Monday, August 25, 2014

Shakespeare, Dead Poets, Eminem, SOA, and TWD.


A writer for whom I hold a particular fondness made an interesting allusion in a work that I recently looked at a little more closely. He alludes to the American folktale of Rumpelstiltskin. The allusion made me think a bit, about the concept of turning nothing into something, of spinning straw into gold. Many people would immediately disregard the thought, not because it was ineffectively presented, but because it was made by a rapper named Marshall Mathers, aka Eminem. That is a shame. I am an unapologetic fan of genuinely meaningful rap music, or meaningful music of nearly any genre, and I would go as far as to say that Eminem's skill at word play and double entendre is on par with none other than Big Willie himself. (That is William Shakespeare for those who did not make the connection.) The man is a storyteller and wordsmith, but simply because he chose a colloquial art form, his skill is discounted by many as unworthy of even cursory consideration. (Yes, I am talking to you, Kim.) Please understand, however, that I do not feel every line scribbled by Mathers is literary gold. Far from it. Some of his work is garbage. He has said so himself. Some of the puns are a bit, well, vulgar, but colorful nonetheless. Guess what? Some of Shakespeare's verse is less-than-Shakespearean in quality too. (That statement could be a discussion in itself, couldn't it?) We cannot disregard the entire Folio because a few lines are crude, awkward, somewhat poorly crafted, or obscene.

I use a lesson in class titled "Shakespeare is Hip-Hop". The speaker, Akala, is a young MC in London. In the video I use in the lesson, he is speaking to a group of scholars and gives them an informal quiz in which the audience members are asked to identify specific lines as having been penned by the Bard or by a modern rapper. It is surprising how difficult it is identify the source of the literarily crafted ideas when the lines expressing those ideas are all that is presented, free from music or stage.



I feel this illustrates that sometimes understanding, or perhaps the weight we give that understanding, is influenced greatly by preconceptions based on the assumed value of the source or presenter.  This fact leads us to give more credence to an expression of an idea by one source than we grant to another, regardless of the validity of the idea itself. For example, in a famous scene from the film Dead Poets Society, the character of John Keating, brought to life by the recently passed Robin Williams, the purpose of language is explained, simply and concisely: to woo women.
I love the film, and I love this scene, among many others. I have yet to argue that this concept, this idea of why we attempt to use language masterfully, is in any way vulgar or disgusting. Take another example that boils down the idea in much the same way, but that has not yet been adopted at a motivational tool in English classrooms, although it might be more effective with adolescent males: 
"I met a girl at a party and she started to flirt.
I told her some rhymes and she pulled up her skirt." (Horovitz, et al)

Ok, it may not be Shakespeare or Fitzgerald, but is the sentiment not the same as the one presented by the character of Mr. Keating, the one that produced knowing nods and chuckles from audiences? Why is the same reverence not paid to the lines from none other than The Beastie Boys? Ok, this example is a bit extreme, and it is clear that the idea is expressed much more appropriately for a classroom setting or academic discussion. However, I believe this is a prime opportunity to teach our young people about register and diction. Don't just toss it away without consideration. Instead, could we not examine if the expression is effective, and when such an expression might actually be appropriate and when it might not be. In other words, as the kids say, "Valid idea or nah?"

I am in no way saying that source or context should not affect how we read or how we examine what we read. On the contrary; I believe the source and therefore the context of a piece must influence our approach and response to a work. Read a little, just a little bit plucked from the middle, of "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" by Jonathan Edwards. Now, pull a bit, just little snippet  plucked from the middle, from a venom-filled spouting from a member of the Westboro Baptist Church. Taken out of context and in limited extent, these two bits may seem to parallel one another. It might be difficult to appreciate the language and sentiment expressed in Edward's sermon if taken out of the whole and without considering who wrote it and when. It would also be extremely unfair. 

However, we should not immediately discount any idea or thought simply because it is uttered in a particular context by a certain individual. We have to examine the idea, and that examination should allow one to disregard the idea on its own merit.

Let's take this in another direction. One of my favorite television shows is Sons of Anarchy. I am also a fan of The Living Dead.  It would be extremely easy for an individual to off-handedly disregard either of these shows as mindless viewing that holds little or no value. One is on FX for Pete's sake! Sons is about a motorcycle club in California. What, besides explosions, violence, and sex does that show have to offer? TLD is in the zombie genre, based off of a graphic novel, which is just a fancy name for a comic book, right? So many strikes against that one as a worthwhile use of time, unless you want to be braindead. 

Yep, I did that.

To immediately toss away those offerings as worthless on a literary level simply because of the genre, producers, or network is not only unfair, it is a wasted learning opportunity. Sons follows a distinct Shakespearean arc, drawing inspiration from Hamlet and MacBeth. Literary allusions and symbolism abound. As part of one storyline, a character is dealing with a crisis of identity and loyalty. As the character grabs a chain from the bed of his truck and moves through the shadows, a song began to play in the background. The song, low and morose, caused me to jolt my chair. "Strange Fruit" is a poem, or a song, about the bodies of black men, lynched and burned, swinging from the branches of polar trees. A sense of dread knotted my gut as Juice, the character, threw the chain over a branch. He had never known who his father was until a sheriff handed him a folder containing the damning information that his father was in fact African-American. The club had never had a black member, and Juice could never live with out the club. Learning and then hiding his origins violated a loyalty code to the club, despite the fact that he was completely unaware of such on infraction, and would devastate him and shake the club. I will not ruin the ending of the episode for you, but that scene is evidence of the depth of the show's writing and production.  The lead writer of the show, Kurt Sutter, was also a major writer for a show titled The Shield. I loved that show too. The protagonist of that series was a classic tragic hero. He struggled with a tragic flaw, and that flaw would lead to his inevitable downfall, an end which he could never escape. 

The Living Dead is a classic tale of the hero's journey, with examples of archetype after archetype. The show is not even really about zombies. It is about survival, interdependence, love, humanity, and growth as human beings. Zombies are just the backdrop that allows the story to be told. A number of quality discussions have sprung from the question, "Did you see The Walking Dead  last night?" Kids amaze me with the depth of examination they will undertake with a character, and then transfer that examination to the literature that we are studying at the time. It is neat.

We must remember that there is a flip side to all of this. Just as we must never blindly disregard offerings without proper examination, we should also not immediately accept an offering as top quality and indisputable because of where or who it comes from.  

Unless you are reading something I have written, of course. Then, one should accept every word as gospel truth and assume that each and every tidbit could stand alone as a golden nugget of greatness. 



Horovitz, Adam, Adam Yauch, and Mike D. New Style. Beastie Boys. Rick Rubin and Mike D, 1986. CD.

Friday, August 22, 2014

Positive World Chagers

We officially started school, or at least preparations for school, this week. (Now, now, all of you who have been in school for two weeks and are screaming at me because our students do not start for another week and a half, don't hate the player; hate the game.) We have been discussing on our vision, our desire to help our students become positive world changers. I am excited for the year. Football is in full swing as we near the end of the first week of two-a-days, and despite the heat, our young men have been pushing themselves, sweating, bleeding; they have impressed me with their efforts and their attitudes as we begin the quest to defend the title. On the field and inside the yet unfinished schoolhouse walls, I am blessed to work with some truly fine people, both students and colleagues. Let me repeat: I am blessed.

Positive World Changers. That may seem like a lofty goal. "Just get them readin' and writin' and figurin' right, and that will be enough," some might say. I say you are short-changing our young people if you take that approach. Positive World Changers. When we begin discussing that goal, that vision, we can hold up many fine young people who have taken their experiences at BHS and begun to make an impact on the world. Students who have aided charities in creating educational opportunities and clean water sources in Nepal or who have traveled to Central America to build homes for those in need. These are terrific examples, but I sat here last night and wondered if they were the best examples. I do not want to in any way diminish the extraordinary things those individuals and group achieve; they are amazing and should be celebrated. However, I was pleased to hear a colleague mention today that we need to celebrate those young people who change the world one person, one smile, one encouraging word at a time. Those who impact and influence those around them, those who lead those with wide eyes to be just like them. When I think of positive world changers, I think of those special young men and women who change the world in their way, in the way that best fits them. So many kids have passed through our walls who have made and will continue making those positive world changes.

There is a young man currently completing his training to become a paramedic. My brother is in the profession, and he knows about this young man because of me and because he has watched enough Crusader football to recognize some of the players I talk about. He asks about him when he speaks to the man in charge where this man is training, and he is doing well. While I hope to never see him in his professional role, I can honestly say that if I need emergency assistance, I want his face to be the one I see, or that my family sees. He will be amazing, partly because of his intelligence and dedication, more because of his character and caring. He is a family man, and was long before he met the girl he will marry and begin his own family. He is a positive world changer.

There is a young women who impressed me on a daily basis as she grew up from a freshman to a senior and now beyond. Do you know what she did to change the world, top change my world and the worlds of so many of her classmates? She was herself. She was a genuinely happy and sincere young lady who looked at a person when they spoke, unless that person was speaking about her, at which point she would look down, embarrassed to hear someone compliment her. She smiled as much as possible, and her bright outlook was contagious. She once called a bus driver at home one evening because she was concerned about him after there had been an accident in which a teen driver ran into the back of the bus. She helped students in class when they struggled, not to show she was bright, but because she wanted those around her to succeed. Humble, caring, and sincere, combined with intelligent, thoughtful, and compassionate can be a powerful mix. She was and will continue to be a positive world changer.

Sometimes it is even smaller, or seemingly so. Once, a student in my class was struggling emotionally, as sometimes tends to happen. She was supposed to present to my class upon returning from lunch, but as she stood up, she was unable to contain her tears.Something had happened in the cafeteria, and it had hit her quite hard.  She left the room, with me a few steps behind. I walked back into the classroom a moment later, and she followed shortly after. Before anyone could speak, a girl from the back of the room boldly said, "Hey, I would really rather go first if I could Mr. Kohls, if she doesn't mind. That would be better for me" As she stood up, she continued, "There a seat at my table if you want to sit here." She then walked to the podium. She changed the world that day in less than 15 seconds. It may not have been a global action, but in that little world that is my classroom, she changed our world by being an example and a light. She was trying to change the world, but she was a positive world changer.

I could keep going with example after example. This year, I am sure I will will be amazed again by the people I am blessed to work with. I only hope I can live up to my end of the bargain to help give them a truly exceptional educational experience, to give them everything I can to aid them as they go from our little world into the wider one, that big, scary one, and do their thing. I am ready to go.

Let's change the world.


Saturday, August 16, 2014

Demons

Robin Williams committed suicide earlier this week. It is easy to say that the entertainment world, the world in general, lost a talented, brilliant man. We also lost a tortured, troubled soul who leaves behind a family, a deep well full of laughter, and a lot to think about.

I loved watching Robin Williams when I was a high school and college kid. His standup was energetic and frantic. He was goofy and awkward on Mork and Mindy. However, he was not solely a slapstick buffoon whose pratfalls made people chuckle. He was witty and intelligent, and he created characters who made audiences laugh, often through tears. Good Morning, Vietnam! was one of the first movies I ever owned. VHS cassette. I owned the soundtrack on cassette tape as well. The film had a basis in real life. Most people who remember the film know that Williams ad-libbed his way through many scenes, cracking jokes and improvising as he modeled the character of Adrian Cronauer, the Armed Forces Radio DJ whose antics ruffled feathers and raised morale. He was funny. However, the character was so much more than that. He tried to encourage and lift up Edward Garlick, played by Forest Whitaker, because he sees something positive inside the young enlisted man that he doesn't know is there. He befriends a young Vietnamese man, at first because he finds his sister to be incredibly attractive, but later because he feels for this boy who has grown up amid such violence and hardship. He is betrayed and tortured by the fact that his naive approach to his world may have led to a tragic result, and he cannot accept the fact that the betrayal actually occurred. A barrel of laughs, right?

Another film I always found interesting came out in 1991 and was titled The Fisher King. The movie focuses a shock jock who inadvertently encourages a listener to commit a horrific crime. The DJ then spirals into an alcohol-soaked depression and eventually stands on the edge of suicide  to end the pain of guilt. That character is not played by Robin Williams. Williams played a homeless man who rescues the DJ from a beating by two punks trying to punish homeless people for "dirtying up" their neighborhood. He appears as a brave knight dressed in filthy, tattered clothes, carrying a trashcan lid shield, and brandishing weapons such as suction cup arrows and baseballs in tubesocks. As he steps in to stop the beating, Williams' character, named Parry, calls in an "army" of homeless heroes who break into an off-key song. It seems kind of strange when written out, but the scene is pretty neat. Did I mention that the character's wife had been killed in the horrific crime prompted by the words of the DJ he saved? Parry is tortured by a frightening vision of a red knight who appears from the foggy subconscious of his mind to steal away any happiness Parry might feel and replace it with pain and regret. It is a story about salvation. Williams is funny at times, awkward and smiling, and the laughter and grins veil the pain and anguish inside. Maybe that was a little more true than anyone realized.

Of course, I have to mention Dead Poet Society. I have used clips from the film in class, and even had students examine Mr. Keating, played by Williams, as a tragic hero of sorts. Once again, the laughter and humor is evident and strong, but it also cocoons anxiety and self-doubt, not only in the students Keating attempts to push to become men, but also in the teacher himself.

I don't know if any of this is interesting to anyone else or not. I guess I just want to tip my hat to a man who made me laugh and forced me to think with portrayal of round and dynamic characters. Awakenings, Patch Adams, Good Will Hunting, Insomnia. Death to Smoochy. The Best of Times. Pull one of them up in Netflicks or from the shelf at Hastings. None of them will be a waste of time.

This week, someone said, "How can someone like him kill himself when he has everything?" That is a common question when someone famous, someone as successful as Williams steps through that tragic door. Just like the brave, tortured man in The Fisher King,  everyone has his demons. Sometimes the demons are on the face and obvious, and causes are clear. For others, the demons are deeper, hiding within shadows within, with eyes that burn and frighten us, often at times that should be carefree and joyful. For whatever reason, the demon just cannot allow that to happen. The saddest part of the loss of Robin Williams is that he was very open about the fact that he had demons. The "signs" were not interpretive, like Chris Farley's weight or John Belushi's drinking. He actually said he had issues. We selfishly enjoyed the talent and creativity that sprang from that dark place. We took what we wanted; we let him rant and rave and bounce from topic to topic because it made us giggle. We applauded and pondered and appreciated. Somehow, it was not enough. The demons won this time.

I know at times I question myself and what I am doing. I doubt myself and almost encourage my demons to feed, to strengthen themselves. If that sounds goofy or cheesy, then I apologize, but it is true. And yet, I have everything. I have a beautiful family, more perfect than I could ever deserve. I have interesting, talented,  and sincere people around me on a daily basis. I get to do what I love and what gives me a sense of fulfillment and call it 'going to work'. Despite this, demons raise their heads and breath fire now and then. I am blessed to have people around me who extinguish those flames without even realizing it. Uttering a sincere word. Sitting down and sharing a moment. Listening and not even responding. Laughing along with me so I am not the only one. Those things, while often everyday and seemingly insignificant, sometimes are all that I need. Who can know what someone else might find to be that shield or that lifeline he or she needs at a given moment?

So, please, kiss someone a little more warmly today, embrace just little bit longer. Ask how someone is doing, and actually listen to the response. Laugh along and smile when that cheerful girl prattles on, but look into her eyes and see if they sparkle or hold back tears. Who knows? Maybe you will help shed light on some shadow and banish the demon, for a little while at least, and that might be all she needs.



Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Proud

I will say, boldly and without reservation, that this post is about my kids, and I am going to brag about them. Deal with it. This is my blog, and I can do what I want. I f you feel differently, write your own blog. No, really. Write one. It is neat.

The other evening, my daughter Emily came downstairs and began searching through the bookshelves in the basement. I asked her what she was looking for, and she told me she was looking for Johnny Got his Gun.  She knew I had a copy, and she just wanted to read it. I am proud of Emily for countless reasons, and one of the qualities that makes Emily Emily that I am proud of is a thoughtful, intelligent young woman. She thinks about things. Not with an elitist effort to place herself above others, but with innocent and sincere wonder. She considers her favorite music and ponders why the artists might have written the way they did, about from where the words and emotion might have sprung. She thinks about how people behave, and what might be behind their actions. She examines history and wonders what motivated the players on the world stage. And she reads with that same thoughtful approach. So, when she asked for one of my favorite novels, for no other reason she wanted to read it, was proud. It could not find my copy, and I am hoping I lent it to someone who has been enjoying it, but I do not remember. To rectify the problem, I gave Emily some cash and told her that having a copy of that book on our shelf was a must. Within two hours, she had a copy of Johnny Got his Gun. 

Johnny Got his Gun  is an amazing novel by the way. Would you like to know what trigger my desire to read it? I really don't care if you answered in the positive or negative; I am going to reveal this monumental piece of information. One word. "One". That is the word. "One". Metallica put out a song titled "One" while I was in high school. It is a dark and somewhat disturbing song. It confused and intrigued me. I discovered that the song was based on a novel titled Johnny Got his Gun.  I found a copy of the novel somewhere in Ellsworth High School and read it. I loved it. It was dark and disturbing. It made me think.

While I am bragging about how proud 'i am of my kids, I have to throw out some kudos to my boy Dylan as well. Last week, I left my wife, son, and daughter for a few days to spend a little time with a family of a different sort as Coach Warner and I headed to the mountains of Colorado with our seniors. It was, as always, a terrific trip that allows us to learn a great deal about the young men who will lead our football brotherhood this fall. At our campsite, phone reception is unreliable, to put it mildly. At one point, my phone rang with my Motley Cru "Home Sweet Home" ringtone, but when I answered, the call broke up and was lost. I texted my wife Heidi, as well as Emily and Dylan, in case something was wrong. Dylan responded that he wanted to make sure everything was ok and that I had made the trip safely. There was also a car parked in front of our house, and he wanted to know if I knew whose car it was and why it was parked there. You see. Dylan was man of the house, and he was taking that role quite seriously. The next day, Emily had gone to out, and she had told her Mom she would return around 5. It seems that at 5:15, Dylan tok it upon himself to call his oder sister and check on her status. He just wanted to be positive that she was safe and sound, since she was late, after all. Dylan is thoughtful, much like his sister. He is also a very serious soul. If he is given a job, he will do it, and he will do it as well as he possibly can. That is just how things should be, at least in his mind.  He is 13. I am not saying the kid is perfect, but he is someone to be proud of.

I could rattle on and on about these two fine young people. All I can say is that they have been raised well. Seriously, they have somehow managed to take the good things their mother and I do and insert those seeds within their minds and hearts and nurtured them, while ignoring the failings in us (ok, more in me). They have been blessed with great examples and guides outside our home, from their grandparents to amazing teachers, and they have had the intelligence and discrimination to choose the examples they value well. That is something else I have to be proud of. I have not even scratched the surface of all of the reason I have to be proud.

So there you have it; my kids are amazing, and I am proud of them. How could I not be?





Sunday, August 3, 2014

The Top Five Utterances That I Do Not Want to Hear Again


Inspired by Samantha Neill's blog post, which was inspired by an Andrew Bauer suggestion, which was prompted by a Samantha Neill lamentation about writer's block, which might have been stirred up by guilt ELA team members' cast upon one another regarding blog proficiency, I offer you my own "Top 5" list. Sam was doubly ambitious in her "Top" list post, so you should go read it at Random Thoughts and Then I Found Five Dollars. You should also check out Andrew Bauer's Ya Nerd... and Greg Froese's "This might be off-topic but..." They are all pretty neat. Another team member, John Knapp, has choosen to make his Facebook page his bloggish post of choice, so you might check it out as well. Kiley Porter does not seem to blog in any way, which is incredibly weak, and she will be ridiculed mercilessly if she does not get off the schneid soon. Our newest member, Amber Neighbor, has a brief grace period, but we expect her to dazzle us as well. Mary Devries, BHS French teacher, posts under the title of The Muse Meanders.

Anyway, when I read one of those other writer's musings, they tend to make me think, and they inspire me to write more. So, I apologize for often borrowing my topics form those sources, and I thank those colleagues and friends for giving me ideas. So, here are my "Top Five Utterances That I Do Not Want to Hear Again".

I cannot believe the summer is almost/already over.
Really? You cannot believe the summer is almost over. You no longer recognize or comprehend the concept that time passes, and as a society, we mark that progress on a device known as a calendar, one of which can be found on your smartphone, and that said calendar marks the upcoming conclusion of the season known as "summer"?

I understand hyperbole and that this statement falls into that category, even if those who use it may not recognize it. I just wish people would stop saying it. Every year, summer draws to a close, and while most of us (teachers) have been working in some way all summer, we look to the turn of the page that reveals the new school year. And each year, around the third week of July, people will begin uttering this annoying statement, as if this year is somehow different from those in the past. Actually, this summer has been different from my past twenty or so summers because we had a summer that began, in principle, in early May, and truly will not wrap up until mid-August,, which should make the sunset of summer even more believable. Despite this, someone will walk up to whatever group of colleagues I am standing with on the first day of staff orientation, sipping the teacher's elixir of power, strong coffee, and he will sigh and say, "Wow, can you believe we are back already? I can't believe summer is already over." I will not lose my cool at that point and punch him in the face. I will save that for the seemingly inevitable following statement that begins with "I seen..."

I seen...
I see. I saw. I have seen. Perhaps I had seen or I will have seen.
Do I need to go any further? This one I do not understand, honestly. It cannot even be blamed on laziness; see and saw are each shorter and require less effort to say. So, can we make the effort to be lazy enough to use the correct form of see and end the madness?

The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread
This phrase truly does not bother me much, but Jimmy Fallon, in his recent "Thank You Notes" informed us all that sliced bread came out the same year as the first television. How many of you have spent hours this week staring at a loaf of store-bought bread? Besides that, is that new Lays Potato Chip flavor really that great?

No offense, but...
I am guilty of this utterance. I hope to never use it again. Let's be honest here: if someone says "No offense, but..." something offensive is sure to follow. If it needs to be said, let's just say it. No qualifier, no cliched preface, no half-hearted noneffort to soften the blow. If it cannot be said without that lead in, don't say it.

YOLO
Stop. Just stop.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Pause on the Patio

I sat on the patio last night and enjoyed that slice of time that rests between day and night, a time, much like dawn, that poets find inspiring and enlightening. I understand why. The only question I have is why more poets have not haled from our fine state of Kansas and filled volume after volume with verse sprung from those daily respites alone, for I honestly believe there is no better place to enjoy those meaningful moments than right here, nestled securely in the heart of this land. As I sat, my phone rang, and the voice on the other end, which belonged to Steve Warner, asked if I could see the sunset from my chair on the west side of my house; he too had been struck by the sunset and the scene it painted.

"So what?" you may ask, especially if you are one of those poor souls who has decided that our fortunate geographic niche in the universe is simply too boring, or too "Kansas" to be amazing. I offer for you exhibit A, proof positive that this land of the brave is in fact anything but boring. Just because life may move at a slightly slower pace here than on the coasts or even in those Midwestern cities does not mean nature is less enticing here. We simply have to allow that pace to take hold and work its magic. Sit on your back porch, or your front steps, or take a walk as the sun glides behind the western horizon. As the light fades, life buzzes, if you listen and look. It may not slap you in the face like a neon light or rush of isolated crowds on their ways to late dinners, but it hums around you and wants to be heard. Lightning bugs zip from below cottonwood branches, and the leaves that adorn those branches turn to listen to the whisper of a breeze. Somehow here, voices carry, and you hear the lady a block over laugh at whatever it is that makes her laugh as she stands in the drive of her neighbor, pausing to see how the week went as she drops off extra tomatoes from her garden. It is not all nature and naturalism, for you also hear the gravelly scrape as tires skid across pavement. Usually those tires come in pairs; kids still ride bikes here, at least on their own block, and if the tires propel a four-wheeled vehicle, the driver will most likely raise a hand from the steering wheel as he passes, often accompanied by a head nod, as if to say, "I don't know your name, but you live around here, so it's the least I can do."

Still not convinced? Consider this: variety is the spice of life. Do you want variety? You have it here. Last week I stepped onto my patio a little later, around 10:30 so, and the neighborhood had in fact grown much quieter. It was 91 degrees. That is warm, especially since the sun had been down for some time. Last night, while not chilly, was perfectly pleasant, and I even stoked a fire in my recently acquired chiminea, not because it was uncomfortable, but because I just wanted to, and there is something about a flickering flame that adds a sense of serenity to an evening as the sun says, "So long." Tonight, it might be raining, a pleasant shower that falls peacefully and rolls from the roof, or it might storm and rattle the windows with thunder sent down by electric flashes that illuminate the entire world for an instant and reveal ropes of water that turn gutters into gushers and streets into canals. Who knows? Some of you who have lived here for a while might be saying, "It might do all of those, as a front rolls through dropping the temperature from blazing to brisk in an instant and rolling in waves of thin clouds, clear skies, and rolling thunderheads, all within an hour or two.

It is Saturday. and while you may have missed a morning that offered a cool  and calm sunrise, take the time today to allow your life to fall into sync with the world around you. You don't have to wax poetic if that is not your style, but you will most likely breathe somewhat more deeply, not with that frustrated sigh of a harried week, but with satisfaction that this really is a place worth enjoying, even if just for a moment.

That is what I will do. Have a great weekend.