Monday, December 10, 2012

I Wonder

I wonder- can they sense the pain,
the pain I feel in my heart,
these men, these predators of Bahrain?

I wonder-is it the beaten saunter of my walk
that makes them roll on by
without that "Need a ride?" talk?

I wonder-do they see it in my face,
in the purse of these lips,
now as fine as lace?

I wonder-why do they stay away tonight?
Are they looking for easy fun,
without even a hint of a fight?

It's really no wonder
they look somewhere else,
for I'm a real woman, and they can't handle my thunder!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The Recess I'll Never Forget



Currently, I'm teaching how to write an autobiographical narrative in both 6th and 7th grades, so for them, I wrote a piece about one time in fourth grade when a hamster my class was taking care of scurried up my pants. My kids had such a blast with it that I thought I'd let you all have a laugh on me too!
The Recess I'll Never Forget
 
When I was in fourth grade, my teacher, Miss Pantazopolous, bought a pet for
 our class to call our own. We were allowed to keep the pet, a hamster, only if students volunteered to come in during recess to play with and feed it. I am not particularly fond of rodent-like animals, but I was excited to be a part of the class project and to spend time with my friend, Brittany.  
            On the day of the recess I’ll never forget, I stayed in the stuffy school, instead of going out in the fresh air. The thrill of getting the opportunity to play with the hamster pulsed through my veins, so seeing the beautiful shining sun didn’t matter much. My friend and I were the chosen ones for the day; we were special. I almost couldn’t contain myself. To be special is not something I have felt much in my life, so I was eating it up!
            Brittany and I grasped gently for our tiny, furry creature, each wanting a turn to play with it. Because we were such good friends, we knew how to share.
            “Hey Deena,” she said, “let’s sit across from each other and put our feet together. We’ll make, like, a play pen for him.”
            “Yeah!” I returned, so we sat ourselves down on the cold floor, the only warmth coming from the idea that we were getting a chance to do something no one else was doing. The silence of the classroom could have eaten us up if it hadn’t been for our own enthusiasm to play with this little guy.
            On that particular day, I was wearing what I thought to be oh-so-stylish at the time. It turns out that overalls weren’t really ever “in,” but I didn’t know that. The events of that recess forever changed my perspective on wearing overalls- to school, anyway!
            So there Brittany and I sat, on the dark green floor of our fourth grade classroom, excitement filling our two bodies, which were connected only by our shoes. Brittany placed the hamster between our legs, since I, again, am not crazy about picking up animals. It began to run around, and we giggled at the idea of this little creature not being able to find its way out of our temporary pen.
This went on for several minutes, and we began to distract ourselves with talk. All of a sudden, Brittany spoke.
“Where’s the hamster?”
Neither of us could detect its presence, so we stood up, brushing ourselves off from the dust of the floor. We stood there for a few seconds, looking around, when I felt something funny in my pant leg. The sensation continued, and it didn’t take long for realization to set in: the hamster was in my pants! As fourth grade girls are prone to do when something like this happens, I screamed and screeched, a chill running through my body from this thing that was way too close for comfort.
That hamster crawled quickly, and before I knew it, it was all the way up my pant leg. I shook my body vigorously from top to bottom, trying all I could to remove it from my pants. It was no longer a cute, little, fuzzy creature that I loved; it had become a rodent that I didn’t want around.
Finally, with the force of someone who is desperate, I managed to coach the hamster back down my pant leg, and it returned to the floor where it belonged.
“Got it!” Brittany cried. I sighed a sigh of relief, and we replaced it safe and sound in its cage before it could cause any more damage. With the fear of this foreign creature in my pants gone, I broke out in laughter. Brittany and I giggled for the rest of the recess, but deep down inside, I knew I would never get close to a hamster again. And I would never forget that recess for the rest of my life.