Monday, November 30, 2015

For my kiddos: "TEACHER FINISHED-UH"

When I was 14 years old I taught VBS on an Indian reservation in Oklahoma for one week. I met this beautiful, olive-skinned, brown-eyed girl named Keelie. She was maybe five. I'm sure I havent crossed her mind since I left. Just as she didn't cross mine until today. I cried for a good hour or two when we left the reservation that day. I remember it quite clearly. I wrote letters and emailed some of them for awhile. Of course those things fade out. It took maybe three weeks to "forget" Keelie. 
Today I told Wendy bye. You know, "bug in a bag girl." My girl. I know she's just a five-year-old spunky, chip on that left front tooth, chubby cheeked girl, but she was what I looked forward to every Saturday morning. Luckily for me, she never missed a class. Maybe today that's unlucky for me cause that was one more day to fall for her ridiculously adorableness. Wendy will grow up, as they all do, and as we all do, and she'll probably forget me, too. I'll never forget her, though. While I taught her for 18 months, as well as 200 or so other students, she was teaching me. Of course they all did, but Wendy sparked it. Fueled it really.
From the moment I sat down to observe her class while the teacher I was replacing still taught, I was infatuated. She was fascinated with my nose ring and just tapped it for a solid minute saying, "shenmae?" Then she had that damn bug in the bag, y'all. I thought she was the coolest kid in the world. Mostly because I saw my younger self there. I used to spend hours collecting rolly pollys, worms, caterpillars or whatever. I once cried for an hour when this girl in preschool squished my ladybug. (Yeah, I hold grudges.)
Anyway, when I found out Wendy's class was mine I was so pumped! In the beginning she gave me that Hello Kitty bracelet and it was like a pact to me. This girl was mine. No doubts. When you get that mentality a myriad of other emotions and connections associate with that. 
Here's what I've learned in 18 months  teaching children thanks, in large, to Wendy. 
After Wendy, I was connecting with all my students. I knew their favorite colors, parents occupations, dislikes, emotional triggers, quirks, bathroom routines, hometowns and so on. The students became mine. This meant they were my responsibility! 

"Wait! What? I don't even remember if I turned off the coffee pot this morning. Ah, your nose is bleeding? Put your head back. No, don't! Just put this tissue there. Are you choking? Please don't be choking! Drink this water. Why are you crying? Don't hit him! Sure you can have some of my snacks! Wait! Are you allergic to peanuts? Shit, you don't know what allergic even means. Where's your mom?"

These are just a fraction of the thoughts that have crossed my mind in the last 547 days. 
I don't have kids and maybe I never will but I've got about 150 I claim. 150 I'd give my last ¥5 to for a snack. 150 I'd take a bullet for if some ass hat came in my school (which wouldn't happen here). 150 ....... You get the idea.
It's been 18 months I've been teaching and some students have come and gone, but for the most part many I've taught the entirety of my time here. And they are mine. When we talk about students in the office we say things like, 'your Lizy' or 'your Will' since many of the names are shared it helps distinguish. 
Their parents send them in with a tiny backpack of hope and leave them in our hands. Point is, for one or two hours a week, they're my responsibility.
In training we're taught to be patient. Use our inside voices. Be stern, but never harsh. Don't scream. Some days, however, we've just reached our limit. We don't mean to yell or speak so loudly, we just want to be heard and quickly. We want to make our point ASAP so yelling just becomes inevitable.
It startles the children, no doubt. When they grab their ears, often followed by, "you scared me, teacher," I know I've been acknowledged.
Aside from learning a bit of patience, what it is to love and what responsibility and passion are, this job has taught me why my mom and dad used to yell so damn much instead of simply saying, "please don't do that sweet daughter that we love so much." 
The reason, nothing else to it, hands down, is PANIC. Like holy crap WTF is happening kind of panic!!! The sweatin' bullets kind. 
Here is a somewhat translation of the actual meaning behind all the screamed and shouted commands, if you will. Mostly, because aside from the commonly used ones, I can't remember all the things I've ever shouted in panic mode. The bold is the emphasized word, here's what can or should follow but isn't always voiced.
"STOP! DONT! QUIT!"
... Running in the hallway before you collide full impact with another adult-sized human!
... Lifting the desk up and down before you smash your fingers!
... rocking back and forth in the chair before you fall off/out/over!
... Playing with scissors or you'll cut yourself or someone else.
... Swinging your backpack around like a lunatic before you hit someone else or yourself.
... Running in the halls because someone could be carrying a coffee or tea.
... Pulling on my legs cause if I fall down there is a possibility I'll lose balance and fall on you. 
............
I know I need to move on and that this job was not meant to be forever. Today, my boss told me, "keep making changes." I know that I'm supposed to do some majorly awesome things. What they are is beyond me, though. I just know I'm supposed to float around, touch down, make appearances here and there and move along. 
I hope that if only one of my students remembers me 10 years from now then I did something here. I made an impact somehow. I know for any former teacher of mine that was their greatest hope. 
Personally, I don't know how you public school teachers do it. You spend every day of an entire school year with a class of students. Then start all over the next year. I remember being in school and always going back to say hello to old teachers, I only now realize how special that feels. So, even at 25, 35, 45, whatever age, tell an old teacher thanks. There really isn't anything we want more in this life. Oh, except to see you do really amazing things like be a doctor, engineer or a lawyer. And even more so, do what you're good at, passionate about and what you want. There are never too many starving artists, struggling musicians playing in bars or writers writing hotel reviews until they get there. Because while the rest of the world around you may say, "What are you doing with your life?" The teachers will say, "I always knew you had it in you."

 

Crazy 1, 2 & 3 :)
Clay






 
 
 






 
 






 







Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Good morning from ISIS

This morning I woke to the sound of semi-fierce knocking on the door. Living in a foreign country knocks on the door are always a bit intimidating. You don't usually borrow sugar from the neighbors. Basically you would only hear knocking if you were expecting company. 
The Chinese voices on the other side of the door ranged in pitch and distinction and it sounded like at least three men. 
My Chinese is enough I knew they were saying "police." The steady rapping at the door told me that before they opened their mouths. 
In China, all residents, foreign or local, must register with the local police station in their neighborhoods for residency permits. A way for the government to keep tabs on who is who and where. 
Now is the time I tell you the door being banged on isn't mine... 
Three weeks ago I made a new friend. Let's call him Leish. This means "why" in Arabic and has a greater meaning for this story. He's from Syria. 
Let me back track on our current friendship and conversations. You see, Leish inspired me to write a blog the day I met him. I've slowly been adding and subtracting to it careful of what I say given the state of the world and the place Syrians stand in it. This guy works for China's biggest news network as a foreign news expert watching video footage and giving it the go ahead or the boot to be broadcast. 
Last week, on the way to see another friends band play I asked him how it really was in Syria and how he dealt with it.
"It's sad to see your country blown to pieces every day on TV. Like oh, I know that street. It was so beautiful. Or that was my favorite cafe," he said.
Back tracking more to show my total lack of comprehension and understanding of the situation in Syria... The night I met him I was asking how long he'd been in China. The usual ex pat introductory conversation. He said he hadn't been home in five years. My response, "Why?" His response, "I can't." Me again, this time to myself, 'you fucking moronic American girl. Good luck salvaging this conversation.' 
Guys, I'm clearly aware of the situation in Syria. However, in a routine conversation when meeting new people I work on auto pilot. 
Lucky for me, my southern charm was able to explain my word vomit and I managed to make a new friend before leaving the bar that night. 
That being said, after spending more time with him I decided I didn't know enough. I spent four hours researching all the situations, names, events and history of ISIS, Syria, Iraq, Muslims, Al Qaeda, etc. 
Those four hours reminded me why I keep a pretty strict no news policy for my life; its fucking tragic. 
I cried a bit then called my mom and bitched a bit more about the world, humanity, religion, Christians, etc... 
Last night I'm having drinks with Jazz at my new spot and Leish shows up and I ask about his day and how he is doing with the whole Paris/Beirut situation. Because he is a victim of those attacks as much as the others. In some ways even more so. 
"The police came to my house today asking for my papers and what hours I work and some other shit. I told them my hours and shut the door," he said. 
Last night we closed the bar down and a few of us went to Leish's house after. Being early morning and drunk by the time we all wound down I crashed there. 
It was Leish's door being knocked on this morning. The look on his face when they left, y'all. The fucking look on his face!!! I've known many forms of heartbreak in my life, but the state in which my heart responded to the look on his face I hope to God never happens again. I just walked over and hugged him and could say nothing more than, "I'm sorry." Then I told him, "It'll be some other race in a couple years. You're going to the get through this." 
I'm sorry? How pathetic is that? There is nothing that will restore his soul or stop the depression he suffers from this civil war. Hugging his family after seeing them for the first time in five years, safe from ISIS' wrath will only mildly ease that pain.
He later went on to say he doesn't want to teach his children the Arabic language or ever go back there. Guys, the state of his humanity is so crushed by all of this that he would reject passing on his heritage and culture to his children. Do you see where I'm going with this yet? 
So I ask you. I am fucking begging you cowards to stand up. If 'all lives matter' please stop racial profiling!!! 
My friend is an atheist, his father doesn't practice Islam and he has lived in China for six years. That's a year and a half prior to when the civil war officially began in Syria. But it wasn't the beginning of racial profiling for him, was it? 
He said something to me when we were talking 'politics,' if you will. "You Americans are always spraying your freedom," he said.
He is right! We are so focused on making every country ''better'' or like us because democracy is best and all that other shit. But I ask you, is it really? 
9-11 has become almost nothing more than an excuse used to justify Islamaphobia. Americans are afraid. Given the history of the world we never know when a dictator will rise and hunt entire races or more mildly, when attacks will happen like this weekend in Paris. History repeats itself as unfortunate as that is. I understand we should be cautious about things. However, the majority of the world lives in paranoia of the past repeating itself rather than embracing the future. Maybe, simply thinking out loud here, if we opened our minds, read a bit more and thought before we spoke, the world could be a helluva lot more peaceful. 
Peace as a whole is something I don't believe the world will ever reach. Even after it ends. Westerners in general tend to have a lot more freedoms, comforts and accessibility to the 'finer things in life.' Believe me! I live in the capital of one of the world's most powerful, rising nations and some days I look around and still see third world characteristics. Those characteristics are often what I love most about China, though. Not everyone has become absorbed in modern ways. Some still live simply on their farms, drive mules and horses to town with fresh veggies and fruits and some have never seen a foreigner until I make eye contact with them. 
Lastly, here's the most important thing I learned in my research. The population of ISIS members who actually believe in ISIS' 'cause' is 30%. Thirty!
We read the stories how someone saved for a year to escape and couldn't survive the lifeboat journey across the ocean. Or the families separated and faced with extreme choices for survival. The refugees with nothing but the clothes on their backs. The refugees who only eat if they're lucky enough. The refugees turned away...
Im sitting here thinking how terrible it must be to be given the option to convert or die. Many of us like to think we'd be the brave one and die before joining such a cause. But what if you have children? Maybe they've somehow kept their hope through it all and are just fighting to make it through the end. Don't you think they hate themselves enough? They don't need strangers across the world hating them, too. Is it any different from US soldiers who oppose "The Iraqi Conflict" yet are deployed to fight for something they don't agree with only to return home with PTSD or worse?
Call me a communist, liberal extremist, or socialist because I promise it won't be the first time (or the last). But let me tell you what I am. I am a fucking human being that doesn't see color, race or religion. What we need to do is live our own lives and when we meet someone different from us we should ask questions. We are so caught up in fear that we would let the world and human race crumble before us. This isn't about Islam, Christianity or any other religion. It's about lives, y'all. 
I've been accused of being a lot of things some would consider a negative cause to support. I've been called a lot by strangers, family and friends the same since becoming more outspoken on issues as such. However, by any fellow foreigner I've met I've never been considered or called ignorant. And that's quite an accomplishment for an American (especially a native of the South). I'm not a communist, but I see it at work here and it works for the most part. I'm not going to advocate it in the States, though. I see democracy in my own country and it too has flaws. That's all I'm saying. People fear uncertainty. What we don't know. And rather than ask, we assume which typically ends poorly. The basis of most of what I support comes from my souls reaction to humankind. If I closed my mind to one kind of human of a particular race, religion, sexual preference, etc, then I would be closed to their entire religion, race, etc. If I closed my mind to all Syrians because of ISIS I wouldn't have had the experience I had this morning with Leish. I wouldn't be able to witness first hand, the effects of ISIS, not only on the world, but on innocent individuals plagued by the name on their passport.