Following the Heart and Signs of Beauty

Over the summer I spent a large amount of time sifting through the high school music library.  I was on a hunt for the “good curriculum.”  Those pieces that make students’ ear perk up.  The pieces that make them wonder what else they haven’t discovered yet.  Curious music was my mission.

I inhaled a lot of dust in my searching, threw out hundreds of disintegrating copies of Mr. Sandman, and welcomed the sight of Britten, Vaughn Williams, and F.Melius Christiansen.  The pride of my pick became the center piece for this winter’s concert.  Benjamin Britten’s “A Ceremony of Carols.”  It also gave me some concern.  The piece is typically high end in my mind.  It’s for choirs that are established; they’ve been around the block.

My choir is young and varied in experience.  We are split into thirds of proficiency.  Highly, mid, and low.  With this in mind, for the first three weeks of school, I have focused on tone, flexibility, and diction-oriented warm ups.  We’ve been rounding and lifting the tone all day, every day it seems.  We also leveled out our counting issues, team-composed rhythm and solfege exercises, and hammered out the school song every day.

It all seemed very basic; I was concerned for their general boredom until today.  First I made an announcement, then I handed them the Britten.

Last Friday, the top choir debuted the year through enormous nerves.  Homecoming coronation required them to sing the school song in the dark for the entire high school.  I don’t think they realized just how special they were as a choir until they got my report back to them today.  “You have been noted as the best choir in the past 13 years at this school by an administrator.”  Blown away, confidence through the roof.  Drive out the wazoo.  And that was the tipping point they needed.

With eagerness they grasped at the Britten today and came out with a gorgeous tone.  It was light and flute-like and, best of all, hopeful.  I think they even surprised themselves.  Furthermore, the old English text spurred a vocabulary discussion.  Real interest and intrigue burst out of these lovely high school students!  Curiosity!

Every day now I feel like I owe them something.  I owe it to them to teach well, to be happy, to push them, to find good music, to talk about meaning.  I owe them a real class with real content.  I owe them an environment that fosters learning.  And with that I hope they will learn to follow their hearts and leave signs of beauty behind.

I can’t wait to meet with the newly elected choir cabinet to see where they are really at, what they are really thinking.  Especially since the girls elected President and Vice-President were screaming in their joy all they way down the hall (at the very spectacular choir bulletin board).

Letter Writing

I had an urge to write tonight.  I sat down at the computer and stared.

Write something–to somebody, but no vague person.  I wanted to write to an audience that had intrigue and fostered intrigue.  The amorphous blogosphere could not handle my request.

I wrote a letter.  I wrote a letter to somebody.  I wrote with specific details and personal affect.  I wrote with intention.  I wrote with question marks.  I wrote in parentheses.

I wrote it, sealed it, mailed it.  Now I wait for a return.

When returns come, they come full force.  They come in tangible thought inked over pages of fluttering, nervous wonder.  And answers?  There are answers, but they bring questions alongside them anyway.

I wrote a letter today.  I will write one tomorrow, too.

For Nora

Sometimes I feel like Nora.
When I stand in the middle of the kitchen with one hand on my slanted hip
waiting for espresso to perc on the stove
clamping my teeth around a sizable cut of parmesan.
When I discipline.

When I team up or contrive a plan with somebody my equal.
When I lay in an X on the grass, a chair.
When I curl in a ball in bed.

When I push someone on a swing.  When I swing.
When I know I’m not a social worker, but could be–
should be.
When I know who is who.

When I simply say okay even though I disagree.
When I voice my opinion based on experience
and education.
Sometimes I feel like Nora.

When I take a break.
When I say yes to a dulce.
When I’m silent.

Sometimes I feel like Nora.
Sometimes I feel like you.

Rainy Traveling, Running

Pit, pat, drip, drap.
Stuck drops, dips in
bosom.  Cold surprises.

Lost sounds:
hum-drumming, feet coming,
all-dumbing down.
Just: breathing, own-drum-
beating, heart speaking.
Rainy traveling, running.

Cold water-drinking, invigorating vision.

August’s End: The Final Storms of Summer and Frank McCourt

When it’s the end of August, I usually gain a sense of empowerment.  Fall is coming with its new school year, crisp ideas, and full plans.  Fall is coming, oh so soon, with its determination to last through winter.  The end of August brings me to a state of bolstered can-do.

Perhaps this is why I became stuck in the last few pages of Frank McCourt’s ‘Tis this evening.  From pages 350-367, McCourt narrates the death of his first marriage, mother, and father.  At death’s house, there is little to be determined about.  It is all that one can do to simply be in the house for a spell, and then leave.

I knew McCourt’s marriage was ending because the first sentence of that chapter read, “Before Maggie was born I dreamed of being a Kodak daddy.”  What follows is a list of McCourt’s memories of early days with his daughter.  These may as well serve as a clothesline of sweet dresses drying in a setting sun, something you might see in a painting.  They are small moments, pleasant and gratifying in the emptiness of a dissolving marriage.  McCourt lets go for good.

When his mother dies, confused and torn from her purgatory life, McCourt sits on his bed with a cup of tea.  “When Malachy calls at three in the morning he doesn’t have to say the words.  All I can do is make a cup of tea the way Mam did at unusual times and sit up in bed in a dark darker than darkness knowing by now they’ve moved her to a colder place, that gray fleshly body that carried seven of us into the world.  I sip my hot tea for the comfort because there are feelings I didn’t expect.  I thought I’d know the grief of the grown man, the fine high mourning, the elegiac sense to suit the occasion.  I didn’t know I’d feel like a child cheated.  I’m sitting up in the bed with my knees pulled to my chest and there are tears that won’t come to my eyes but beat instead like a small sea around my heart.  For once, Mam, my bladder is not near my eye and why isn’t it?”

And when his father who abandoned him dies far off in Ireland at the Royal Victoria Hospital, McCourt goes to his funeral because his mother would have said it was something you only have one chance at doing–which is something I’ve read from other Irish authors.  And he went with that formal feeling, but no pain like Emily Dickinson said there would be.  Another swell of images, of morning fireside talks and begging at the St. Vincent de Paul Society, of poverty and longing.  True things.  Things far off from me.

So far off and yet so a part of my soul that I laid my head on the couch and meditated, which is something I generally reserve for Holy Books.  There was a deep stuckness.  What am I to derive from a sense of connection to an ocean of sorrowful tears trapped around my heart?  To a marriage lost to differences?  To a mother confused and giving up?  To a father absent and pretending not to be?  The world is full of small oceans around hearts.

I am assured there is an outlet for my tears to follow and water some good soil to produce good fruit.   It opens from time to time and it closes from time to time so that I might know of my need for it.

Even at the end of August, especially at the end of August, there is need to be reminded of my sorrowful state.  To be reminded how my heart requires room to swell and burst and let go of its ocean.  Before the bolstering of fall, there must first be a final storm of summer.

*Into the fire was thrown II Samuel 12: 23 this morning: But now he is dead.  Why should I fast?  Can I bring him back again?  I shall go to him, but he will not return to me.”

Best Thing I Did Today

The best thing I did today was take a nap.  It was somewhere between 20 minutes and 1 hour, but I can’t be sure because the afternoon was pretty flux today.

The worst thing I did today was eat Starbursts from my desk candy jar that I’m supposed to be saving for students who will join me at school in two weeks.  Sorry, kids.  We’ll be taking donations for sugar fixes.  I also invited an extra 100 kids to sing at my December choir concert.  That is a close second to the Starbursts.

In Five Minutes

At 5 minutes to 5, I was near tears.  M. and K. wrapped up rehearsal with the string quartet and I turned to L. saying, “I really don’t know if I can make it through tonight.  One more song about love and I’m going to lose it.” 

“Really?”

“Yeah.  It’s a big subject.  Touchy.”

I wanted someone to hold my hand.  Where were you?

L. scrunched her face as we sat in the front row of the sanctuary.  “I do not feel cute in my clothes.  I never feel good about what I’m wearing.”

“Me neither.  But you look cute.  You always look so nice.  I got this shirt I’m wearing at TJ Maxx yesterday for 10 bucks; it’s not breathable.”

“Are you hot?”

“No.  I just feel like I stink.”  I hoped the drummer didn’t just hear that.  He was sitting a few seats down.

“Don’t worry.  I don’t smell anything.  I need a haircut.”

“Oh my.  So do I.  I was literally just thinking that in the bathroom.  And earlier, my sister told me to wear my hair down.  She said it was looking good, but I can hardly stand it.  My ends are all torn up.”

“You look good.  We always try so hard, don’t we?”

“What a funny day.”

L. looked back and agreed.  “Have fun singing tonight, okay?”

“Thanks.” 

At 5 pm, I was ready.  My crisis was averted and I did not cry whilst leading worship and not holding your hand.  We will see what tomorrow brings, but I hope to be engulfed in the truth that I have an even bigger hand holding my entire being.

An Open Response to: “Summer Afternoon and Beautiful Words”

Dear Jane Austen Didn’t Prepare Me for This:

Dear KW:

After reading your post today, I was set again along the road of words.  Words that matter, words that signify, words that crackle on the tongue and purse the lips.  Those are my favorite words.  They are words that I enjoy pronouncing to my choir students to get them to enunciate.  Perusal.  Stick your lips out.  Tip of the tongue.  Teeth.  And for other words: Clack the back of the tongue at the highest ridge of the soft palate. Glt. Glt. Glt.  We need to understand you.

One of your favorite words, and I suspect a few more, is also one of my favorite words.  Dilettante.  A person who cultivates an interest without real knowledge or commitment.  Isn’t it a nice play on sound for a few other words we enjoy?  Diligent: to cultivate work to an end.  Dunt: firm knocking, which clearly leads to duntz (which I like to spell with a z as a brief acknowledgement of my fancy-free side) and we all know what duntz means.  Duh[This is not to say that a dilettante is a duntz.  Dilettante is more nuanced and can be more broadly interpreted in my mind.  It is also more elegant and less fancy-free.]

When I first learned dilettante, I understood it.  At the time, I felt myself blubbering my way through college and art school.   A dilettante of finer things, I felt lost and hazardous amongst them.  This connection naturally and immediately led to a song.

It was a challenge, but I diligently worked at it.  So as not to put dilettante out there to be critically crushed in songwriting class, I mixed in a few other favorite words to balance the feeling of it in the singer’s mouth, my mouth.

Here are the lyrics; I’ll let you guess at my other favorite words:

A DENIZEN OF INNOCENCE TYPICALLY ALRIGHT
SOMETIMES ALL THIS POLISHING OF SINNERS MAKES ME WANT TO FIGHT
A DILETTANTE OF FINER WAYS I’M ALWAYS LEAVING MARKS
SOMETIMES ALL I GET FROM LIFE IS KNOWING I TRY HARD

A PARAGON OF IMPERFECTION BASICALLY MY FAULT.
AT SOME POINT I DECIDED THAT I’M ALWAYS GONNA FALL
DERACINATE THE POTETATE AND TELL HIM IT’S ALRIGHT
SOMETIMES PEOPLE MAKE MISTAKES EVEN THOUGH THEY KNOW WHAT’S RIGHT.

MAMA’S ON THE TELEPHONE TALKING TO ME LIKE I’M A CHILD
IT DOESN’T EVEN MATTER THAT I’M 1600 MILES AWAY
TAKE THIS OFF OF ME.
I TRY NOT TO BE UNDER COVER.

IT’S LIKELY THAT YOU’RE THINKING THAT I SHOULDN’T ACT THIS WAY
WELL EVERY OTHER DAY I THINK A BEER OR TWO’S OKAY
THE LEITMOTIF I’M HEARING SOUNDS LIKE A WATERFALL
NO MATTER WHAT YOU DO IT WILL ALWAYS HIT THE GROUND

THE AFTERNOON IS FILLED WITH THE WINE OF TEMPTATION
AND I DON’T KNOW WHEN THIS FEELING COMES
BUT I OFTEN SUCCUMB.

Aside: I did end up recording this song with some guys [it’s always with some guys] and the only thing I heard from them for weeks was the hook: Mama’s on the telephone! It was too high for most of them to sing.  [They always think it’s always funny when it’s high.]

At long last, I would like to say thank you for you words.  Thanks for writing.  Thanks for helping us remember that there is nothing wrong with a strong vocabulary and reviewing it on a summer’s evening, even if a summer evening is not the best type of evening of the year.  [I have to admit agreeing with James on this one since I’m particularly enjoying this August’s 5-8pm slot.]

Aside 2: While on vacation with my mother and sister, I made them choose favorite words of the day.

All the best,

N.

Rice Day

Very naturally, in the course of discussing her daughter’s impending first year at school, she said, “I will miss being able to connect with my daughter’s heart throughout the day.  Today, we ate only rice all day to help us [as individuals and as a family] appreciate the choices available to us and understand what many people throughout the world feel lucky to have each day.”

They made rice in the morning, put it in an ice cream bucket, and drank water from their bathroom because they usually drink filtered water and nobody likes the taste of bathroom water.

Her kids are all under six and there was no fussing.

I love that she did this all on her own [with her husband] without being a superhero and without a corporate cause.  She wasn’t raising money.  She was simply living a life of solidarity.  She was connecting and impacting with the biggest reward being that she connected with someone’s heart.

I Am the Worst: Letting Love Lose

The worst at letting go: me.  I met a man for all of 20 minutes today and helped him shop for some shirts.  Thankfully, shopping with people is actually my job, so all awkwardness was avoided.

And thankfully, all awkwardness was actually avoided.  He was the best.  The best at being good looking and charming.  “Can you check what size shirt I’m wearing?”  Oh, definitely.  I will stand on my tip toes and read the inside label of the softest shirt I never sold you.  It was the perfect, most classic set up.  The perfect shop girl moment.

He was the best at pretending to be preoccupied with buying shirts, but actually content to rest his hand on the counter and be intriguing.  I saw his interest click as soon as I let it slip that I only sell shirts and jeans part time and spend the majority of my time teaching high schoolers to sing.  Some people really dig that.  This was it: the click.  He, himself, was an educator of sorts.  College level baseball coaches are certainly considered educators to me.  And I could see by the tiniest grey line above his ear, we might actually be in the same age bracket.  Potential: met.

Since he was passing time at the mall waiting for his game that night, I casually asked for a start time.  He said I could come and cheer his team.  You’re new to town, so I’m sure you haven’t formed a bond with anyone on your team yet.  You can cheer for us, he said.  I gave him an official good luck, which I hoped he knew meant that I was coming and cheering for him and hoping for a drink after, and then he left.

That’s all you get in 20 minutes and three shirts.

After that it’s just: dragging friends to a three-hour baseball game, feeling bad for dragging people out when I know nothing’s going to happen, and trying to make up for it by being “extra” funny but actually being annoying, and then eventually letting go.  Eventually.  Which I am terrible at.  Was that today or two years ago?

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