Sunday, September 12, 2010

China Grove


Today I met DennyJ, Mimi, and Grandad in Tuscaloosa and we drove out to Hale County. The second Sunday of September is Homecoming Sunday at China Grove, the church my great-grandmother MawMaw grew up in. It's out in the middle of nowhere on a no-room-for-two-cars-to-pass kind of road in a there-ain't-no-indoor-plumbing-to-be-found kind of setting:


It's a pretty drive, though. We got there early enough to sit in the church and listen to some note singing. I'm fascinated by note singing. Although I can read the music, I can't keep up with the pace of the songs so I have to just listen. It's a cool experience to sit in this simple wooden church with no air-conditioning, with all the windows opened, and listen to these people sing.



I found myself today wondering where MawMaw liked to sit, if she sang along at the top of her lungs, or if she was a silent "appreciater" like me. I also started wondering what will become of this pretty little church as the years go by.



The number of folks showing up dwindles every year. Grandad talks a lot about the huge crowd that used to show up years and years ago. I vaguely remember going when I was little, and I thought it was so cool to have "dinner on the grounds". MawMaw would help fix our plates. She would whisper to us whose food we wanted to eat and whose food would "make you sick as a dog". We would sit on the ground or on the hood of a car to eat our lunch. Once I hit my teenage years I realized, "Hey! Nobody can make me go to this anymore!" And I didn't. I was far too cool for such things. I'm glad I'm not too cool anymore.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

The Binch

I remember getting this email in the days after September 11, 2001, and a friend sent it to me again this morning. Moving on is good...so is remembering and reflecting.

The Binch

Every U down in Uville liked the U.S. a lot,
But the Binch, who lived Far East of Uville, did not.
The Binch hated the U.S., the whole U.S. way!
Now don't ask me why, for nobody can say,
It could be his turban was screwed on too tight.
Or the sun from the desert had beaten too bright.
But I think that the most likely reason of all,
May have been that his heart was two sizes too small.

But, whatever the reason, his heart or his turban,
He stood facing Uville, the part that was urban.
"They're doing their business," he snarled from his perch.
"They're raising their families! They're going to church!
They're leading the world, and their empire is thriving,
I MUST keep the S's and U's from surviving!"

Tomorrow, he knew, all the U's and the S's,
Would put on their pants and their shirts and their dresses,
They'd go to their offices, playgrounds and schools,
And abide by their U and S values and rules,
And then they'd do something he liked least of all,
Every U down in U-ville, the tall and the small,
Would stand all united, each U and each S,
And they'd sing Uville's anthem, "God bless us! God bless!"
All around their Twin Towers of Uville, they'd stand,
And their voices would drown every sound in the land.

"I must stop that singing," Binch said with a smirk,
And he had an idea--an idea that might work!
The Binch stole some U airplanes in U morning hours,
And crashed them right into the Uville Twin Towers.
"They'll wake to disaster!" he snickered, so sour,
"And how can they sing when they can't find a tower?"

The Binch cocked his ear as they woke from their sleeping,
All set to enjoy their U-wailing and weeping,
Instead he heard something that started quite low,
And it built up quite slow, but it started to grow--
And the Binch heard the most unpredictable thing...
And he couldn't believe it--they started to sing!
He stared down at U-ville, not trusting his eyes,
What he saw was a shocking, disgusting surprise!
Every U down in U-ville, the tall and the small,
Was singing! Without any towers at all!

He HADN'T stopped U-Ville from singing!
It sung! For down deep in the hearts of the old and the young,
Those Twin Towers were standing, called Hope and called Pride,
And you can't smash the towers we hold deep inside.

So we circle the sites where our heroes did fall,
With a hand in each hand of the tall and the small,
And we mourn for our losses while knowing we'll cope,
For we still have inside that U-Pride and U-Hope.
For America means a bit more than tall towers,
It means more than wealth or political powers,
It's more than our enemies ever could guess,
So may God bless America! Bless us! God bless!

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Thankful Thursday

What a day what a day what a day what a day. What a week. What a month. What a...I'll stop now. This could go on for a while.

Today I am thankful for:
  • my life...busy and hectic but I'm glad to have it!
  • my family and friends
  • my health
  • my job...still haven't gotten into that groove I wrote about last week...maybe next week (and I'm going to KEEP saying that until I get "grooved"!!)
  • my students...they (usually!) know exactly how to make me smile
  • the sweet parent email I got this morning...great way to start my day
  • a fun little science experiment planned for tomorrow...I need something fun in my day and I know the kiddos do too
  • being a "Suzy Sunshine", as I was called today...there are worse things you could call me
  • my Tigers playing tonight...gonna make for a late night but will totally free up my weekend :)
  • my Toms...good and broken in by now, and they make my feet happy...glad I let myself get talked into buying them
  • tomorrow being Friday, which means the weekend is right around the corner...big plans=clean, sleep, walk, work on my reading assignment/paper for grad school, sew, sleep, China Grove, sleep...most excited!
  • managing grad school+work+life successfully for two whole weeks now (knocking on my laptop now so I don't jinx it)
  • the fact that the stack of papers I've been driving around all week has actually made it inside with me...would be even more thankful if someone would grade them for me! Any takers? No?

HAPPY WEEKEND, and WAR EAGLE!

Monday, September 6, 2010

chili-roasted black eyed peas

Such a fun weekend. God's country (aka Auburn), tailgating, good friends, good food, good game, gorgeous weather, lunch with the fam, a day off of work...doesn't get much better than all that!

I made these for the tailgate this weekend, and thought they turned out really well. Granted, I did burn 1 batch completely beyond recognition (poor little guys), but the non-burned ones ended up being quite tasty. This recipe is somewhat similar to the roasted chickpeas recipe I found this summer.

Chili-Roasted Black Eyed Peas
2 cans black eyed peas, drained and rinsed
3 tbsp olive oil
1 1/2 tsp chili powder
3/4 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp salt
onion powder, to taste

1. Preheat oven to 425.
2. Mix all ingredients together; add seasonings to taste.
3. Transfer to a greased cookie sheet (or two, if needed).
4. Bake 45 minutes, or until crispy. Stir every 1o minutes. (Side note: I stirred as directed and the peas looked great at 30 minutes. By 40 minutes, one whole pan of them was burnt to a crisp. I was most sad and MAY have said something ugly. Next time, I'll probably pull them out of my turbo super powermax oven after 3o minutes.)
5. Store in an airtight container. Best when eaten within one or two days after baking.

I could see these being really good on a salad instead of croutons. Of course, they're also great by the handful!

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Thankful Thursday

Today I am thankful for:
  • my family and friends
  • the many, many blessings in my life
  • the challenges in my life...they sure keep things interesting!
  • my health
  • my job, even though I can't get myself settled into a grading/planning/keeping my head above water groove yet...surely it's coming soon, right? Right??? Please say yes. Please.
  • the fact that, by the grace of God, things always work out and get done, even when I don't see how it's possible
  • the news that Julie CE will be bringing a little blue baby into the world in January...woohoo for boy babes!
  • getting my hair cut last week...if I ever have a staff of folks at my disposal (you know, on my teacher's salary), I want someone to wash and fix my hair every day...pure DElight
  • surviving my first week of work + grad school...I may survive after all
  • no work on Monday...I feel like turning cartwheels and throwing confetti at the mention of this particular news
  • my upstairs neighbor's sudden fitness kick...I'm thinking of investing in a helmet to wear in case she Tae Bo-s herself right through my ceiling...which is likely to happen at any moment
  • a stellar super duper fun LONG weekend on the horizon
  • Auburn football (more here)...amen.

HAPPY WEEKEND!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

hummus: yummus in my tummus

I don't write much about my students on here, but not because I have no material. I just don't want any concerns raised about confidentiality. It's not like millions of people read my silly little blog, but I try to keep my professional life, well, professional.

With that being said, I must share this. I have a student I adore. He's a regular, goofy, 10 year old boy, but he understands my sense of humor and has a really quirky sense of humor himself. I need to recount the conversation we had on Monday. For the sake of privacy, I'll call him Fred.

Fred: Ms. Johnston, have you ever had hummus?
Me: Yep. I really like it. Have you?
Fred: My mom just bought some yesterday and we already ate a lot of it. It's my new favorite thing in the whole world. She packed some with crackers in my lunch.
Me: Sounds great! I'm glad you have a new favorite thing in the whole world. Now get to work.

Fred was so excited he even wrote about his hummus during our free write time. On our way to lunch, I walked past Fred in our line and stopped so I could hear what he was chanting under his breath: "Hummus! Yummus in my tummus!" I told him that was very creative, and he said that he had spent all morning trying to make something rhyme with hummus. Bless him. No wonder he didn't get his math assignment finished. He was too busy trying to figure out how to make hummus rhyme with something...anything!

Sometimes I wonder why anybody would want to do anything other than teach 5th graders.

Because I do enjoy hummus myself, I decided to make some tonight. It turned out to be most tasty and figured I'd share the recipe. It's so ridiculously easy I think I'm going to have to make it all the time. You know, so I'll constantly have something yummus in my tummus.

Black Bean Hummus
1 can black beans, drained and rinsed
1 garlic clove (I used two 'cause that's how I roll)
lemon juice from 1/2 lemon
2 tbsp tahini (I didn't have this, couldn't find it, and don't even really know what it is, so I substituted olive oil)
1 tsp cumin

Dump everything into a food processor and pulse until the texture looks good. I added a little water to thin it out a bit.

That's it! You could substitute a can of any kind of beans for the black beans. Healthy, easy, and most definitely yummus.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

There's no place like home

I just returned from a wonderful weekend spent in Tuscaloosa. I've come to appreciate going "home" more and more as I've gotten older. Staying at my parents' house makes me feel happy and relaxed and peaceful. I can't pinpoint exactly when the change occurred, but DennyJ and Mom somehow went from mega-embarrassing to hmm-they're-really-not-all-that-bad in the last few years. I'm proud of them for making such a big leap in such a short period of time :)

I spent yesterday afternoon with Grandad looking over books, old letters, and pictures in an effort to soak up some family history. Grandad has spent years and years tracing our family tree, and while I've looked at some of his stuff before, I can't make heads or tails of it. I asked him to sit down with me and explain it to me. I still probably wouldn't pass a quiz, but I learned so much and loved spending time with him. It was neat to see pictures of him when he was little, and to see pictures of family members that I never got to meet but have heard so much about. Grandad gave me some things to take home and look over, and I'm sure I'll have some questions after looking over that stuff. I appreciate him spending his afternoon with me and hope he's willing to do it again!

Last night, I went to a housewarming party for a nearly lifelong friend and his wife (someone I've also known for 20 some odd years). I'm so glad I went. Their new home is beautiful, and it was so good to visit with them. I love that we're still friends, even though we're separated by distance and life stages. I also enjoyed getting to talk to some of the mamas who were there. While I love meeting new people, there's something very reassuring about spending time with people I've known most of my life. It makes me feel grounded and happy.

We capped off the weekend with lunch after church today. Mimi, Grandad, Uncle Robert, Daniel, and Olivia joined Mom, DennyJ, and me at the ol' homestead for hamburgers and 7Up floats. I'm thankful that I live close enough to do things like this; I missed that while I was living in Auburn. Nothing like a fabulous weekend to kick off a (hopefully...) fabulous week!

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Thankful Thursday

Today was one of those days where I thought it was Wednesday until about 1:00. Those days leave me feeling a little unsettled. What day is it? Who am I? What does it all mean?? It is indeed not Wednesday. It's Thursday, which means tomorrow is Friday. Which is never a bad thing. Unless it's not REALLY Friday, which, with my luck, could be true. Make sense? That's what I thought.

Today I am thankful for:
  • my family and friends...excited to see some of the aforementioned on Saturday
  • the genealogy lesson Grandad and I have planned for this weekend
  • my health
  • my job
  • the many things I'm destined to learn from my darlings this school year :)
  • tomorrow being the last day of my morning duty until November...I forget how much I can get accomplished in 30 minutes until I have to spend those 30 minutes supervising kiddos before school!
  • the "lightbulb moment" I had with a student during math today...makes it all worthwhile!
  • my tenure pay raise coming up...woohoo!
  • a few more days "off" before I dive headfirst into grad school
  • Sasha's successful interview (say that 3 times fast) today...even though we're branching off down separate post-grad paths, I'm glad I'll have an "I'm going back to school, too" buddy
  • supper with Byrne last night
  • feeling better than I did last week
  • the little, super-subtle whisper of fall we got to feel for a few days...it's coming!
  • the beginnings of a way fun, wide open spaces kinda trip starting to stir
  • a weekend to regroup and rest and pull the pieces of myself back together...gotta love the first few weeks of school

HAPPY WEEKEND!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

ready and waiting

*I'm feeling better. Still not 100%, but much better than I was Thursday night. After sleeping 22 hours over the last two days and providing my drivers license/signature/birth certificate/blood type/SSN/library card/three references/left arm/right leg to buy a dadgum decongestant at the drugstore, I think I may pull through. Hopefully.*

Dear Fall,
Now that summer, for all intents and purposes, is over, I'm ready for you. I don't want to rush you, but I'm excited about your arrival. I love you. You're by far my favorite season. I love you because you're not hot and humid like summer or cold and dreary like winter or pollen-y like spring. I love that you let me wear pants and long sleeves so that I no longer have to advertise what a white girl I truly am. I love that you bring cool breezes and pretty leaves. I love that your favorite colors are red and brown and orange. I like those colors, too. I love you for bringing football season with you (even though it technically starts in summer...we won't go there). I love that you bring me a reason to travel to Auburn nearly every weekend. I love you for bringing me Halloween and Thanksgiving. I love you for giving me an excuse to make pumpkin muffins* and light cinnamon-scented candles. I love that you make me want to be outside all the time and carve pumpkins and go on hayrides. If I could dress you up in a sweater and hold your hand and jump in leaf piles with you, I would. I love that you make me so happy. Can't wait to see you soon!

Your #1 fan and not-so-secret admirer,
Julie
*True story: I was on a waiting list last year for canned pumpkin at Publix. Have you ever heard of such? And did you know that there's a pumpkin shortage? Well, there is. It makes for some desperate times when you have to make pumpkin muffins for that weekend's tailgate and there is. no. pumpkin. to be had. Thankfully, Publix came through and rationed 2 cans for me during an especially desperate time last October. Perhaps I should ask if they've started a new pumpkin waiting list for this fall.
*True story #2: Santa Claus may or may not have put 4 cans of pumpkin in my stocking last Christmas. And it may or may not have been the highlight of my Christmas morning. Yep. True story.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Thankful Thursday

I'm sick (bleh! BLEH!) with the sinus crud, so I'm going to keep this short and sweet. And maybe not even sweet, but definitely short. I'm not thankful that my head feels like it's going to explode, my ears are throbbing, and my current method of oxygen intake is that gross, creepy-kid-on-the-schoolbus mouth breathing. I am thankful, however, that I feel like this every once in a while so that I can appreciate being healthy when this passes.

I'm thankful for all the usual things: my family, friends, job, students, the upcoming weekend, etc. I'll try to make next week's Thankful Thursday the best one ever, or at least better than this one. For now, though, I feel my Benadryl coma closing in on me and I can't fight it any longer. Here's hoping that I wake up feeling like a whole new person tomorrow.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

under my teacher "umbrella": mama, coach, encourager, disciplinarian, nurse, therapist...and now, magician

I love my job as a teacher. It's really the only career I've ever pictured for myself, and I truly enjoy it most days. I counted the other day and I've had 98 students (including my current ones) in my 3+ years of teaching. That's 98 little people that I've had the chance to impact; what an awesome opportunity (and responsibility)!

I try really hard to focus on the positive in things and to spend minimal time dwelling on the negative. If it's something I can't change, I try to accept it and move on. As I've spent my afternoon preparing for the first full week of school starting tomorrow, it occurred to me that I'm going to have to be a magician as well as a teacher this year. I'm going to have to make the state and district-mandated timeframes magically fit into my day. I've got about 6 hours of mandates to fit into a 5 hour instructional period. Hmmmm. I'm no genius, but that doesn't quite work, does it?

There is such a push for MORE in education right now. MORE reading. MORE math. MORE techology. MORE small group instruction. After all, No Child Left Behind states that 100% of American students should be proficient in reading and math by 2014. (I'm going to say nothing else about that statement. It could get ugly.) It truly would take a magician to make it all work. When working within a set timeframe (say, a school day) it's impossible to add MORE without doing something else LESS, right? It works out to LESS social studies, LESS downtime, LESS time for activities/experiments/projects.

It makes me wonder sometimes what this educational system is going to do to this generation of kids, long-term. Are we instilling a love for learning in these kids? Or are we pressuring them to constantly perform better, without ever showing them why learning is important?

Thankfully, the teachers/administrators at my school are trying hard to achieve a balance between pushpushpush and instilling a love for learning. As challenging as it is, I try to do that every day and I see my coworkers doing the same. I feel that we owe it to these kids to not burn them out before they even make it to middle school.

Bleh! Rant over. I feel great about this week coming up. The kids in my new class are sweeties and I foresee a lot of fun memories being made between now and May. I'll be ready for tomorrow as soon as I make my lunch...and remember where I put my magic wand.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Thankful Thursday

Today I am thankful for:
  • my family and friends
  • my health
  • surviving the first day of school today!
  • my new kiddos and the things I'm sure I'll learn from them this year
  • the plan God has for me and these kiddos this year
  • officially earning my tenure as of 2:45 TODAY...woohoo! I'm IN :)
  • the weekend coming up tomorrow...much-needed
  • guests this weekend...always love seeing Kira, Oliver, and Princess Elizabeth :)
  • plenty of other stuff but my bed is calling to me

HAPPY WEEKEND!

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

juggling act

School starts this week (Thursday, to be exact) and it seems like I'm juggling 895,432 things right now. Every time I cross one thing off my ever present to-do list, I add two more. Meet the Teacher Day is tomorrow and I feel like I should have taken a pillow and toothbrush up to school and made a night of it. I always want everything to be PERFECT on this day. My new kiddos and their parents will be seeing the room and meeting me for the first time. I'm praying that it will go well and I really am excited to meet the new kiddos. I know God has a plan for our class this year, and I can't wait to go along for the ride! Now if I could just get these 120 labels cut out and put on folders and get into bed, I'll be ready for that ride to begin...

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Thankful Thursday...Sunday...whatever

Life has had me on the move lately, so Thankful Thursday didn't happen. Thankful Sunday will have to suffice.

Today I am thankful for:
  • my family and friends (especially my sweet Mimi, and even though our Chattanooga trip didn't turn out quite like we planned, I still had a fabulous time with her)
  • the baby news a sweet, far-away friend recently shared with me :)
  • my health
  • summer 2010...it's over after today (weep! wail!), but I've enjoyed nearly every second of it. This is hands down the best summer I've had since I started teaching, and I'm most thankful for it!
  • a job at a great school to return to (tomorrow! sob!)
  • finally getting registered for my grad school classes...all that's left is to write a hefty check and enjoy the 22 days I have left before classes start
  • a few days to get back in the swing of things before the kiddos arrive on Thursday
  • how hard my fam and friends worked to make my birthday weekend so spectacular...best one in recent memory!
  • getting to go to Olivia's graduation yesterday...hoping she finds a job soon!
  • the fabulous new kids' books I've been able to trade for at the used bookstore...25 new-to-me books for my kiddos to read
  • Shark Week...I look forward to it every year...honestly, I watch to get tips on surviving a shark attack...you can never be too prepared...I've learned so much that I've decided not venturing in past my knees is the way to go...if a shark wants to come get me knee-deep and I don't see it in time to get away, it deserves to have a little nibble

HAPPY WEEKEND...eh, WEEK!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

birthday weekend recap

I turned 25 on Friday, and had the most incredible weekend to celebrate my milestone birthday. Here's the (stream-of-consciousness) rundown:

Lunch at the Depot/cupcakes at school with Sasha on Thursday. Birthday in Tuscaloosa with Mom and Denny J. Bought some great books for my classroom. Birthday lunch with Mom at Taco Casa (where else?). Locked my keys in my car (first time ever...boo). Enchiladas and sangria for birthday supper. "Official" birthday lunch on Saturday with Mom, Denny J, Mimi, Grandad, Bubba, and Olivia. Chicken & grits, green beans, and pavlova for dessert. So very, very good. Thoughtful presents, including my much longed for boots. So excited! Back to Bham. Overnight guest named Kate. DQ with Kira, Oliver, and Princess Elizabeth (who's now smiling and cooing...such talent in that child!). So fun! Rogue Tavern for supper with Byrne, Guy, and fellow concert-goers. Really hot...disgustingly humid...occasional breeze...but mostly just really hot. Kinda like trying to breathe through a hot, damp towel. Try it sometime. Eric Church concert at Sloss Furnace. Sweat. Lots and lots and lots of people. More sweat. Worried my cuteness is fading. Will Hoge opened. Dripping. Waited an eternity for Eric Church to come out. Hair in a ponytail, wiping off every trace of makeup, no longer concerned with looking cute or even remotely human. Eric Church played. Phenomenal and absolutely worth the wait. Love him. Truly one of the highlights of my year. Slimed on by countless sweaty, shirtless people. Once home, 3 glasses of water and a shower were required immediately upon walking through the door. I don't yet feel human again. SO worth it, though!

I had such a fabulous, fun weekend! I am more blessed than I deserve to be. I've got one more week of freedom, some things to sew, and a quick trip to the glorious state of Tennessee before I rejoin the workforce. Plus, Shark Week starts tonight :) It's been such a great summer!





PS--Is there such a thing as sweat-communicable diseases? I'm going to look into this. If I never touch another sweaty, smelly, sticky, slimy person again in this lifetime, it'll be too soon. Ick.