and I am shocked to find I am sad to see winter going this year.  But, I am not letting it get away without one last chance to play in the snow.  I wanted to ice skate on the town rink this year, but first it was under four feet of snow, then it was destroyed by the weather and people walking on it when it was soft.

I decide to take out my brand new snowshoes and give them a whirl, but I don't want to go out too far away from civilization in case I fall and break a hip or something.  I decide the cemetery is probably a good place to go.  It's reasonably private yet close enough to the street that few people will see me look like an idiot if I tumble, and I can crawl for help ... if I tumble.

I spend some time circling the stone chapel and shoeing up a hill, around some trees, and back down again.  The pond is semi-frozen, and I don't really trust it enough to try skating on it, especially alone.  It is a successful but short trip out, maybe forty-five minutes total including putting the snowshoes on and taking them off.  The snow is a bit crusted and iced over, but the traction on the snowshoes makes for some great strides.  I actually get going pretty fast at one point, and I manage to stay upright.

I'm a New Englander and have been all of my life.  I know full-well just because it's late March and the calendar says spring, there still may be snow days ahead of us.  As a matter of fact, it snows about three inches a couple of days later as I am on my way to an outdoor lacrosse game, not to mention we still have all of April in front of us.  We've had blizzards in April and days in the mid-nineties.  Realistically, I can snowshoe one day and sunbathe the next, all outdoors here in the Northeast.

I'd be happy to take my snowshoes out at least once more before the season is over, but I'd be happy not to shovel snow again for a few months, too.  Your call, Mother Nature.  Like this past winter, I'll take whatever you've got.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

BACK ON THE TREADMILL

After two weeks of slacking, I have taken up the fitness torch again.  Thankfully my body doesn't rebel too much.

 Okay, so the whole power-it-yourself treadmill is really a workout, not at all like the automatic ones at the gym.  Running on the self-propelled belt is a lot more like trying to run on the street because my legs have to actually work rather than just lightly pretend to be gaining momentum.

It is partially through this activity that my coworker calls.  She doesn't bring attention to it, but this must sound like an obscene phone call with her talking away and me breathing heavily into the receiver.  When all is said and done, I actually work out more than I anticipate and feel pretty good about myself.

Of course, I say this as I am sitting at my computer eating homemade chocolate chip cookies and sucking down a huge glass of milk.

I am truly trying to get myself back to fighting shape.  I'll never be able to do judo again (because of my rebuilt foot), not that I was ever any good, but I liked the fighting.  I'm a bit of a masochist that way.  The road back to being healthy and fit isn't easy at my age, but I am determined, this time anyway, not to give up on this whole training myself to run schtick.

Today I realize just how lame I am, though.  My class before lunch sees the clock is at 11:08.  I am not allowed to dismiss them until 11:09, even if there are other classes spilling into the hallway.  Every day I tell them, "Seeing you all trying to get away from me is like a knife through my heart."  Today is no different.  I give them my spiel and shake my head sadly as they gather at the door, watching the clock tick away.

One girl looks at me, pleading with her eyes. "But don't you know how looooooong a minute is when you're waiting for lunch?" she asks me.

"Of course I do," I snap back, "it's about half as long as a minute on the treadmill."

Oh, boy.  Going to a lacrosse game tonight, but tomorrow I'm back on that treadmill ... for a minute ... or more.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

SLEEPY HOLLOW: FINAL CHAPTER -- MINDING MY OWN BUSINESS



SLEEPY HOLLOW: FINAL CHAPTER – SO I’M MINDING MY OWN BUSINESS WHEN…

I assure you, this is the final chapter in this saga, but I also have to admit that I set you up just a bit, as well.  I tell you the interesting places I visit and how the entire trip goes, but I also stress the importance of being aware of my surroundings, making sure I don’t do stupid shit that might get me mugged or maced or macheted or molested or murdered.  These are all very serious offenses, and I do my best not to become a corpse on the Sleepy Hollow news (film at eleven).

You must understand: There are so many awful things that happen simply on account of me being me that I should expect this kind of random crap to happen to me by now.  Lord knows I’m old enough to have learned my lesson, yet when these synchronicities hit me, I am still utterly surprised.  It’s like Groundhog Day all over again … and again … and again.

On my solo trip to New York state, I am careful enough to get my EZ pass mounted to the windshield so I will not have to stop and open my window at toll booths.  I am cautious when I plan a pit stop, making sure I go to safe public places like Panera and not some half-assed, semi-closed and completely suspect rest area.  I don’t wander too far from my car in the remote sections of the cemetery.  I only get out of my car at the scenic overlook when I see humans I know to trust. 

I am always aware of my surroundings.  I was, after all, a Girl Scout.

So, naturally, it turns out that the most dangerous place I find myself is when I am completely surrounded by people I know well and trust implicitly.  Apparently, I have a giant target painted on me that only certain people can see – strange people; well, nice enough people, but slightly freaky just the same.

My regular blog readers may recall my recent run-in with the Beanpot Man, the guy who told me his and his brother’s entire life stories, offered to buy me a piece of pizza, then called my kid “Son” when he arrived to meet me, his mom, at the game.  At the time of this rather crazy encounter, I was standing near the pro shop minding my own damn business when the guy just started talking to me. 

This is how it starts, always and almost without exception.  Today will be no different.

I decide to meet up with the team bus at the swanky hotel where they stayed the night before, hoping to follow them over to the college since I have an semi-idea where the campus is but no flaming idea where the field is.  According to the satellite image of the place (yes, I actually check that shit out when I’m traveling so I know where the parking lots are), they don’t even have a field, but the old high school down the street does.  Good thing I follow the bus (that also doesn’t know where it is going) because the college has added a turf field since the last time Google Earth was in the vicinity.

The parking lot slopes down, slightly at first then sharply, heading right toward the Hudson River.  For a split second (or maybe about ten minutes, I can’t recall because I think my heart stopped for a bit) I am reminded of entering downtown Burlington, Vermont, where it seems like the street will end only once it has tossed your car into Lake Champlain.  There are several parking lots, all packed to maximum capacity, but I find a recently vacated spot about two hundred feet from the banks of the river that is rushing crazily by.  The water here is violent, swift, much more dangerous than upriver by the Kingsland Point Park where the water was calm and more like a lake.  I see a lower parking lot entrance so far down the slope and near to the banks of the river that I cannot see the vehicles.  Cars disappear over the edge, then students come walking up, still dry, so I know they have made it safely.  It is so steep that the school’s shuttle bus starts down the small road then quickly backs up again.

I remain in my car and open up my cooler to eat the lunch I’ve packed, a turkey sub I made to avoid stopping anywhere by myself, and enjoy my safe view of the Hudson from my safely parked vehicle a safe distance from the water and a safe and open walk to a main school building.  I keep my eyes open for more parents from my son’s team, knowing that I am the first one there but that they will soon follow.  I don’t get out of my car until I know there is safety in numbers.  Yup, I am like the Safety Patrol.  I may travel alone, but I’m not completely reckless.

There are four possible places to watch the lacrosse game that I’ve traveled a couple of hundred miles to see.  I can stand along the end of field by the fence near the cars, which would provide many moments of imminent danger as rubber balls shot at over ninety miles per hour race past my skull.  I could sit in the rickety stands with the home crowd, where there is probably enough seating for twenty people.  I could stand on the hill, a little too far from the field and also in the crux of the Hudson River wind tunnel.  Or, I could stand near the sideline fence along with several other parents from my team, out of the worst of the wind and close enough to the field to take pictures.

I opt for the latter since my main pastime is to take a hundred or more pictures of the game.

It is here, along the fence with my compadres, that I realize yet again I have that invisible target painted on me.  It’s like a creep magnet, like flypaper for freaks, some kind of sonar that only certain people can intercept (and never anyone I truly want to have intercept it).  A thin man about my height and wearing a flannel fur-lined cap with ear flaps sidles up next to me and strikes up a conversation.  He has a familiar look about him, and I wonder if he is a parent from our team, as well, until he opens his mouth to speak. 

Nope, this guy is all New York.  His NY accent is thicker than Boston molasses. 

I start to realize that he seems familiar to me because he kind of reminds me of a shorter version of Harry Dean Stanton from Repo Man.  In no time at all, I have his entire life story – His son told him to come watch lacrosse because it’s a sport he’d probably like.  No, his son used to attend the college but doesn’t anymore.  As a matter of fact, his son (the only child he and his wife have) is getting married next October to a teacher.  His boy is in the media business.  The college cafeteria sells the best hot chocolate.  The field was put in a few years ago.  The train runs by the field on its way to the city.  The state is building a new Tappan Zee Bridge right near the park where I visited earlier.  There’s more, but I am sure I’ve forgotten some of it.

While all of this is going on, I am still trying to take pictures of the game.  I steal a glance to my other side and see some of the parents smirking.  Yes, they think this is funny that I have found a friend, or, rather, that the man has found me as a friend.

Don’t get me wrong.  The man is pleasant; talkative, but pleasant in a New York-Meets- New England kind of way.  He and his wife, who is nowhere to be seen, have been married for over thirty years.  He somehow extracts from me a bit of my life history, which endears him to me as if we have been friends for all of our lives rather than the ten minutes we’ve actually shared together.  He disappears once then reappears, picking up the conversation exactly where he left off as if we are in a time warp and the scene just ceased to move on while he was away from it.

Weirdly, one moment we are talking, then, as I look to my lacrosse friends and put the camera back to my eye, I notice the New Yorker has disappeared again.

“This kind of stuff always happens to me,” I lament to the parents.  They chuckle and think it’s oddly funny.  Yup, my life is a frigging laugh riot.

As if he’s an extra in Bewitched, my friend returns, appearing next to me as magically as he had vanished moments earlier.  In his hands are two steaming cups – both full of hot chocolate from the college’s cafeteria.  I am hoping it is safe to drink because I don’t want to be impolite and, to be completely honest, I am freezing my ass off at this point.  The sun has gone away, and an icy breeze is careening off the thunderously loud river.

Damn.  He’s right.  This is some of the best hot chocolate I’ve had in a while. 

The New Yorker chats for a few minutes more then shakes my hand, glad to meet me though we’ve never exchanged names at any point in the entire two-quarters-of-lacrosse-worth of conversation. 

My whole New York trip I have avoided interacting with anyone, watching out for my safety, minding my own business.  Then, in the most populated and safest of all environments, I am approached by a complete stranger.  The oddity of it all somehow relaxes me, as if my uncomfortable moment for the day is passed, and it’ll be smooth sailing from here.

Even though the GPS takes me out a different way than I intended, the way I wanted to avoid, I make the three-and-a-half hour trip back to Massachusetts without starting to feel tired until route 2, so close to safety and home.  I crank up the music and sing to keep myself alert – Rush’s Freewill and Ted Nugent’s Stranglehold.  Ironically after all that, the most dangerous moment of my trip is when I hit black ice at my exit.  Four hundred miles later and an adventure of a lifetime, I crawl home and into bed because that five a.m. work wake-up is going to totally suck eggs.