Monday, January 30, 2023

Random bullets of Monday morning; or, my life as Whack-A-Mole

I miss my teaching-free Thursdays! With no free day during the week, I always hope for some free time over the weekend, but it just isn't happening right now. The harmonic convergence of a whole mess of deadlines led to my working all weekend, with just a few idle hours last night to read the paper and play silly card games. Hence I'm starting the week already feeling like I can't get caught up, and it's not going to get better any time soon because I have both a doctor's appointment and two special meetings this afternoon--and by special I mean long and angry. So I've got nothing of any value to contribute to the universe this morning except some random thoughts:

  • Years ago when I was the most junior member of my department, a senior colleague asked me to cover a class for her on a day when she expected to be absent. Why? Because she expected that attending a controversial faculty meeting on a particular topic would upset her so much that she'd be in no condition to teach the next day. I agreed to cover the class, but what if we all did this? I'm attending a meeting that's bound to upset me so I need you to cover my classes. What, you're attending the same meeting? But surely you won't be as upset as I will!
  • Overheard from a prospective student: "I'm looking forward to taking liberal arts courses because it's nice to have an easy class that lets you shut down your brain for a while." He's in for a rude awakening. 
  • Prospective students who participated in a scholarship competition on Saturday morning impressed me with their ability to engage in academic conversation, but I was really impressed by their attire. High school guys in suits and ties! I can't remember the last time I saw so much professional attire assembled in any of my classrooms; dressed in my usual casual teaching gear, I felt a little outclassed. Will they look any different when they show up next fall? If they show up next fall?
  • All that hard work over the weekend allowed me to finally check two major items off my to-do list: I finished proofreading the page proofs for the comedy book, and I revised and resubmitted a journal article. It feels great to get these projects off my plate (for now), and just in time, too: I'm collecting drafts and papers in all my classes over the next 10 days. 
My life right now is like a giant game of Whack-A-Mole: smash one time-consuming project into smithereens and another two pop up demanding attention. 

 

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Journeying in a nightmare world

Lately I've been struggling with logistical nightmares--literally. Instead of waking up screaming from dreams about invasions of nasty critters, I'm alert at 3 a.m. in a cold sweat after a nightmare about the problems inherent in getting certain people from point A to point B. In one dream I'm frantically trying to pack for an immediate departure but my very young daughter keeps taking things out of the suitcase as quickly as I put them in there, and in another I'm trying to transport my small children across a post-apocalyptic landscape but I can't find adequate food so I have to stop them from eating random stuff they pick up off the ground, and in the worst nightmare I suddenly realize, in the middle of a complicated journey, that I've accidentally misplaced a child. Terrifying.

I could understand having these dreams back when I was responsible for planning one of our many camping trips when my kids were little, like the time we drove to the Grand Canyon camping all the way or the weeks we spent camping in the Great Smoky Mountains. Making reservations, stocking up on supplies, and packing all the camping gear for a family of four was enough to give anyone nightmares, while planning a workable route in the pre-GPS era presented its own special challenges. 

But I don't do that any more. Our trips these days are much simpler and more focused: the two of us pack for ourselves, drive someplace interesting, and stay in a motel or rental or with relatives. No nightmares need apply.

And yet here I am, waking up frantically night after night from dreams of thwarted journeys presenting logistical challenges incapable of resolution. I sense a theme, but I don't know what it means. I'm reminded, though, of my father's nightmares about running from floods, recurrent frightening dreams that stopped only after our family weathered the floods following Hurricane Agnes in Pennsylvania in 1972. We lived through danger and terror and rampant destruction but came out unharmed, and after that Dad's flood dreams dissipated.

So maybe what I need is to start living dangerously: plan a logistical nightmare of a trip in hopes of banishing the logistical nightmares haunting my dreams. But where should I go, and how can I heighten the risk level to make the journey less comfortable, predictable, and safe? 

Maybe I'll just plan a comforting staycation. After all those nightmares, I could really use a nap. 

Monday, January 23, 2023

Of dimness and Dramamine

I stood in the hallway flicking the light-switch on and off, on and off, on and off without making any discernible difference in the dimness surrounding me, and somehow it felt like a metaphor for so many things happening in my world right now.

The fluorescent lights just outside my office are dead, which happens from time to time, but the lights inside my office are working just fine, so I'll have no problem getting my work done today--except for some pesky distractions, the most pressing being a knotty faculty governance situation that led me to greet a colleague this morning with "Thank you for not sending me angry emails!"

I can't talk about the angry emails or why they're being sent but they've become a fixture in the lives of current members of Faculty Council. Last Thursday, for instance, I was enjoying back-t0-back classes involving lively discussion and clear evidence of student learning, and after class I was floating to my office feeling like a rockstar until I opened my email and saw the emails that had arrived while I was teaching, which brought me right back down to earth with a splat.

There were more over the weekend that I had a good excuse to ignore because (a) I'm not in the habit of reading email, angry or not, during church; and (b) I was sick. Sick-ish. Worst attack of vertigo I've experienced in years--the kind that requires me to sit perfectly still and stare at the wall because any attempt at movement results in the immediate need to vomit. 

Dramamine made the room stop spinning, though I'm still a bit wobbly this morning. I stopped at the store this morning to stock up on non-drowsy Dramamine in case the vertigo comes back full force, but the local pharmacy doesn't stock anything to prevent the onset of angry emails. And so I'll sit in my brightly lit office focusing on the work that makes me happy and trying to ignore the outer darkness.

Friday, January 20, 2023

Will work for popcorn

I'm sitting in my office looking out the window as a campus flag flaps furiously in the wind and a chickadee hops along a tree limb; I ought to be reading some student writing or prepping Monday's American Lit class, but I can't concentrate on any of that because the smell of popcorn is calling me.

We're having a popcorn bar in my building today with big bowls of popcorn and all kinds of toppings, plus we're invited to paint rocks or bricks with inspirational slogans. For a month we've had a big coloring sheet and markers hanging in the hallway, and rumor has it that we'll soon have access to a Lego table.

I don't have a problem with any of these attempts to boost campus morale. Some curmudgeon might be inclined to ask Why are we eating popcorn or coloring pictures when we should be addressing serious campus issues, but I'll tell you what: I already spend three to five hours a week sitting in meetings among people trying desperately to solve serious campus issues, and I'd rather be coloring. I mean, I can't wrangle with administrators or disentangle institutional prose every minute of the day, so taking a little time out to eat popcorn with my colleagues will make those tasks a little less onerous.

I could suggest a few other methods to improve campus morale--Raises all around! Personalized parking spaces! Free massages in the faculty lounge!--but the current budget crisis puts the kibosh on anything that costs more than a potluck lunch. And so we accept the popcorn bar as a small but yummy moment in the midst of a massive distasteful mess, a brief chance to enjoy some crunchy deliciousness before we get back to serious work.

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Marching to the beat of a different semester

Today I accidentally kept a class about five minutes over time and nobody told me to stop. Apparently I'm capable of talking about Zora Neale Hurston at great length without being aware of the passage of time. I didn't even see anyone packing up and getting ready to leave. "Next time, make me stop," I told my students, but we'll see how well they comply.

Today feels like Monday since we didn't have classes yesterday but it can't be Monday because I'm already done teaching for the day at lunchtime. On Mondays I have an afternoon class and frequent late-afternoon meetings, but Tuesdays and Thursdays I'm done at 12:15 (or 12:20 if I lose track of time). Kind of a different schedule for me this semester: no 8 a.m. classes; no morning classes on MWF; no first-year composition; back-to-back 75-minute classes Tuesday and Thursday mornings. I haven't yet internalized the rhythm of the week but so far I'm managing well enough.

It feels strange to have no teaching-free days, but even stranger to be teaching only three classes. For years I've taught four classes (and four different preps!) every semester, but this time I'm teaching American Lit Survey, Creative Nonfiction, and an upper-level special topics literature class I'm calling Between Fact and Fiction in which we'll read works that skirt the line between genres. Today we discussed a couple of chapters from Zora Neale Hurston's autobiography, Dust Tracks on a Road, juxtaposed with chapters covering the same information from Valerie Boyd's biography, Wrapped in Rainbows. Fun reading and interesting discussion about the sometimes murky relationship between "truth" and "fact."

The course release provides time to work on a special project for the provost--designing resources and training events for department chairs and providing mentoring for new chairs. This will mean more meetings and lots of paperwork, but it's nice to have a new challenge and a break from teaching composition. Nothing against composition, but: I've paid my dues. Everyone needs a break sometimes, and this one came at just the right time for me. If I pace myself and keep an eye on the clock, I may make it to the end of the semester with my sanity mostly intact.

Friday, January 13, 2023

Christine Smallwood's "The Life of the Mind"

Speaking of the life of the mind, I've just finished reading The Life of the Mind, a novel by Christine Smallwood focusing on the travails of Dorothy, an adjunct instructor teaching in an English department in New York City who is, from the first line, deeply engaged with the frailty of the body. The novel covers a period--and suddenly I see why it's going to be difficult to summarize this novel, because it's relatively plotless but covers a short span of time from the beginning of Dorothy's unfortunate miscarriage to the restoration of her menstrual period. 

Yes, there's a whole lot of blood in this novel, as well as sweat and tears and lumpy tissue and other bodily excretions. I wouldn't want to try to count the number of scenes that take place inside a bathroom. Dorothy struggles with an intransigent photocopier in the university library,  attends an academic conference in Las Vegas, sings karaoke disastrously at a party, and talks (or fails to talk) to her therapist (or one of her two therapists), but she also frequently attends to bodily functions that are never mentioned in 19th-century novels. It is impossible, for instance, to imagine Dorothea Brooke engaging in any way with a chamber pot, but Smallwood's Dorothy does a lot of her best thinking in the bathroom.

And much of the novel focuses on Dorothy's thoughts, most of which remain unspoken. As she agonizes over whether or how to share the fact of her miscarriage with the people closest to her, she thinks about Coleridge's ancient mariner:

She did not want to be the mariner, forcing the story of her shame on unwilling ears, yet she could not deny that only by telling his tale was the mariner released from his shame. But to be the mariner--to hold the attention of others--involved some combination of tragedy and gruesome charisma, some sheer skill, that she lacked.

But if Dorothy can't tell her story to the people closest to her, Smallwood can tell her story to us, making readers the wedding guests who "cannot choose but hear."

Well, I suppose we could choose to not hear simply by closing the book, but I didn't want to. It's refreshing to see an academic novel focusing so closely on a female protagonist who is whip-smart and witty but also oddly inept in social situations. The book is funny, particularly regarding the petty posturing common to academe--the chapter set at an academic conference is worth the price of admission--but it is also deeply philosophical and engaged with a wide range of literature and ideas.

For instance, while Dorothy is getting an ultrasound to determine whether her miscarriage is complete, she recalls the point in Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain when Hans Castorp views an x-ray of his own innards:

Hans Castorp had been looking at bones, so maybe that explained the gravity of his feelings, the concreteness of his epiphany, his sense that he was meeting his own future self. His confrontation was with the very structure of the, his, human form, and with, no less, the hand--the part of the body that reaches out, that is manipulative, active, external, that writes and drives and builds and prays and feels. The hand. Dorothy was looking at a spongy interior, a disused room, a warehouse for a shell company, a cavern or cave. She knew from her undergraduate education that the shadows projected on the walls of a cave are never to be trusted, that they lack the reality of flesh, and of philosophy. If the womb was a grave it was also a junk drawer.

There's so much going on here regarding gender and Thomas Mann and Plato and the limits of human knowledge--the passage seems to keep opening up passages to new understanding while folding back in on itself. Everything is complicated, including the connections between mind and body.

It's no wonder that this chapter ends with Dorothy wishing for a place where "she could put her body down for a while, just a little while, before getting back into it." But this is just the problem with the life of the mind: it can't be separated from the frailty of the body. Christine Smallwood brings this conundrum to vivid life in The Life of the Mind, inviting readers to dig into the grave, fumble around in the junk drawer, and peer inside the bloody cave to see what blurry outlines of new ideas might eventually emerge.  

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

The life of the mind vs. the frailties of the body

Water, water everywhere--except where it's most needed. I've been texting with a California friend who's dealing with the current inundation, and I've also been emailing a committee chair asking whether this afternoon's meeting can be moved to a building where there are functioning rest rooms--Asking for a friend, but nobody's fooled by that.

No water in my building or most others on campus. Classes start tomorrow. Incoming students are undergoing tests just up the hall while repairpersons do something with the elevators that requires banging and shouting and my colleagues are frantically photocopying handouts and posting course materials to Canvas, but if you want to use a rest room, be prepared to walk. If you're in a hurry, walk fast.

I have some projects to finish before my afternoon meeting so at 11:30 I drove out to visit the brand-new Panera that just opened in town, but I was not the only person excited about finally getting a local Panera. The place was hopping, and not just with people looking for a functioning rest room. It took 27 minutes for my order to arrive. I look forward to returning after the initial rush of excitement dies down a bit.

The agenda for this afternoon's meeting has me stressed out before it even starts, but the thought of spending two or three stressful hours without access to a rest room makes me want to run home and hide under the bed. Someone could make a killing right now setting up a campus kiosk to sell adult diapers. Am I planning to attend that meeting? Depends....

 

 

Monday, January 09, 2023

A little respect goes a long way

Anyone who's ever worked as an adjunct knows a story like this one: Back when I was finishing my dissertation, I worked as an adjunct instructor at a community college for a few semesters. One semester I was on campus photocopying syllabi a few days before classes started when a full-time prof said, "I thought you weren't teaching this semester." I assured her that I was indeed scheduled to teach an American Lit Survey class, and she looked puzzled. When I got home, I found a message on my answering machine from the dean, who informed me that--oops!--they wouldn't be needing my services after all and she'd just forgotten to let me know. Sorry!

Well what could I do? I was a powerless adjunct, with no voice or rights or reason to expect respect. I got angry but I moved on.

A year later I was again working as an adjunct, this time for my current institution, and a few days before classes started the provost (!) came to my office (a real office, not a cubicle!!) in person (!!!) to tell me that one of my classes was being cancelled and to ask me what other kind of service I could do for the College in its place. Together we came up with a workable solution. I was still sad that the class had to be cancelled, but the consultative process left me feeling valued and respected--even though I was a powerless adjunct.

All leaders occasionally have to communicate bad news, but which communication method is more likely to improve campus morale, inspire employee loyalty, and promote further cooperation? At a time of budget crisis and staff cuts, when faculty members at all levels are expected to make sacrifices, I hope that the consultative method will prevail, but given the haste with which important decisions are being made, I fear that the last-minute-surprise  method is becoming the default.

I didn't want to be treated like a replaceable cog in a vast faceless machine when I was an adjunct, and I don't like it any better now--but at least now I can fight back. I doubt that my intransigence will have much impact, but it might make me feel a little better about the sacrifices we're being asked--no, required--to make.

Wednesday, January 04, 2023

Some insights from a return to the real world

Why is it always a surprise to come back from a trip and find all the messes I left behind still waiting for me? I mean, I know no one's going to break into my house to take down my Christmas tree or clean up the plumbing-repair mess from the bathroom floor, but it's a shock to come home and find that the house has not cleaned itself, and neither have the syllabi written themselves or the annoying tasks checked themselves off my to-do list. 

A few insights from a half-week of getting stuff done:

Putting course content on Canvas is much easier the second time around. Prettier, too. Experience matters.

Maybe linking all my recurring payments to the same credit card is not a great idea, because if, for instance, some miscreant steals my card number and tries to purchase $2.99 worth of random items in Mexico City on Christmas Eve, and if my credit card company recognizes the transaction as bogus and informs me that my card has been compromised and cancels my card, I'm going to have my hands full deleting the old card number from all my subscriptions  and accounts and replacing it with the new card number. I thought I'd updated everything yesterday, but today I was reminded that the old card was also linked to my MLA membership, my cloud storage subscription, and my Zappos account. Back to work.

My new driver's license finally arrived, confirming that the DMV still uses those special cameras designed to make everyone look like a homeless serial killer, but I had to have a chat with our local postmaster about how it arrived, because it's apparent that the new  mail carrier who sometimes substitutes for our regular rural mail carrier does not actually know where our house is located. In the past month we've had packages delivered to the drainage ditch next to our mailbox, to our neighbor's front porch, and to our neighbor's back porch, which was a problem because she didn't see that pile of Christmas gifts and loose mail for a full week.  Good thing the high winds didn't blow them away! I'd hate to have to go to the DMV all over again.

The peace and calm that result from time away from campus can hold on for a little while after the trip is over, surviving even through Canvas clicking and credit-card fiascos and complicated chats with kindly postmasters, but a certain kind of email related to faculty governance is sufficient to dissipate all traces of travel euphoria. I guess I'm glad that I didn't have to think about campus financial shenanigans for a week or two, but here we are again scrambling under the sofa cushions for a few million dollars, and I keep wondering why these messes didn't clean themselves up while I was gone.

 

Monday, January 02, 2023

Weighing the crowbars against the wildflowers: 2022 in review

As I look back over a year's worth of blog posts, the biggest surprise is not how little I wrote in 2022 (104 posts!) or how rarely I wrote about books in any depth (maybe twice?). No: I'm most surprised by the number of times I threatened to bash on something with a crowbar--or, once, with a space heater.

I am not a violent person! I can't remember the last time I hit any person or thing--intentionally, that is. I have a gift for unintentionally smashing things, from my own knee to my own noggin to a cup of vanilla latte to a stranger's car. But in 2022 the prospect of wielding a crowbar against various objects kept coming up in my blog posts, and I think I know why: in a year full of difficult events I couldn't fully write about in public, my pent-up frustrations manifested as imaginary crowbars ready to do some smashing.

The year had its wonderful moments, often involving birds, butterflies, beaches, wildflowers, grandkids, or some combination of these things. But even some of the most delightful moments featured unpleasant intrusions--like the time a stray dog tried to put its herding skills to work on my grandkids.

My students sometimes surprised me with delightful writing and discussions, their willingness to sample pawpaws or their ability to create art inspired by literature. In the spring I enjoyed my Tuesday afternoon discussion and laughs with the retirees who signed on to learn about the history of comedy in my Learning in Retirement class, which I was reluctant to teach until I saw how much fun and perspective my students brought to the table.

And my colleagues continued to provide enlightenment and encouragement, proving, as I wrote in one post, that even in the face of disaster, we can "grit our teeth and carry on" if we work together.

But let me tell you: we've really needed that skill this year. Early in the year, we all thought that the biggest controversy we would face on campus would be whether to move to a mask-optional policy, but then in February we learned that the campus was facing a serious financial crisis that would lead to unprecedented cuts in positions, budgets, and benefits. One sudden personnel change made me wonder whether we'd entered the kind of universe in which anvils can suddenly fall from the sky to crush whole careers. 

All this uncertainty led to discord between various campus constituencies and a multiplication of long, anguished meetings in which we flailed away at Gordian knots without finding the proper tools to slice through them. As a member of Faculty Council, I developed survival strategies for three-hour meetings and often found myself privy to all kinds of information that I couldn't share in public, and often I just couldn't find the words to deal with the difficult issues.

As the long-term impact of this crisis became apparent, I struggled with a lot of angst about concluding my career "not with a bang, but a whimper." Not only is it unlikely that I'll ever get another raise, I also see enrollments declining in courses I care deeply about alongside an insistence that tenured faculty are too expensive and ought to be replaced by adjuncts or technology. I fear that if we can't quantify our intangible qualities in a spreadsheet, we will sacrifice the essence of a Liberal Arts education.  

But despite all this extracurricular angst, I still keep teaching--and writing about it. Early in the year I faced some rough academic weather, and I soon found myself facing some unexpected challenges--students secretly recording classes or relying on spinbots--alongside the usual failures to understand basic instructions. I struggled to say yes to students, convey bad news effectively, and avoid the hazards of Grading Brain, and sometimes technical difficulties were an albatross around my neck, from malfunctioning Zoom links to faulty hybrid teaching for snowbound students to an intransigent internet connection that led me to make a nuisance of myself.

Covid still had an impact, both in and out of the classroom. My students sometimes cheered me in the dark times as the virus kept rearing its ugly head even in times that should have been joyous. I've been sick with nasty sinus infections or colds several times this year but still have never tested positive for Covid, despite frequent exposure. 

The worst time, of course, occurred around my father's death. I'd endured a desperate road trip to try to reach him before he died, followed by the task of helping to clear up his effects and settle his estate, followed by cataract surgery, followed by another road trip to Florida for the funeral, all suffused with my attempt to understand his life and death, so I guess it's no surprise that I was sick and glum for most of July.

But thanks to Dad's estate, we've managed to take care of some deferred maintenance projects this year, from a new bed to a massive painting project to new flooring in several rooms--and let's not forget the septic-tank cleaning! Not exactly the highlight of my year but definitely a task that needed to be checked off the list. Sometimes household disasters provided needed distraction from knottier problems.

Other distractions arrived in the form of pleasant surprises: an unexpected tax refund, an encounter with fond memories at a reunion, an opportunity to revisit a checkered work history. Although my work on editing the collection of essays on teaching comedy pushed my stamina to the limits during the copyediting process, I found great pleasure in moving the work ever closer toward publication. In a year when helping a colleague jump a dead car battery counts as a major success, I'm giving myself a gold star just for showing up--because sometimes mediocrity is the thing for me.

All told, it's been the kind of year that inspires the desire to bash things in with crowbars--but I'm pleased to report that I haven't hit or kicked or walloped anyone or anything intentionally. In fact, in 2022 I wrote about flowers and birds and butterflies far more than bashing things with crowbars, so as I look toward 2023, I'll take inspiration from a post I wrote about recharging my own depleted batteries with a hike among the wildflowers at Lake Katharine, during which I found a rare and droopy but still surviving blossom: "Today I'm that showy orchis, battered by the elements and exhausted by the demands of this train-wreck semester but still standing in front of my classes and pointing toward beauty and growth." 

That's a goal I can get behind--but I'll never accomplish it unless I drop the crowbar.