Friday, December 31, 2010

Listening: Part I

I learned a lot about listening by listening. It took me a long time to learn to be patiently, quietly, and supportively present for someone who needed to talk. That lesson was, and for that matter still is, the most difficult when I don’t agree with the person talking. And still more difficult yet, when the person talking is in some way expressing concern about something I have or have not done. It is too easy to mistake listening for grudgingly taking turns talking. Listening can become me waiting for you to stop talking so I can start talking again. I continue to work at being a good listener.


It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Wedding Anniversary--"I did, I do, I WILL."

Thirty-three years ago yesterday, Katy and I were married. It sounds so much longer than it actually feels. I can’t imagine my life without having married her. I was in love when we got married and yet I am more in love today than I ever knew I could be.

We went to a wedding last weekend of a young couple. I have been to lots and lots of weddings through the years. This was the largest one I have ever been to; there were almost 450 people there. There were three videographers. At the reception there was an extensive slide show of the bride and groom from the time they were little. There was a 20 minute video of them talking about how they met and remembering their experiences together in the year they have known each other. It was pretty impressive.

When Katy and I were married there were no video cameras, no digital cameras, and no personal computers. There were film pictures and we have an album with them in it. I put a portable cassette tape recorder on the floor while we said our vows so we have a somewhat audible recording of the ceremony.

Where has the time gone? There have been so many changes in our lives and those changes aren’t just the result of changes in the world. We have experienced a myriad of personal change on our own and together. We have grown individually and together. We are still the people we were when we were married. Well, sort of. We are each someone else too. In the midst of that change we have encouraged and supported each other.

We have faced challenges together. A couple of those challenges have been very difficult. We still laugh together and so much enjoy each other’s company. Decades before the characters in Avatar where saying, “I see you,” I was saying it to Katy. I still say it. “I see you,” means many things to me but most of all I still celebrate being in her presence. I still love the sound of her voice. We are still friends and we are still lovers. We each support the other in our individual endeavors and we enjoy doing things together. I still tell her I love her every day and work to show it.

It has been said that being 60 is the youth of old age. As of October 11, 2010 we are both officially entering the youth of our old age. I look forward to the years to come; together, I embrace them with open arms.

Thirty three years ago yesterday we stood in front of our God, our families, and our friends, and made our wedding vows. We both said “I do.” As to making wedding vows—past, present, and future—“I did, I do, and I WILL!”

It is the weekend and it is a holiday weekend. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

PS I still think Katy is pretty darn hot too.

P

Friday, December 17, 2010

2010 Christmas List

Years ago, when I was younger and better looking, along with teaching Marketing I was also teaching Typing. Yes, Typing. That was the 70's. Not only were there no personal computers yet we were using manual typewriters. That's the kind where you have to press the key all the way down. Here is a picture of the ones we used. If you didn't hold the shift key all the way down long enough the capital letters would be above the line; they were called flying capitals.

Since these weren't computers we had to center everything manually. Horizontally, you went to the center of the paper and then backspaced once for every two letters and spaces to get the starting point. Vertically, you went lines available, minus lines used, divided by two, to find the starting line.

That's an interesting little anecdote but what is "really important" is that for one of our centering projects I would have kids center my Christmas list. I sure thought that was funny. Most kids thought it was funny too. At least the ones that had a sense of humor thought it was funny. I don't know about the rest of them.

Even when I went to full time Marketing in the 80's I was still handing out my Christmas list to kids. I always said, "I'm doing this as a service to you to help take the worry out of your shopping."

One year a kid told me that she had seen my Christmas listed taped up at Everett Mall. Good grief, what was wrong with kids back then?...

I have embraced my new life as a real estate agent but I still want to "give out" my Christmas list so here it is. Truly, I just want the last seven things. (But I'll take the other stuff too.)


Mr. P.’s 2010 Christmas List

Junior Mints

CD’s
(Cool ones of course. And by the way my mother doesn’t like me listening to explicit lyrics so DON’T get me any!)

Moonstruck Chocolates

An iTunes gift certificate

A Lamson Velocity 3.5 Hard Alox reel

A line for the reel

Rose Hill Chocolates

****A bonefish trip guided by MPHS Alumnus Michael White to wherever he says the fishing is good****
(Get this, get this!)

Moonstruck Chocolates
(I know)

A helicopter
(Slightly used would be okay)

A pilot
(Duh, I can’t fly the helicopter.)

Rose Hill Chocolates
(Yeah, yeah, I know)

An NHL Hockey Team
(Preferably in the western United States but I won’t be picky if you get me the Habs.)

My own island in the San Juans
(with a helicopter landing pad)

Microsoft
(Yes, the whole thing. Bill and Melinda would have me and Katy over for dinner I bet.)


The Blackfoot Reservoir
(Never mind I don’t want the island anymore; I’ll just take this reservoir. I really want that bonefish trip though.)

My own private parking space
(Everywhere I go)

Good health for my family and friends
(And me too)

Peace of mind and peace of heart for my family and friends
(And me too)

No suffering for my mother

World Peace
(Yes, I’m serious)

Justice
Forgiveness

Happiness and well being for my kids
Here is wishing all of you Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. I hope you get everything on your Christmas list and I hope you find some joy in helping someone else with their Christmas list.
It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.
P








Friday, November 19, 2010

Improving the Past

Working to improve is something I think I’m pretty darn good at. I strive to improve my own life and the lives of people I know and love. In my 36 years as a teacher, many times, I literally and figuratively used light to communicate belief, support, and community. I have, and still do, try to be someone who spreads light in the world.

Even at age 60 I still try to take good care of myself. Exercising regularly, and eating healthy foods (well most of the time) add to my well being. Treating myself with respect, spending time with people who treat me with respect, and treating others with respect are fundamental to taking good care of myself. Yes, treating others with respect adds to my well being.

I work to live happily in the present and to build a positive future for myself and people in my life. As a real estate agent I am work to take good care of people through the process of buying or selling a home.

As I age I am adapting to things that I need to do to improve or at least maintain my quality of life. For example, monitoring blood pressure, watching my cholesterol, and stretching regularly,

I believe that I am unusual in terms of my willingness and ability to work at improvement in my life and the lives of others. A good deal of my time and energy is spent helping myself and others to live happily in the present and to build bright futures.

Even a cursory look at my personal use of time and energy shows that I also spend an incredible amount of time trying to improve the past. Yes, I work extremely hard to improve the past. I worry and fret. I hold on to resentments. Over and over and over I think, “If only I would have…” Or, “I should have…” An honest appraisal of myself shows that I spend time every day trying to improve the past. When I think about that it sounds kind of ridiculous to me. I fear that I am unusual in my consistent and persistent efforts at improving the past.

Once again I have had to realize that possibly one of the best things I can do to live happily in the present and to influence a positive future is to STOP trying to improve the past. After 60 years I have yet to be successful in any attempt to improve the past. Am I slow or something? It has never worked and I still keep trying.

Today, I am not going to try to improve the past.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Proud to be an American: Part III

This past week I voted. It doesn't matter who I voted for or how I voted on the various initiatives. I voted.

When I was 18 years old the law of the land was that you had to be 21 to vote. In 1970, when I was 20, the voting age was changed to 18. I voted in the next election and I have voted in every election since then.

I do not take this incredible freedom for granted. I cherish it.

I think more amazing than that we get to vote is that even when we have close races there is still a peaceful transition of power. Were you tired of all the political advertising? It could have been guns. It could still be guns. Even if there are recounts there are still no guns.

I know the country isn't perfect but it is nevertheless incredible. I voted; I'm proud to be an American.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Pork and Beans

The FDA requires all food manufacturers to list ingredients on the label in order according to volume. The ingredient that is most predominant in the food is listed first, with the rest of the ingredients listed in descending order. For example, the Cherry Mountain Bar I am holding right now says, “sugar, partially hydrogenated palm kernel oil (what the heck is that?) peanuts, cocoa powder, whey, cherries, natural flavors, invertase, dextrose, etc. Okay I can kind of picture what palm kernel oil is but really, what the heck is invertase? The Snickers bar I am holding has chocolate, peanuts, corn syrup, sugar, etc. If I cared that much about the ingredients in each of these candy bars at least I could read the label and know roughly what was in them. I could also see how many grams of fat, sugar, and sodium there is in each bar along with how many calories.

Sometimes I enjoy some “pork and beans”. The reason I call them pork and beans is because the can says “Pork and Beans”. See, it's right there on the front of the can.




According to FDA labeling requirements the can would have mostly pork and then beans. One would think that means the can has pork in it. And of course beans too. Pork is listed first. That might even mean the can has mostly pork, with some beans. Now I like pork and beans, don’t get me wrong, it’s just that I have a concern about the labeling or the packaging or whatever. Even when I was little I remember asking my parents why the can said pork and beans but there wasn’t any pork.

The label says pork and beans but the ingredients in a can of pork and beans are prepared white beans, water, tomato puree and sugar. After that it says, “contains less than 2% of high fructose corn syrup, salt, distilled vinegar, pork, baking soda, onion powder…” Even though the darn things are called pork and beans on the front of the can there is less than 2% pork and that 2% has other stuff besides the pork.

But wait, if that’s not enough, what exactly does it mean to call something pork? The “pork” is two uniform cubes of pork fat. Come on. That’s the “pork”?




Are those two cubes cut from a big slab of pork fat? Do they cut thousands and thousands of pork fat cubes and then have a machine put two in each can? Is there an assembly line where someone plops two in every time a can rolls by? Do they melt fat, pour it into cube molds, let it solidify and then shoot them into the cans? Those two cubes of fat count as pork? Seriously? Okay, fine, they count as pork.

The thing is, is that I like pork and beans even though there isn’t any pork. The sugar and corn syrup probably aren’t good for me but eating the beans is better for me than the Cherry Mountain Bar or the Snickers bar. As a middle age person I have to be more aware of eating less fat, less cholesterol, and more fiber. Oh look, good news! Pork and beans are cholesterol free. AND they are low in fat. Plus they are high in fiber. That is such good news; I’m starting to think pork and beans might actually be health food.

I’m thinking that a can of pork and beans is kind of like life. I don’t always get what I think I’m going to get or what I’m picturing. Sometimes things just plain don’t go the way I want them to. Sometimes I’m picturing pork and I only get beans. Sometimes I feel subtly tricked by circumstances and people and sometimes I feel downright deceived. Okay, that’s life. The good news is that if I look carefully often there is more in the beans than there first appeared to be. In life, when I get past my frustrations and my disappointments there can still be joy in simple things. I probably need to take a lesson from the pork and beans and work harder on that.

It's the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, October 8, 2010

Goodbye 50's, Hello 60's!


Hmmm… So this is my last post on this blog as someone in my 50’s. Is that possible? Yikes, I will be 60 on Monday. Where did the time go? I just don’t know. By the time a person has lived for 60 years he should have at least a little insight about life and maybe be able to pass on a wise tidbit or two.

Part of me thinks I should post some good advice. I even know a small amount of good advice. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. That’s excellent advice. Manage the “phone call.” That’s also very good advice. The heart that loves is always young. So keep loving! That’s good advice too. I’m just full of good advice. Be thankful. Cherish your life. Yup, more good advice. Take out your head trash every week. Also good advice.

So what’s the best advice I can give after almost 60 years on this earth? Talk nice to yourself is way up there. Treat yourself with respect; that’s way up there too.

But you know, I think sometimes it’s just a very good idea to make homemade brownies. You know, from scratch. Now, there is good advice! But wait, if you eat the whole pan yourself, particularly in one evening, then that’s bad. If you share them, that’s good. I just made some last night. I shared with Katy.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend. (Make the brownies; you’ll be glad you did. It's good advice. I know because I'm almost 60.)

P

Friday, October 1, 2010

The Badometer: Part II

Sometimes I’m bad, like I mentioned last week. I do bad things like eat hot dogs. Sometimes I get bad readings on the badometer not because of what I do, but because of what I laugh at. I probably should know better but I just think some stuff is funny. I’m bad; what can I say?

My nephew, Steven, is currently a senior at Skyline High School. He plays goalkeeper for the soccer team. He has good grades and in the spring of 2009 he was invited to join the Honor Society. To gain admission into the Honor Society one of the things he was supposed to do was perform a certain number of hours of community service. He is a great kid but he just didn’t have the time to do the community service. I think that he really didn’t care at all about being in Honor Society, but let’s just say he didn’t have time for the community service. Yes, let’s just say that.

After he was sent the invitation letting him know that his grades qualified him for admission he was given an application packet and checklist of other items to complete like the community service. The deadline for submitting the application packet came and went. I don’t think Steven noticed or cared. Actually, I don’t think he cared one bit that the deadline passed.

Undeterred by Steven’s lack of interest in the Honor Society, the Faculty Selection Board sent him a form letter letting him know he had not been granted admission to the Honor Society because he had not applied. That alone makes me laugh. Oops, there goes the badometer. They encouraged him to reapply in the spring of 2010. I’m not sure how a person reapplies for something that he hasn’t already applied for. (Laughing again--the needle just moved a little more.)

Steven decided to respond to the faculty. He got out a Sharpie, and using his best penmanship, he wrote them a short note at the bottom of the letter the faculty had sent him. That would be the letter that let him know he could reapply for something he had never applied for. When his mom showed us the letter I asked for a copy because I thought it was so funny. Like I said, sometimes I am bad because of what I am doing. Sometimes I’m bad because of what I laugh at.


(Click on the letter to see a little larger version of it.)


It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend. (Try to laugh a little sometimes too.)

P

Friday, September 24, 2010

The Badometer: Part I



I try so hard to be good. I really do. I am a good person. Well mostly I am. Well, I think I am anyway. I try to do good things. You know I’m considerate and polite. I treat myself and others with respect. I’m professional and businesslike. Yeah, I’m a good person. I eat granola for breakfast. Well sometimes I do. Sometimes I eat cold pizza for breakfast but so what, that doesn’t make me bad; I’m still good. I think I am anyway. I eat fruit and I even like some vegetables. Sometimes I put blueberries in my granola. And yogurt too. Low fat. Dang, that’s so healthy. I must really be a good person. Yeah I like granola and blueberries and fruit and vegetables and skinless chicken, and low fat milk, and other good stuff. The trouble is that I like Cheetos too. I like Hershey bars with almonds and I like Nutty Buddies. I like bacon and breakfast sausage and I know they clog my veins. I like Snickers bars. I suppose that’s not such a bad thing and I suppose that they do at least one bad thing to me or possibly a plethora of bad things but the trouble is, sometimes I just don’t care. I just enjoy the Snickers bar. Clearly I’m not as good as I thought. Maybe I’m bad.

A particularly bad thing I do is eat hot dogs and enjoy them. Katy doesn’t like hot dogs so I try to only eat them when she is not home and I am feeling really rowdy. Recently we were talking about what to have for dinner and I said I wanted to have hot dogs and that I would go to the store and get her something else for dinner because I knew she didn’t like those darn vein clogging, heart stopping, cancer causing, tubes of death. She told me she wanted a mushroom.

A what?

I like mushrooms. Mostly I do. It kind of depends on where they are. I like mushrooms on pizza. For dinner or breakfast; it’s all good. Sometimes I like a mushroom burger. The thing is that a mushroom burger is supposed to have one burger and a bunch of mushrooms. How hard is that to understand? Saying I like mushrooms means that I like mushrooms with an “s”. It doesn’t mean I like mushroom. As in one single mushroom. Katy wanted a mushroom burger without the burger and with only one mushroom. I thought, are you serious, one mushroom. You want one mushroom for dinner? She said she would put it in a bun and have a mushroom burger. Whoa, whoa, whoa! That’s not a mushroom burger. A mushroom burger has to have a burger and the mushroom part means mushrooms not mushroom. Whatever. She said I could eat my nutritionless hot dogs and she would have a mushroom. One of them. One huge mushroom. Big enough to fit in a hamburger bun all by itself. Are you serious? Is there such a thing? Are they grown or are they manufactured? Are they even real? I think a mushroom that is that big is a processed mushroom or something. They take a bunch of real mushrooms, grind them up, press them together, and cram them in a mushroom mold to make them look like one, giant mushroom. What holds it together? Surely whatever is in that processed mushroom is worse for you than a little hot dog. Or two. Or three. And you want me to barbecue a mushroom? Are you serious? One mushroom all by itself? Who ever heard of such a thing?



I love my wife and I will do a lot to help her be happy. Even make her a fake mushroom burger.

The trouble is, is that as weird as I think barbecuing one mushroom is, I look at that darn thing on the barbecue sitting there next to my hotdogs and I think I’m not good; I’m bad. Katy is eating a mushroom and I’m eating hotdogs. What is wrong with me?

I decided to hook myself up to the badometer (rhymes with speedometer) to check to see if I am good or bad. The badometer is a scientific device of course. It is available at Radio Shack, Amazon, and directly from the manufacturer at Badometer.com.

If the hotdogs next to the mushroom aren’t enough to tell me I’m bad, the badometer confirmed it.

Dang it! What could I do?

I hooked Katy up to the badometer and of course she got a good reading. She always does.







I made fruit salad.



It improved my reading on the badometer.



But I just know that I will never be as good as my wife. Still, I refuse to eat one monster shroom to improve my reading. Maybe I’m just hopeless.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

Oh, and smile too. Just that simple thing will improve your reading on the badometer.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Proud to Be an American: Part II

I fished in Montana for several days at the end of August. In the motel we stayed in there was a simple breakfast served each morning as part of the package. The TV in the dining room always had Fox news playing. It seemed to be comfortable for most everyone in the room. I'm not saying whether or not I prefer Fox news. It's clear that Fox presents a conservative or right wing perspective. CNN presents a more liberal or left wing perspective. I'm not saying whether I prefer CNN. Heck, maybe what I really prefer is the Outdoor Channel but that's not the point. Maybe you think one or the other of these news sources is the "truth" and the other is "all lies". Maybe you prefer the cooking channel. Still that's not the point. Maybe there is no such thing as unbiased news reporting anywhere in the world. To a certain extent maybe we are all biased in one way or another.

So here's something else I like about America. We don't have unbiased news be we do have opposingly biased news. How many countries on the planet have that? A few, but not many. Regardless of whether I prefer FOX or CNN or the Outdoor Channel, I live in a country where the news can be reported from different perspectives. I do not take that freedom for granted. It is something else that makes me proud to be an American. My country is not perfect but it is still pretty darn amazing.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, September 10, 2010

Proud to be An American: Part I



Ten days after the terrorist attack in 2001 my students put on a Proud to be An American Program. The program had several elements including a moving assembly in the gym and forming the American flag on the football field. A sixty yard section of the field was divided up into approximately 325 grids. Second period classes were designated as red, white, or blue, and asked to wear that color. They were assigned to specific grids. We had no idea if kids would wear the color we asked them to wear and we had no idea if everyone could find their grids without ever having practiced. They wore the colors and they found the grid. That morning was an extraordinary experience on so many levels. The willingness to risk and the commitment that my students showed still inspires me years later.

Certainly there are many things that are not perfect about our country. I can acknowledge that and I can help to make things better. I also acknowledge that there are so many, so very many incredible, good things about my country.

Today, and particularly tomorrow, regardless of what is in the news, I choose to be proud to be an American.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, September 3, 2010

Choices and Directions

Even though there are choices in my life, every day I have choices, sometimes all that I see is red lights. They yell at me and give me all kinds of reasons to stay stopped. I feel like I don't have any choices and my life is controlled from outside of me. It frustrates me and I don't like it.



Sometimes at least a suggestion would be helpful. Watch out for that direction. Go this way. Okay, I can make the choice. The trouble is, sometimes I'm not smart enough to take the warning.



No, no, no. That's not the right way. Stay stopped.




Oh sure, don't go this way. Watch out for that way. Show me the GOOD way!


I don't want all this help. I don't want people making suggestions to me. I want to make up my own mind. And I want ALL the choices.





Sometimes I feel like deciding what to do is too difficult. I just need some clear direction. Yeah, that's what I'm talkin' about. Go THIS way.


Don't tell me what to do. I want to make up my OWN mind.



Are you serious? That's too many choices! How the heck am I supposed to know which way to go? How about that one in the middle? Is it really telling me to go both ways?



On the same day I feel like I have too many choices...



And no choices at all.


I always have choices. Damn It! They may not be the ones I want but I always have choices.


It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your car carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, August 20, 2010

Aging--Part V: It is Not All Easy

Some parts of aging are exciting and I have looked forward to them through the decades. Even now I still actually look forward to turning 60 in October; I am not dreading it in any way. Some aspects of aging are troubling and disconcerting. Things just don’t work as well as they did, I don’t recover as quickly, hearing and eyesight are diminished, balance and flexibility are not what they once were. It is, some days, sobering, troubling, and scary. Sometimes there is nothing else to be said except that things are what they are.

I want to age gracefully, to accept the changes that happen to me which I cannot control and to still actively make change in my own life for as long as I am alive.

I have made four posts recently that in my mind are upbeat and that show people aging well and still embracing life. Not all of aging is that way.

My mother is 87. She is my hero. If you know me and if you have heard me talk you know how true this is. Just a few years ago she was still driving to the grocery store and to church. Osteoporosis has just wrecked havoc on her bones. She is crooked and twisted. She walks very tentatively; she always uses a walker or holds someone’s arm. Her hands shake. She has experienced profound hearing loss this past year; even with her hearing aids she struggles to hear conversation and often doesn’t. She has cataracts that make it challenging for her to read. Nothing about this is glamorous, light hearted, or fun. She will battle until the end because that is who she is. She is scared.

Embrace and cherish your life. Help others do the same.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, July 30, 2010

Aging Part IV: June's dinner

Each summer over the last 12 years Katy and I have traveled somewhere with our with our long time friends, Jerry and Gretchen Schaefer. Usually we go hiking somewhere. This past week we spent time on Vancouver Island. The company was great, the hikes were beautiful, and the weather was just about perfect; we had a marvelous time. We stayed at a bed and breakfast in Sooke. In the morning, Norm, the owner, would prepare breakfast for the guests. We ate a fairly leisurely pace, gathered up our gear, and headed out to hike for the better part of the day. We would return to the bed and breakfast in the late afternoon, read for an hour and then go into town to have dinner. Two of the nights we ate at the Stone Pipe Grill. The menu is varied and the food is very good. The setting is comfortable, the staff is pleasant, and the prices are reasonable. Between the four of us in two nights we sampled several things on the menu. We had Butter chicken, Ginger Fried Beef, Pad Thai, Chicken Penne, Penne Primavera, and a curry dish. It was very tasty. Besides this kind of food the Stone Pipe serves other food also.

On the second night of eating dinner at the Stone Pipe Grill a couple sat down at the table next to us and ordered their meals. I didn’t hear them order but did see the waitress bring the meals. The husband had a cheeseburger and the wife had a chocolate sundae. That’s it, a chocolate sundae. I was really looking forward to my Butter Chicken but couldn’t help but notice that she was having a chocolate sundae for dinner and I was thinking that looked pretty dang good. I mean come on; ice cream has protein in it. Who knows, maybe it has antioxidants and Omega-3’s too. Okay, it probably doesn’t but so what, it might.

I just had to ask her if that was her dinner and she said it was. Now I want to be like that when I get older. I still want to eat (mostly) healthy foods but if I want to have ice cream for dinner then maybe I just will. I walked over to the table, introduced myself, and visited with them. Their names are Graham and June Brawnell. I believe they have lived in Sooke for 26 years but I’m not sure of that detail. I am sure that June felt she had a big lunch and only had room for a sundae for dinner. June is 72 years old and just seemed to be enjoying the heck out of her dinner. I sure would have. I enjoyed visiting with Graham and June for about 10 minutes. What nice people they are.

I sat back down at our table and chuckled about her dinner. It occurred to me that I wanted to take a picture of her eating the sundae but she had finished it. So that made me wonder, “How full is full?” Okay, June was too full from lunch to order Seafood Primavera or Butter Chicken for dinner, so she just had a sundae. But was she too full to eat a second sundae? I didn’t think so. I went to the back of the restaurant and asked the waitress if she would bring June another sundae so I could take a picture of her. I told the waitress that I wanted to put the picture and a short story in one of my blogs. I had offered to pay for the sundae. The waitress talked to the manager and they just brought it to her for free. I think you can pretty well tell from this picture if June enjoyed the second sundae.















Graham, good husband that he is, did help her eat it.



Seriously, here is a 72 year old woman savoring a simple pleasure in life, a chocolate sundae for dinner. It made me smile in the restaurant and it makes me smile now. Thanks June and Graham.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, July 23, 2010

Aging Part III: Making Out in the Car

Last week when Katy an I were riding bicycles she fell. She has a huge bruise on her hip and a smaller one on her elbow. The bruises have gotten worse since last week. I wrote last week how amzaing she was to get out there and try to learn to ride the bike at age 61. I was really proud of her for getting up after she fell and continuing to try and learn to ride. We are not talking about trying to remember something she used to know how to do; we are talking about learning to do it for the first time.

After 90 minutes of riding we headed for home. When we pulled up in the driveway I told her that I was very proud of her and that I was impressed with how hard she worked at learning to to do something new and that she got back up after falling.

We were still sitting in the driveway. I looked at her and thought she is still the same beautiful girl I married 32 years ago. So I asked her if she wanted to make out right there in the driveway. All of my life I think that I have had a lot of good ideas. The thing is, is that some of my good ideas work really well and some of the them don't work at all.

I have no idea when the last time we made out in car was. No idea at all. I know we did but who knows when it was. Heck I'm not sure if we have made out in the car since before we were married. Back then I would bring her home and we would sit outside her house in my mean 1969 Dodge Dart and kiss. It was heavenly.

Now my car has the gear shift lever in between two bucket seats instead of a "three on the tree" manual transmission with a bench seat. I sort of leaned over and tried to twist enough to get my mouth facing hers. Good grief, I don't have the slightest idea how on earth we ever could both twist that far for even three minutes let alone half an hour or an hour. I can't just blame it on the gear shift lever and the bucket seats; we just can't face each other anymore while we are sitting right next to each other. In the end, even as impressed as I was with her accomplishments, we had three quick kisses and that was the extent of making out in the car at age 60. Well heck, that's not what I had in mind, not at all. The bad news is that we just couldn't turn far enough to be even a little bit comfortable making out in the car. How did that happen?!

Ah, but the good news is that back in the house, even at our age, we are still able to make accomodations or other arrangements. Things worked out just dandy. Its still heavenly.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally. Enjoy your weekend.

P

Friday, July 16, 2010

Aging Part II: Learning to Ride a Bike

When Katy was seven years old she got a bike. She rode it a couple times before someone broke into the garage and stole it. It was never replaced so she never learned to ride a bike.

She has talked about learning to ride since we have been married. This week we got a bike for her and she is working at learning to ride. When we tried it out in the parking lot it was an effort for her to go even 10 feet without stopping. After about 40 minutes she made three laps of the parking lot albeit it very tentatively.

We went out on the Centennial Trail late Wednesday afternoon. She was anxious to learn but also very nervous. She was particularly concerned about going by people coming the other direction whether they were riding or walking. She stopped and let everyone go by.

We had been riding for over an hour before she fell. She banged her hip and her leg pretty hard. She got back on the bike and continued trying. We went again yesterday and rode again for about 90 minutes. She didn't fall and was able to ride farther without having to put her feet down.




How about that 61 year old girl! Still learning, still trying new things, still risking, still getting up when she falls. Dang it, ain't she somethin'!

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

PS Next week look for Aging Part III: Making Out in the Driveway

Friday, July 9, 2010

My Hard Life: Part I

Some days I get up and say, “Nothing hurts, everything works”; it’s going to be a good day. Some days I try hard to remind myself that when nothing hurts and everything works that’s a lot. Some days I think I have a hard life.

Late last night I returned from some fishing in Eastern Washington. Fishing was difficult the first day. I pouted about that. Like I said, I have a hard life. It was good the second day and very good the third day.

My hip hurts from so much wading the last three days on uneven, slippery rocks. My ears don’t work as well as they used to. Maybe I really do have a hard life.

Yesterday I had a potential seller tell me that they have an in-law who is a real estate agent and they need to work with her. Grrr... That cinches it; I do have a hard life.

It’s sunny out. As the years pass, warm weather makes me more and more happy. My wife is beautiful. I had a transaction close today and another home that went pending this morning. Today, “Nothing hurts (very much) and everything works (pretty well)”. I think that’s pretty dang good. Maybe I don’t have a hard life after all.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Friday, July 2, 2010

Mayor Kendall

This week Mayor Dennis Kendall of Marysville announced his resignation. He was a tremendous asset to the Marysville community.

In 2002 my students and I began working on a four part program to honor veterans. One of the components of our program was the building of a memorial for Killed in Action veterans from the Marysville/Tulalip area. We met with the architect to begin planning in the fall of 2002. The estimate for the cost of constructing the memorial was $15,000-$20,000. We had never raised this much money for a project and never attempted to construct something of this magnitude. A raffle and a ten site “super car wash” were the original plans we had for fund raising.

My students and I made several presentations about the project over the course of the winter and early spring, one of which was to Marysville afternoon Rotary. This group, certainly known for its strong commitment to our community, was very receptive to our program and in particular to helping with the memorial. At the suggestion of Dennis Kendall and Chris Nation we decided to conduct an auction to raise the money. The auction was a huge success; Dennis Kendall was instrumental in that success. He spent several days in our classroom coaching my students through each stage of the process. His communication skills and enthusiasm were tremendous assets. The memorial is like nothing on a high school campus anywhere in the country; it rivals the scope of a state memorial. During the summer the memorial was built Dennis volunteered many hours helping with the construction as well as helping to arrange sub contractors. His deep commitment to our community, his strong leadership, and his willingness to roll up his sleeves and work were all much in evidence these during the duration of the whole project.

Through the years Dennis was a regular visitor to my classroom. He often stopped in to say hello to me and my students. My students always appreciated seeing him and being able to dialog with him so openly.

Seeing the announcement of your resignation brings back so many good memories for me Dennis—so many positive experiences. Thanks you for your years of support to the community and in particular for your willingness to work directly with my students.

I would add, and I do so carefully and respectfully but without specific detail, that I know that Dennis has known adversity and disappointment, the kind that can make a person wonder, “What’s the point of caring?” Some of that adversity was happening while he was in office and helping us. That you maintained a positive attitude and straightened your back Dennis may be the most impressive thing of all. I am always impressed with people who have true emotional stamina. You do Dennis; you most certainly do.

Thank you for all you did for the community Mayor Kendall. I wish you and Sue the best in this next chapter of your life.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.


P

Friday, June 25, 2010

Aging: Part I

The Summer Solstice was this Monday here in Northern Hemisphere. It is the longest day of the year in terms of the time between sunrise and sunset. It is a time of year when the weather warms and we all hope for bright, sunny days. The weather will get warmer these next couple months but the days immediately are already getting shorter.

In just a few months I will be 60 years old. Largely, my days and my life are warm. I like that. I would like to think I am in the summer of my life. Maybe I’m not. Depending on what a person reads, an American male has an average life expectancy of about 75 years. That would mean my life is 80% complete. It is startling to think of it that way. I’m 4/5 of the way to the end of the road. That is a sobering thought.

If a person’s life was the calendar you can think of your life span as being in some month of the year. The day you are born is January 1. If you are 18 years old you are in March with lots of calendar ahead of you. If you are 30 years old you life is in the last week of May. If you are 45 you are in the first week of August. At 60 I am in the third week of October. Again, that is a startling thought to me because I think of myself as being in the summer of my life. I need to recognize that I’m not; I am likely in the last season of my life. My days and my life are warm but as the summer solstice passes this year and the weather improves I am entering the winter of my life.

In this winter of my life I resolve to embrace each day with an active mind, a generous heart, and a strong spirit.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Friday, June 18, 2010

Phone Calls: Part IV

You are asleep. Just as your alarm goes off and you start to wake up you realize your phone is ringing. You answer the phone before your alarm goes off. It’s that same voice again. Morning, after morning; it’s always the same voice. There’s a pause, just a very brief one; it is almost imperceptible. In that brief second you wonder if today the voice will criticize you relentlessly, complain at you in a dull, tired sort of way, talk to you angrily, or maybe even have some good things to say.

The phone that rings every morning isn't your cell phone or some old land line. It is the phone that rings in your head and in your heart. The caller is you. It is your own voice you hear. For every one of us it is our own voice we hear every morning when we wake up. Every morning. Our own voice can be the one that criticizes us relentlessly, complains incessantly, remembers hurts and slights both imagined and real. Our own voice can be the one that nutures us, encourages us, and helps us to heal. Our own voice is the one we hear every morning in that phone call. Make the voice a voice you want to hear. Make the call one that you want to get every morning. Instead of saying, "I hate it when you call; you never have anything good to say to me", make the call be one where you say, "I love it when you call!"

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Reflections on the Past Year

A year ago this week I was down to just a few days of school left in my 36 years in the classroom. It was a huge decision for me. I have missed the classroom and my students but have embraced my new life. The first time I heard myself say, “I was a teacher,” it sounded like a grammatical mistake to me. I had never said that before. For all of my adult life I had said, “I am a teacher.” I am a real estate agent now and am enjoying my new life. I like the different schedule, the different work, and the new challenges. I feel good about the work I do for people. They appreciate my work and my communication and I like that. Still, as I complete my first year of full time real estate sales it gives me pause for some reflection. There are so many things I would like to say now while I take time to reflect on the past year. As this year has progressed I have been very aware of what I would have been doing if I was still in the classroom. So many things, to remember, so many things… I think often of My Alumni and certainly thought often of the amazing junior class I finished with and what they would have been like as seniors. Again there are so many things I would like to say as I reflect but think I would use up all the space eBlogger allows you to have if I said it all. I decided to publish an email exchange as a way of trying to “summarize” some of my thoughts and reflections and to show what I miss most.


With Bill’s permission I am publishing the exchange between the two of us. He sent me an email in April 2008 asking me some questions and also saying some moving things that I really appreciated. He sent me the email again in February 2010 and asked for answers to questions again.

Bill begins in February 2010 and references an email from 2008. He says:

I keep old e-mails so I can follow up on things. Both professional and personal. At the bottom of this e-mail I sent to you just under 2 years ago; I had some questions. Some rhetorical, some not.

I would like some answers...

Going Out the Out Door?

How does a 36 year career conclude?
Are you going to wear a tie or work out clothes?
Will you cry? Laugh? See the faces of friends new and old? Will Kate be with you?
Will you still have boxes in your room or will it be cleaned up already?
Will you leave the lights on or the doors open?
Will you visit the old room one last time?
Will you exit down the long front drive of MPHS slowly over the speed bumps or zip out the back way twisting through the shade go past the old wooden Marysville Pilchuck sign?

Will the world stop? Will they know what just happened? Or will the world miss this major event from occurring? Will CNN cover it live? King 5? The Marysville Globe? Will the annual have a page about you in it?

Is it the end of compassionate education? Or just a sign of it?


From: Bill Fortunato
Date: 4/14/2008 12:37:51 PM
To: jkpankiewicz@comcast.net
Subject: My Teacher: Mr. P

I have been thinking about this quite a bit over the last week. I have been meaning to send you an e-mail since our dinner last week. Currently I am heading down to San Diego for the day to meet with a client. It is one of the joys of modern business. You can get anywhere on the west coast and back the same day. But it is tiring.
(My flight just returned to SeaTac because we had a fire warning light. Instead of being on the ground in SD for 9 hours, I will be on the ground for 6 hours. Yippy)

On making a difference and changing the world.

I heard you and Becky talking about this over dinner. My wish is that you never doubt yourself for one second. Through the years, it is clear to all that you have made a difference in so many students. It is not one student a year. Not one a quarter. Not one per period. You don't pick a favorite kid. Not a favorite class of kids. It is your goal change each of them. You not only teach, you inspire, mentor, and encourage.

Hundreds came before me and hundreds came after me. I don't believe any of your alumni would claim they felt like the class, events or teachings were routine. You never began to coast or let up.

It is said that it is worthwhile to be in education if you make a difference in one person's life. I am glad that you did not stop after just one. You have changed the world for hundreds of us.

Mr. P's Small Learning Community

School within a school. Learning communities. All this sounds familiar to me. Didn't you already achieve this in your classes? A smaller group within the school. It gives the student a sense of belonging. An area of interest that they can explore in depth learning.

Why is it this has to be administered from the top? Does it to have to be branded, labeled, analyzed, measured, metered and tracked to make sure it is good. Why can't it be good on its own?
Does it have to be wrapped up as the complete answer to all?

Is "no child left behind" an achievable goal? It is almost like 100% employment for a nation. It is a grand concept, but not a reality. My feeling is some are always left behind. Some have to be. Some choose to be. The ones that choose a different path are not bad or wrong. If we all took the same path, the world would be uninteresting. Flat, dull.

The community you build in your program should be the goal of the current model. It makes me sad that a model would be heralded as the solution to all would discourage someone that already provides this to his students.

My Path

I can't say my path was radical. Took the collage bound path all the way. Knew I was going to be an engineer in my junior year. Not a tough path to figure out. Went to a four year college and finished in four years. Pretty linear.

One thing I did do that would take me a different direction would be to drop French and take a class called Senior Sales and Marketing. To this day, I draw from the lessons I learned in an elective class. A class that I was told would not help me get scholarships or elevate my academic standing. I can't remember most of the lessons from high school. Not saying that I don't remember anything. This non-scholastic class was the one the stands out more than any other in high school.
Mostly I remember what it was like to be a part of the community we build that year. Hugs, high fives, tears, pounding. We believed it. Pounding. Believed it everything we had. Pounding. Believing.

My DECA Beads of Honor mean more to me than graduating "with honors" ever would have.

Going Out the Out Door?

How does a 36 year career conclude? Are you going to wear a tie or workout clothes? Will you cry? Laugh? See the faces of friends new and old? Will Kate be with you? Will you still have boxes in your room or will it be cleaned up already. Will you leave the lights on or the doors open? Will you visit the old room one last time? Will you exit down the long front drive of MPHS slowly over the speed bumps or zip out the back way twisting through the shade go past the old wooden Marysville-Pilchuck sign?

Will the world stop? Will they know what just happened? Or will the world miss this major event from occurring? Will CNN cover it live? King 5? The Marysville Globe? Will the annual have a page about you in it?

Is it the end of compassionate education? Or just a sign of it? The Marysville School District will not be the same. Nor will the state of education.

Perhaps a little dramatic. Yes, the sun will rise. Children in Marysville, Washington will go to school. The kids will likely not even know there is anything missing. I hope and pray there is another in the district that may match what is being lost.

In 14 Months

To you my friend, I hope I get invited to whatever event is held in your honor. Or at very least, I would feel honored to carry a box or two.

All the best to you. Much love.

Billy



Bill Fortunato, P.E.

PACLAND
1505 Westlake Avenue N, Suite 305
Seattle, WA 98109
Office: (206) 522-9510
Fax: (206) 522-8344


This is my reply to Bill in February 2010. It includes my answers to his questions.

Reply |Jim Pankiewicz to Bill
show details Feb 27, 2010

Good morning My Young Friend,

It touched me quite a lot to reread your email. You know, I still think about school every day. Not in the way I once did but I still do nevertheless. I still hear myself talking to kids; I can still see their faces. I don't think much anymore about the adults, not by any conscious choice, it just seems to have happened. Yesterday, I got a thank you note from a parent of a kid I had in class last year. It still gets to me. Thinking about kids in general is sort of like background music in my head and heart now. When I think about specific individuals that's different particularly if they still are an active part of my life.

How does a 36 year career conclude?

I haven't thought much about that last day for some time. Your email prompts me to recall.

There are so many ways to answer the question. It concluded on June 16, 2009 at 2:20. It was a day, like any day; it was a day like no other.

Many years ago we went to a finals schedule for the end of the year. One hundred minute periods. A one hundred minute, period six final on the fourth to the last day, with the remaining classes at about 30 minutes. One hundred minute finals for periods 5 and 4, on the third to the last day. Periods 3 and 2, on the second to the last day. And just period one on the last day.

The retirement party had been on Saturday, June 13. It was supposed to be the day after the last day of school. We had two snow days so we were back at school on Monday and Tuesday. It was a bit weird to be in school after the party. I had had seniors in periods two and three so I had no kids on Monday. I spent a good deal of time just getting rid of things.

On Tuesday, June 16, 2009, I had only my first period. I gave a final because that is what I'm supposed to do and because I wanted to read the answers. There was no way I was going to let what they wrote take all 100 minutes. I asked "regular school" questions like, "List the steps of the sale." "Give an example of steps 1, 3, 4, 5." "Write five feature/benefit statements for each of the following products and services." "Explain each of the elements of promotion and how we used them in a large scale project." Etc., I also asked a couple "not regular school" questions. I want, or wanted, kids to be able to say what they learned. I can still hear a couple teachers saying some years ago, "Why would you ask a question like that--how could they possibly explain what they learned?" Maybe they were right and I was wrong. Maybe if they can't explain or show what they learned then heck, maybe they didn't learn anything. I don't know if someone can always explain what they learned. Either way I asked, "What did you learn? Explain in your own words. If you put that you didn't learn a single thing I will give you credit for answering the question. Just don't be sarcastic please." And then I asked, "Okay, it's 10 years from now, it's 20 years from now. You have never been back to the MP campus. You don't remember much about high school. Much of it is a blur. Think about what you just said you learned in the previous question. Does it still matter to you? How have you used it for these past 10 or 20 years? If you have, how will you continue to use it?" Some of their answers brought tears.

I read all of the finals, I graded them, and I even wrote comments on virtually every one of them. Old habits die hard. Some kids told me they would come back to and get their papers later in the day. A few actually did. I entered them in the electronic gradebook, entered comments and submitted final grades for the last time.

They knew that I remembered the name of the first kid who walked in my room 36 years ago. Suzanne Paine. They knew that I remembered the name of the kid whose paper I first corrected. Radie Smutek. Some of them held their papers so that they could turn it in last so it would be the last one I corrected. It got a bit silly so I just shuffled them and told them to just turn theirs in because I wasn't finished with class. Finally there was a last paper.

I had really bonded with this class. It was all juniors. Twenty-six of them. They were really quite extraordinary. In terms of native intelligence they were honestly a room full of kids. Some were behind on credits, most were doing fine in high school. There wasn't a kid in the room with a 4.0. I believe the highest GPA was a 3.6. In so many ways they were just a bunch of ordinary kids. Their responses to things, their commitment, their repeated willingness to risk and to care was what made them so extraordinary. Both individually and collectively they felt, and acted on, an amazing sense of empowerment. They were special. Very, very special.

They were, for an aging teacher, a wonderful class to have on the last day. While they were angry with me for retiring what they felt was one year early, they were very pleased to be that last class.

After the final, we sat in the circle one last time. We had made time for any of them who wanted to speak to do so. Many of them did. It was moving. And then, I did "a few words" one last time. It was very emotional for me. It was comfortable, it was familiar, it was eerie. Do you know, even on that last day, after so damn many years, I was still nervous to do it? Not just nervous to be finishing but nervous to do the few words. What can I say...

The period ended and it was time to say goodbye. I stood at the doorway and said goodbye to each one of them. I hugged anyone who wanted to hug. They all did, even the boys.

A few of them lingered because they wanted to be the last one to walk out the door. The last three finally walked out together.

There was an end of the year faculty luncheon in the small cafeteria. We say goodbye to staff leaving for any reason. The person gets a card and a gift and someone presents it. Several people were leaving. Some had been pink slipped, some were just quitting education, some were transferring to another school or moving to another city. One was retiring after 36 years and he was last. Mr. Stokes had been asked to present the gift and say something. I have to say he was eloquent. I wish I had a copy of what he said. He got very choked up and had to stop a couple times. I was definitely moved. I don't even remember what the gift from the staff was. It was a gift certificate but I don't remember to where. Ted's I think. I think people expected me to say more than I did. I simply said, "Thank you Mr. Stokes, thank you very much." We hugged. Then I said, "Thank you staff. I leave Marysville-Pilchuck with a deep, profound, and enduring sense of gratitude for the privilege of having been a teacher. Thank you very much." And then I sat down. Some people shook my hand and said a few things to me.

Is it the end of compassionate education? Or just a sign of it?

I went back to my room to finish things up. I really expected to just have the rest of the afternoon kind of to myself to throw out the last few things. Several staff members stopped by to say goodbye. I appreciated all of them. A few seniors who had just graduated the week before came by to say goodbye. I think I was the most surprised by Mr. Kittle. He is a young teacher--I think about 8 or 9 years in the classroom. He is also the girl’s soccer coach. I have never had more than a brief hello type of conversation with him. I have never had the same lunch as him and never sat next to him in a meeting. So I was surprised when he came in; I guess I was surprised at what he said. He said congratulations on a long and successful career and things like that. That was nice of course since we really don't even know each other. Then he told me how much he appreciated the way I work with kids and that I was the teacher he aspired to be like. I got wide eyed and said thank you of course but also chuckled a bit and said to him that we had never really talked so I hoped he wasn't making me into something I wasn't. He chuckled back and explained that he had a lot of my kids in his classroom and several of his soccer players were in my classes through the years. He said that he appreciated the types of things we took on and how it benefitted the school and the community. He said that kids talked about me in ways they didn't talk about other teachers. He even said in passing that he thought his girls might even be a little better soccer players because of the program. I said that we did unusual things but no soccer drills. I thanked him very much and said, "Young Mr. Kittle, you had the heart to come over here and say what you did to an aging teacher you don't know. Take that heart and use it to risk in the classroom. Not just with your team but in the classroom too." We shook hands and I said thanks again and he left.


I started this response early this morning. I had two meetings with clients so now I am getting back to it.


Are you going to wear a tie or workout clothes?

In 1986 I couldn't stand one of the administrators at the time. An opening came up at Woodinville HS and I applied. I had an interview with Bob Boesche, the vocational director. He was thrilled that I was interested. We talked for 2 hours. He said that I was his first choice but that the principal still had to interview me and give his approval. I was interviewed by the principal, Dave Rumppe, along with two vice-principals whose names escape me. He told me early on in the interview that he was reluctant to hire me because he said that he didn't want the DECA program to get too big. I told him that I didn't want it to get too big either. I was only with the principals for an hour. A few days later Bob Boesche called me to say that they had chosen another candidate over his objections. I pouted for four days. I thought about the juniors I had that year and knew that I would have a good year with them as seniors the next fall. I resolved to make the best of things with the administrator I didn’t like. As it turned out he left that October and his replacement was great. Had I got that job in Woodinville I believe I would have liked it and done well. Still, I would not have met so many other amazing kids at MPHS so I am very grateful to Mr. Rumppe for not hiring me. I would have never known you for instance. After that, I pretty well knew that I would retire from MPHS. So I can say that since that point I always knew what I would wear on the last day. A white shirt and a red tie. There just wasn't any question.

Will you still have boxes in your room or will it be cleaned up already?

I had been getting rid of things for months actually. Doing it a little at a time helped me with the transition and it helped me manage the workload. I actually brought very little home. My yearbooks, my pictures, some speech notes, and a few awards, are all that made it. Loads and loads of stuff went in the dumpster. On that last day there were still some things to get rid of and I still had to take a few things out to my vehicle. Because several people came by to say hello or goodbye I was a bit later getting finished with these things than I thought I would be. I had expected to have an hour to just sit quietly and think. As it was I only had a few minutes but that was fine. The chairs were up, the room was neat, everything was off the walls, the file cabinets were empty, books were stacked and in order; things were ready for the new teacher. I wrote him/her a short note wishing him/her the best and left it on the desk.


The last day of school is early dismissal for kids but it is a full day for the teachers. Reality is that people leave as soon as their grades are turned in and the rest of their summer checkout form is completed. By 1:00 the campus is pretty darn empty except for the secretaries, the principals, and the custodians.

For years I had got to school early and left late. I still got to school at 6:30 on that last day and still stayed until 2:20. I just needed to do that.
I did have the chance to sit for a few minutes and reflect. I was not willing to leave before my contract day was over but I didn't want to stay until it was dark either. I had made up my mind some time before that I would leave precisely at 2:20. It helped me to know when it was the end. At 2:20 I got up, walked over to the door, turned and faced the room, kissed the wall, thanked God out loud for the privilege, and stepped out of the room with my face to the classroom. I locked the door and walked over to BE-6, my old room, the one you had class in. I let myself in and spent a few minutes remembering. Then I went over to the office to turn my keys in. It was a solitary moment as I guess it should be. We all had to turn our keys in the year of the strike. Other than that I had never turned my keys in for the summer before. I got a little light headed when I took them off the ring. I hugged the two registrars who took my keys and said goodbye to them. I walked out to my vehicle and just headed down the driveway at a normal pace. Certainly I was aware that it was the last time. I knew I was no longer Mr. P.

It was, as you know, a difficult decision. It is one about which I have no regrets. I have embraced my new life. In fact, this afternoon I listed the home of one of my alumni. I will be inputing it into the Multiple here shortly.

I appreciate you sending me this email again Bill. I have reread it several times. Thanks for asking me the questions again. I value your continued friendship and am thrilled for you that you have a new daughter. I look forward to meeting her.

With love,

P

That is the end of the email exchange. I spoke with Mayor Kendall two weeks ago. We talked for half an hour about a lot of things. He knew the end of the school year was coming up and while he asked me if I missed the classroom it was more like he volunteered what it was he knew I missed most of all. He said, "You miss the realationships, don't you." It wasn't really a question. Yes, I miss the relationships and I appreciate the relationships I have with Alumni with whom I am still in touch even if is just casual exchanges on Facebook.

Looking back over this year I miss the classroom. I would repeat what I said to the staff. I leave (left) Marysville-Pilchuck with a deep, profound and enduring sense of gratitude for the privilege of having been a teacher.

To all of my Alumni, one year later, thank you so very, very much

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Friday, June 4, 2010

Forgiveness: Part III

I started this post months ago. I have drafted something, revised it, thought about it, deleted it, and started it all over.

At age 59 I have to admit that sometimes I'm just not as good at forgiving as I should be or could be. Depending on circumstances I have excuses and in some cases I have some very good reasons to not forgive.

I find myself, reminding myself, and relearning that sometimes the best reason to forgive someone isn't because they deserve it. Sometimes they don't deserve forgiveness. Maybe the best reason for me to forgive someone is for my own peace of mind and peace of heart.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Gary and Josh

The Everett Parks Department sponsors a kid’s fish-in at Silver Lake each May. The Evergreen Fly Fishing Club, which I am a member of, helps with the event. There is a net pen full of fish set up near the shore and kids who come can catch up to two fish each. Fishing poles, reels, and bait are provided for the kids. It is a popular and well attended event every year.

At our fly club meetings part of our agenda is for each of us to give fishing reports and for officers and committee chairs to give reports.

At our last meeting, during the fishing reports, one our members Gary talked about the fishing he had done since the last meeting and then said that he wanted to talk about a kid he had helped at the fish-in. The boy, Josh, came with his grandpa. Gary said that as they approached he saw that Josh had a white cane so he knew working with him was going to be different. Gary explained that besides being blind Josh was also autistic so he didn’t say much at all. Gary handed Josh the fishing pole and explained to him what he was holding and had him feel the whole thing. Josh had never fished before. Gary also had him touch the reel and turn the handle and then feel the line and the hook. Gary baited the hook for him and cast it out. In short order Josh had a fish, his first ever, and he reeled it in. Gary picked up the trout and let Josh feel it and stick his fingers in its mouth. Gary set him up again and Josh caught a second fish.

This time of year the guys in the club do a lot of fishing so almost everyone has a fishing report. Some of the reports are lengthy and some are short; most are interesting. Of all the reports that evening going away I enjoyed Gary’s story of helping Josh more than anything. I was moved that Gary was so careful to take Josh for who he was and to help him have a good experience.

It gets too easy for me sometimes to complain and be cynical about the world. As soon as Gary was finished talking I put both my arms in the air, kind of like the touchdown signal, and then did two thumbs up towards him. I appreciated so much hearing this story of one human being reaching out to another who he had never met. I appreciated how Gary treated Josh with respect and dignity. I take inspiration from things like this; it encourages me to want to be a better person.

It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cars carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P

Friday, May 21, 2010

Pearl Harbor

About a month ago Katy and were in Hawaii. We toured Pearl Harbor on the island of Oahu. It was quite moving. On a Sunday morning, December 7, 1941 this was the site of the Japanese attack on the U. S. Pacific Fleet.

Many of us have seen the movie Tora, Tora, Tora or the movie Pearl Harbor. For many years I have wanted to see this place. I have wanted to tour the Arizona Memorial. I can’t explain why but I have particularly wanted to see the hill that the first wave of Japanese planes flew over. There is a line in the movie Gladiator just before the Romans attack the last stronghold in Germania, where as General Maximus gives the command to attack, he says to Quintus, “Unleash hell.” As Commander Fuchida led the first wave of the attack over the mountains to begin bombing, he realized that the Japanese fleet had achieved total surprise. To communicate that to his fleet he broke radio silence and yelled, “Tora, Tora, Tora” and in a matter of moments they unleashed hell.

A bomb went through the forward deck of the Arizona and exploded an ammunition magazine. The ship was sunk in the harbor and still rests there. 1,177 died on the ship and many are entombed with the wreckage. Oil still leaks from the Arizona. I spent some time reading the names on the list of men who died on the Arizona. Several times I saw the same last name; in some cases there were three and even four men with the same last name. I felt that this couldn’t all be coincidence so I asked a tour guide about it. We learned that there were 37 sets of brothers on the ship. Twenty-three sets died that day.



When we worked on and built our Veteran’s Memorial at Marysville-Pilchuck we learned what a gold star family is. A gold star family is one who has lost a son or daughter in combat. What would it have been like to lose all of your sons in one minute? I found myself remembering Kristen Hendrix, MPHS 2006 reading the dedication along with Gold Star Mom, Betty Pearson. I remembered Katey and Kelly Robertson walking Hazel Hammond out to the memorial where she very gently touched the name of her KIA son, Jack Hammond. I thought about Marine Corporal, Jack Elkins, from Washington State who survived the Bataan death march. I remembered his grandson, Marine Lieutenant Brian Hensarling. I remembered Marine Veterans, Greg Chiaravalle and Brian Johnson, who show their respect by volunteering to maintain the Memorial.

We also toured the battleship Missouri where the Japanese formally surrendered. Again, it was all very moving.


As you walk up to the spot where you board the ferry to the Arizona Memorial there are 18 display boards on the path. Board number 16 gives information about the first wave of the attack and has a picture of Commander Fuchida.


Walking by I saw an elderly Japanese man reading this board. He was crying. It wasn’t the kind of crying where he had just a moment of being choked up with a lone tear; he was crying hard, the kind of crying you can hear not just see. I wondered what he was thinking and feeling. Was he feeling shame for the carnage his ancestors caused that Sunday morning almost 70 years ago? Was he related to one of the sailors or aviators involved in the attack? Was he related to someone else who fought in the war? Almost for sure he is; I am. Was he feeling the lifetime of pain that the families of the dead would feel? What about those families who lost all their sons in one morning? Was he feeling shame? I wondered if maybe he was crying so hard because he might even be related to Fuchida. I also wondered if maybe he cried so hard because he had family who died when the Enola Gay dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Did he have family in Hiroshima or Nagasaki? Was he feeling a intense, seething anger for these attacks? Did he have friends and family who fought and died in the war? What was that old man feeling?

I wonder if he was feeling almost all of those things.

No matter what he thought about the past I wondered if he was feeling tremendous gratitude. All he had to do was purchase a plane ticket and show a passport to be able to stand on American soil. If I want to go to Japan all I have to do is purchase a plane ticket and show my passport. That we could both stand there did not happen without tremendous sacrifices. Maybe he was moved by those sacrifices. I surely was.



It is the weekend. Please be good. Drive your cares carefully. Ride with people who drive carefully. Treat yourself with respect. Spend time with people who treat you with respect. Treat other people with respect. Talk nice to yourself; you deserve it. I look forward to hearing from you or seeing you. Keep yourself whole physically and emotionally.

P