Pandemic Journal, Day Six

3/21/2020

The snow has almost melted in our yard, with only a few shrunken patches where it was deeper or shaded. Squinting into the early dawn light on Wednesday morning, we were surprised by more flakes falling steadily from the leaden sky, adding extra inches on top of what had not yet melted. The break in the weather on Tuesday was enough for the guys to come out and fix our wood stove. So we are warm again and spread out in the house, feeling blessed. I sat on the deck today and enjoyed the sun while I could, before the next storm blows in tomorrow night.

It’s been a week now that we have been home full time, with only a couple of trips to the grocery store. My husband went to his school site and prepared packets to be mailed to the students in his program. After an hour and a half long phone conference with my school staff, I feel prepared to officially begin distance learning on Monday. Our school has the unique advantage of having online learning already set up for many of our students. I have been grading papers from last week and posting grades and instructional information on Google Classroom, along with emailing and texting families and students. It’s amazing how busy you can stay when you are home bound.

I always worry I won’t have enough to do when I am trapped in the house. There is always cooking, cleaning, and laundry. Moving my job to all online more than fills my schedule. I am also video chatting with our daughters and their kids daily, and our son is staying in touch. Now that the sun is out and the weather is returning to the springlike conditions we had a week ago, I wonder how staying put will feel. It’s important to get outside, and the garden is calling to me.

On Thursday evening, our governor told everyone in the state to stay home, except for essential needs like food and medical care. There are designated essential services that continue, but there is still controversy over who is and is not maintaining “social distancing.” The governor has made it clear that we will not be policed, as he is expecting us all to do the right thing, but as always, there are those who step up and those who do not, and the ones in between who struggle with change. I count my blessings every day, and try not to obsess over the dire reports I hear. All we can do is our part, and do it to the best of our ability.

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One Hundred Words about Time Travel

A character in my time travel novel asks these questions:

If you could travel through time, would you?

Do you dream about the past, the present, or the future?

If you chose to live in another time period, when would it be?

If you visited the past, what would you change?

Would you rather see people you know or meet new people in the past or in the future?

If you visited the future, would you seek out familiar people, places, and situations, or try new experiences?

Would you travel to the end of the world, and would you stay?

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Fast Forward

This week I took a trip through time. I camped in the northern Sierra Nevada mountains, and visited a botanical area that I hadn’t seen in many years. The surrounding forest was ravaged by the Dixie fire in 2021, and this was the first time I saw the damage in person. The ecosystem is recovering, but altered. There are still many standing dead trees, although a lot of cleanup work has been accomplished. The boardwalk across the peat bog has been rebuilt. The Pitcher plants are few but still there. Nature can accomplish a lot in only a few years!

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Be Careful What You Wish For

The Good Part by Sophie Cousens is another exceptional novel that uses time travel to celebrate the ups and downs of life and our impatience to get to the good stuff. Published in November 2023 by Putnam, it’s more than a romcom. Inspired by several classic films including Big, it reminds us of the benefits of living life a day at a time, even when it’s scary, and appreciating the people we share our lives with every day. What better way to understand the value of what you have than to wish for something different, and try it on for size.

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Slipping Through Time

An irresistible time travel novel I’m rereading is The Seven Year Slip by Ashley Poston, published in 2023 by Penguin-Random House. I’m on Chapter 1o, remembering how much I enjoyed it the first time. There are many different ways to represent time travel. Some authors use a mechanical device, and others have their characters stumble across a threshold, both literal and figurative. It’s possible to fall asleep in one time, and wake up in another, or in the same time over and over, at least if you’re fictional. I aspire to create a unique way of presenting a familiar trope.

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Time Travel Lit

I devoured a book in January that featured all of my favorite things. The Ministry of Time is the award-winning debut novel of British-Cambodian writer Kaliane Bradley, set in the UK. Published by Avid Reader Press/Simon and Schuster last year, Goodreads says it’s “a time travel romance, a spy thriller, a workplace comedy, and an ingenious exploration of the power and the potential for love to change it all.” It inspired me to write my own story about time travel. Creating characters is fun; mine are young adults. That’s what happens when a middle school teacher writes a story.

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Another 100 Words

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Welcome Back to Me!

It’s been a very long time since I shared my thoughts here. Too long to be away. It was hard to keep this blog going while I was teaching and grandparenting and all the other things I wanted or needed to do. The Pandemic complicated things. Then I wrestled with the difficult decision to retire. But now I am retired, with fresh ideas and lots of time. I still work a bit because I can’t seem to tear myself away. I’m reading and writing more. Stay tuned for those fresh ideas. It feels good to be back on this page!

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One Hundred Words-Stories

Yesterday, I composed six word stories with a group of middle school students. They are my favorite age group; they’re raw. Most of them have not yet learned the subtle art of aloofness. We used pages torn from magazines, scissors, and glue sticks with canvases cut from colored card stock. They were silly, but engaged. It was a challenging task for the last class of the day. I told them the pages were taken from environmental magazines, and someone noticed they were earthy. The kids pushed the boundaries of convention, but that’s the creative process and adolescence in a nutshell.

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One Hundred Words-Inspiration

Where does inspiration live? It’s hiding in the imagination, waiting to be awakened by our senses. All we need is a stimulus, and there it is, ready to be explored. We had snow on the ground for days before I dove in and made a snowperson. All it took was the right moment.The snow was melting. I don’t know how to roll a snowball. Is it even possible? I scoop snow into a pile and then start carving my shape until it looks just right. It only lasted a few days before the rain melted it, but we bonded.

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One Hundred Words-California Snowing

After a week away visiting family, we drove back between storms to several inches of snow. This is unusual in the foothills, and exciting for this native Californian. But last week I learned why my husband, a native New Yorker, isn’t excited about snow. We had twenty-seven inches on the ground, power out for forty hours, and more snow on the way. Trees and power lines were down all over the county. This storm is almost over, but an atmospheric river is headed our way. It’s very exciting, but a hardship for many, and disrupts my schedule. Life does that.

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