Author Archives: M

How to Fly The Friendlier Skies

I’m not a serious business traveler, but I do fly an average of once a month due to my far-flung family and friends.  Thus, I consider myself a reasonably savvy flier.  Often as I wait in the security line or listen to an irate customer chewing out a desk agent, it occurs to me that people should have to pass some kind of test to be allowed to board an airplane.  

Since the government is unlikely to start issuing licenses to passengers, the next best thing is educating the masses. In honor of the upcoming busiest travel day of the year, I present my guide to flying: How to Fly the Friendlier Skies.

(This guide specifically addresses concerns for flying domestically on the day before Thanksgiving and should not be considered totally helpful when flying abroad.)

Not being Kate Middleton is no excuse for rude airline etiquette.

Read the rest of this entry

The Pacey Story

Today is the birthday of one of the greatest friends I’ve ever had.  Happy birthday, Diette. This one’s for you.

Editor’s Note: This is how I remember it. But we all know that memory is a tricky thing. If you were there, if you remember more, forgive my liberty with details.  Also, enormous thanks to Marcie Maxwell for allowing the use of some of her fantastic pictures.

To paraphrase a line written by the great JK Rowling, there are some things in life that you can’t experience with someone else without becoming very good friends.

In my case, we were already good friends, but this cemented the deal.

Read the rest of this entry

Animal Crackers and Cocoa With Ms. Balkom

A friend from high school emailed me today.  Our senior year English teacher died.   It wasn’t a total shock– I heard at my reunion a couple of years ago that she was ill. All the same, the office went still for a moment.  There are people we don’t see for years, that don’t cross our minds for months, but we still feel real loss when they leave. Ms. Balkom was this kind of person.

There are a lot of things to be said about death and loss and English teachers so often being the people that impact our lives the most, and I could probably write some things that would make her cringe about sparks burning in our hearts or whatever.  Instead, I’m just going to honor her with my favorite Balkom story.

English IV AP in our all-girls school was a strange place.

First, we met in a forgotten annex off the main room of the library. They used to store dusty VCRs there and the only windows were near the top of  only one wall in the room.  We sat in tottering desks under fluorescent lights during the last period of the day. We resented that– the school allowed seniors with study hall during 8th hour to leave. We suspected they purposefully scheduled English AP during that block to sabotage us.   There might have been 15 of us all crowded into that space meant to be a closet. Our numbers shrank considerably when Ms Balkom visited our junior year English class and barked that it didn’t matter if we called her class “Honors” or “AP”- she was teaching the same course and we should be prepared to sweat.  From two classrooms of 20 girls each in English III Honors down to 15 total. We were the brave few.

Second,  those brave 15 were a motley crew. We were a mix of the usual, “I must take every honors class I can so I can get a scholarship and go to college and be successful and preserve my class ranking” (um, yeah, guilty) and the artsy types who eschewed other honors classes but excelled in English.   There was a cross section of high school hierarchy- an athlete or two, some student council busybodies (again, guilty),  almost the whole drama club, some borderline goth girls, a girl nominated for Homecoming Queen… you get the idea.  But under the flat gaze of Ms. Balkom, we were all best friends for about an hour a day. In that room, we perfectly understood each other. We were in the trenches together.

Third, and most important, our fearless leader contributed to the general strangeness. Ms Balkom looked the part of the crazy English teacher: short, thin, salt and pepper hair cut in a wispy bob, oversized sweaters, and shark eyes.  She never once smoked in class, but I always visualize her sitting in her desk with a cigarette dangling from her hand as she rasped that we would be reading Richard IIIagain because we clearly missed the point.  (Years later I contend that we did not miss the point. It’s a sucky play. There’s a reason most schools stick to Hamlet and Othello and such.) She alternated between blunt academic and whimsical artist.  She filled our papers with chicken scratch critique, told us “not to be stupid” when writing our essays for the AP test, and once shut down my interpretation of poetry with a simple, “No” before asking someone else to answer (no explanation, no “well, poetry is subjective,” just, “No”).  But she also read us poems about animal crackers and cocoa, she dressed as a cheerleader when we played the junior class in puffy polo, and she had the best throaty laugh– like something out of an old Hollywood movie.

So, there we were. A stuffy gray room, a group of misfits with a shared purpose, and a salty middle aged woman who was nearly mythical at our school for being a difficult teacher.    Since it was an English class, she didn’t put much stock in tests. She preferred essays and response papers. By the second semester, we hit a groove. Most of us already knew what college we would attend so we weren’t that concerned about grades (except those of us with high anxiety… again, guilty).  We settled into a comfortable routine– we would gather our desks in a circle and discuss that day’s reading like a really great book club. I remember that class fondly, naturally. But then came the drama test.

Ms. Balkom announced she would be giving us one test that 9 weeks. We would mostly write essays, but we could count on one test– the drama test.  We spent several weeks learning about the history of drama, learning the terminology, reading excerpts from plays. I think most of us saw it as an opportunity to get an easy good grade. Essays could be subjective, but there’s one right answer to a multiple choice question, right?

A little foreshadowing: you might think that, but you would be wrong.  Dead wrong.

So we actually studied. By this point in senior year, I won’t say we were phoning it in in other classes, but let’s just say I spent most of Honors Physics founding the Boys R Stupid Club with my lab partners.  This test felt important though. We liked the class, we liked the drama unit even if it did involve reading Richard III TWICE,  and I think most of all– we just liked Ms. Balkom. So for this test, I made flash cards. I think there was a study group at a coffee house. The day of the test, I sat outside the gym with my best friend and we quizzed each other.  I remember thinking we were ready, that we had actually worked hard and it would pay off.

In college, I took a stats class that left me spinning. I took a psychobio class that literally made me scream. I had to memorize all the parts of the brain and their functions for another class and explain the  physical mechanics of a flip flop for another But this… this might be the hardest test of my life.  There was a matching section with something like 30 concepts with corresponding definitions, but we wouldn’t use all terms so it wasn’t a simple one-to-one match as we were allowed to use some concepts more than once. There were those dreaded multiple choice questions with answers like, “D) A and B only, E) All of the above, F) A, B, and E only.”   There were True/False questions that made no sense.  For once, the short answer responses felt like a recess.

That afternoon, we all handed in our tests to a smiling Ms. Balkom. I think it was a Friday. I think she told us to have a good weekend as she gathered all the scantrons. I think we all exchanged looks as we left and knew that it would be our last weekend on the planet.

On Monday, you could have easily picked out the members of English AP by our faces: pure, unadulterated terror. We all knew we bombed. Every last one of us. Nobody left the test thinking, “Well, I think I guessed right…”  I remember going back to my notes that weekend, aghast that I could have forgotten so much, and found that many of the concepts tested couldn’t be found in my notes. I wasn’t alone. A cloud settled over us, we passed each other in the halls between classes with shared condolences in our eyes, and for once we did not pray that the day would end.

We whispered amongst ourselves– did she know yet? Did she grade them over the weekend? Did she run the tests through the scantron machine at school yet?  Would we have to pretend it went fine? We watched for her in the school halls throughout the day; a rumor spread that she was cursing in the teacher’s lounge.  But she was the type to curse anyway, so it could be nothing

How could this have happened? We weren’t dumb. There were National Merit Scholars in our midst. Our valedictorian sat next to me during the test. For the love of  everything good, we actually studied for this one.

We finally met in our annex. For once, we did not chatter. Mary did not try to show off her dance moves. Erin wasn’t harassing Clare about what she was doing after school. Diette wasn’t making fun of me for generally being lame. We just sat in our desks, quiet as mice. Anne Boleyn must have felt that way in her tower.  Maybe when you were little, your mother would get really angry with you and shout, “Just wait til your father gets home!”  It was exactly like that.

Lizzy finally broke the ice. She said something like, “She’s  going to come through the walls like lightening and KABOOM.”  She pretended to explode something in her hands. Balkom’s rage would incinerate us all. How could we have let her down?

In the end, she came into the classroom with a flat expression. We tracked her progress to the front of the room and she dropped her stack of papers and books on a desk.  She looked up at us, a room full of basset hound eyed 18 year old girls quaking in our scruffy tennis shoes.  I’m not sure exactly what she said, but in my memory, she always says in a voice dryer than the desert, “Well. That didn’t go well.”

And that was it. In the end, I can’t remember if she yelled at us. I think she handed back our tests and, sure enough, the highest grade went to our valedictorian and wasn’t any higher than an 85. Most people were much lower than that. I think we went over the test, she agreed to grade us on a curve, and there might have even been a make up test or extra credit or something.   There’s not a profound big finish to the story or  a punch line.  It’s kind of a lame story, actually. We took a really hard test and no one got an A or even a B.  That’s it.

I’m sitting here with my hot cocoa (but no animal crackers), and I’m trying to figure out why this story comes to mind, why this is the tribute story.  Other than producing a ridiculous, nonsensical test, Ms. Balkom isn’t even featured that much.  Years later, I’m not even facebook friends with everyone in that class, but I know that if I only say, “drama test,” to any of them, we’ll have plenty to say to each other. Any one of them would groan and then laugh. And maybe that’s the key to any good teacher- someone that scares the shit out of you but then leaves you laughing.

The first day of class, we sat in our desks like petrified bunnies. The last day of class that year, we sat outside and had a tea party. I still have the plastic tea cup… and a picture in which Balkom the Great and Terrible is wearing someone’s hula skirt.

She  was always interesting, always thought-provoking, always witty, always honest. I’m glad to have known her and even more glad that I learned from her in the equivalent of the cupboard under the stairs. Cheers to you, Ms. Balkom. Thank you.

“Animal crackers and cocoa to drink, 
That is the finest of suppers, I think; 
When I’m grown up and can have what I please 
I think I shall always insist upon these.”


A Tiny Announcement

I’ve realized my posts about books don’t appeal to some of you, so I’m starting a new blog just for my book related chatter. You can now read this blog with the assurance that I will no longer try to foist YA books upon you!  But if you’re into that sort of thing, you can come check out The Bibliotherapist.  That’s: http://thebibliotherapist.wordpress.com/

I’ll continues posting my reviews there, but I’m also going to attempt posting book related news that appeals to me and some more creative endeavors. Check it out if you’re curious.

All-Girls School Confessional #3

The list of “Stuff I Picked Up at Catholic All-Girls School  That May or May Not Be Good For Me in the Long Run” continues.  Tonight- a Very Special Edition.  For part 1 of my list, see here. Part 2 is here.

I should probably call this All-Girls School Confessional #3: Sex Ed. But then I feared what element that title might attract. It sounds like a kinky porn, doesn’t it?  Like maybe I’m wearing a tiny plaid skirt with nothing underneath while I suck on a lollipop. Sorry– everybody knows that the hem of your uniform  skirt should be no more than 4 inches above your knees and all Catholic schoolgirls wear shorts under their skirts.  In fact- let’s make that part of the list.

Read the rest of this entry

All-Girls School Confessional #2

…. in which I continue my list of “Stuff I Picked Up at Catholic All-Girls School That May or May Not Be Good For Me in the Long Run.” (Still taking suggestions for a better title).

See Part 1 Here.

Read the rest of this entry

All-Girls School Confessional #1

I went to a Catholic all-girls school.  As I get older, it becomes clear this left me with some cognitive distortions and strange habits. Thus, I’m starting a new series called, “Stuff I Picked Up in Catholic All-Girls School That May or May Not Be Good For Me In The Long Run.”   You can see where a snappier title might be helpful.

Before I start… a kind of disclaimer. I don’t pretend my high school experience is exemplary for all Catholic all-girls school alums.  I don’t even pretend it was exemplary for alumnae of my old school.  I think there are some common threads you may recognize, however. If not, you can just laugh at how dumb I am. You won’t be alone.

Without further ado… Part 1

Read the rest of this entry

Red Wine & Diet Coke

I was going to write about books all last month, but instead I went to holiday parties, watched “very special” Christmas episodes on TV, and ate my weight in sugar cookies. Then, I was going to write a blog entry every day in the New Year until I caught up with my Book Report list, but that plan stalled out when I started watching Netflix Instant Queue.

But now, two days into SNOMG 2011, I find myself with some extra time on my hands. I cleaned out my closet, read a couple of books, tried to make my dog frolic (she refused), and made muffins.

 

Spicy Cheddar Pumpkin muffins from the Baked cookbook.

The natural conclusion to my day would be challenging my neighbors to a wii bowling tournament or working on The Novel. Instead, I’m experimenting with red wine and Diet Coke.

Read the rest of this entry

To Which Ever Jerk It May Concern

Nothing will bring you out of blog hiatus faster than unsatisfied rage.

Today at lunch, I trekked home from work (as I do everyday) to walk my dog, Heidi. For the past 3 years, this is what we do: I go to work, she stays in my bathroom until lunch, I walk her to my neighbor’s for an afternoon play date, I pick her up after work, we lounge about watching bad TV until bed. Lather, rinse, and repeat.

Something different happened today. At my door, the following sign greeted me:

I Wish Your Yappy Mutt Would Die

Classy, right? I’m some what shocked because my neighbors are mostly young professionals and the majority own dogs, and I wouldn’t expect this kind of malice from any of them.    And who would wish death on this?

Read the rest of this entry

Guest Post: I Am Twenty Nine.

Two weeks ago, a co-worker/friend  IMed me through our company IM service and asked what I was doing. I (truthfully) answered that I was , “waiting.”

“For what?” she replied.

“Everything. My next call. Lunch. The weekend. My next career move. My future. EVERYTHING.”

I thought I went through my quarter life crisis a couple of years ago, but it turns out that little bugger lasts a few years. Or maybe we just always feel confused and uneasy about the future.   Lately, my friends seem fixated on this issue. Everyone seems to be fighting a pretty hard battle. I mean that relatively. Like, yes, we know it’s a First World Problem and there are Worse Things Out There.

But that’s not really stopping us, now is it?

Today, I’m pleased to present my first guest post from my friend LMac, who likes the idea of a blog in theory but doesn’t want to deal with maintaining one.  She felt inspired this week and wrote the essay you will find under the cut.  It’s a little more maudlin that the kind of post I usually write, but it feels appropriate given today is Good Friday.  I always feel this day deserves serious reflection. I’ll spare you my religious ponderings, but it feels right to post something serious today.

Withour further ado… I present Lmac’s Essay: I am Twenty Nine.

Read the rest of this entry