Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Haircuts

As just about everyone who knows me could tell you, I have almost always had long hair.

When I was eleven, it was nearly to my waist, until the fateful day my mom agreed to take me to get my hair cut. I told the hairdresser to cut it to below my shoulder blades. She assured me that I had nothing to worry about, no problem, she'd give me the cut I wanted.

I had to remove my glasses for the cut, and being near-sighted, could really only make out a vague impression of my reflection as she snipped away at my locks.

When I was finally allowed to put my glasses back on and see the result, I found, to my horror, that she had cut my hair to slightly above my shoulders. I was upset, but as I could hardly insist that she put the hair back, I sighed resignedly and mom and I headed home. I spent the entire ride home playing with the blunt ends of my hair, trying to convince myself that it was okay, it could have been much worse.

When we arrived home, my father took one look at me, then without a word, turned around and went outside onto the sundeck. I found him there, crying uncontrollably.

I gave him a big hug and said "It's okay daddy, it's just hair. It'll grow back!"

It was several years before I cut it anywhere near as short again. In fact it's become somewhat of a tradition to let it grow very long then chop it off to just below my shoulders every four or five years.

The last time I did this was almost ten years ago. My dad had passed away a couple of years earlier, so I didn't have to worry about upsetting him by cutting off my "beautiful hair." I've had haircuts since then, but never gone shorter than falling to my mid-back.

Until last week.

Last Tuesday, at 3:30pm, I had hair that hung below my derriere. 


As of 5:30pm, I had hair that hung to just below my shoulders.


I donated a 25 inch ponytail of hair to a group that makes wigs for kids suffering from cancer or Aleopacia.

It will take a while to get used to having hair this short (for me) again. We took pictures before and after the haircut, as my five-year-old niece said: "because it will be a long time before your hair gets long again." She informed me very diplomatically that she liked it both long and short, but she was glad we took the pictures so we would remember it long.

I couldn't help but think of my dad and that first drastic haircut, and whisper to him, "It's okay daddy, it's just hair. It'll grow back."

Monday, February 21, 2011

Dad's Adventures In Teaching

As you may already know, my dad was a high-school Math teacher.

Over the years he relayed many tales about his teaching experiences... including the time his students decided to paint holiday representations of the teachers including this one of my dad as Santa:
Santa Dad

There are four anecdotes that have particularly stuck with me over the years.  I thought I'd share them here.

I Need Some Help With This Equation... or RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP!

One day dad had his class working on some math problems when one of his students put up her hand to ask for his help.  He went over to her desk to see where she had gotten lost in the equation, and just as he bent down to peer at the paper, there was an unmistakeable ripping sound from directly behind him.  The class burst into laughter, while dad's face undoubtably became a rather deep shade of red.

Shocked and embarrassed, dad quickly backed away and excused himself from the classroom for a moment.  He wanted to check out the damage.  The thing was, his pants were perfecly in tact.  There was no tear to be found on any of his clothing.

Mollified, he returned to the classroom only to find that the student sitting directly behind the girl who had requested help figuring out the equation had two pieces of cloth stuffed under her desk.  They had planned the entire thing to make him think he had ripped his pants.

I think it was quite some time before he was able to look at this event (or those students) with humour instead of humiliation, but eventually it became one of his favorite stories of pranks pulled by students.


Passing Notes
WARNING!  This is not a happy story.  If you can't handle sad things, skip ahead to the next one.

Dad had a rule in his classroom that if he caught someone passing a note in class, he would not only confiscate it, but read it then and there.  This horrified some of his students, but they never knew the real reason why he was so adamant about it.

Once there was a girl in one of his classes whom he caught passing a note to a friend.  She was a girl like any other in the class, nothing made her particularly stand out.  He saw the note being passed and confiscated it on the spot.  Not looking at the note, he stuffed it into his desk drawer and carried on with the lesson.  He didn't give it another thought.

The following Monday dad arrived at school to the news that one of his students had committed suicide that weekend.  It was not until days or weeks later that dad found the note in his desk.  It said something along the lines of:  "I can't take it anymore.  I'm going to kill my self this weekend."

The note was this girl's last cry for help, and it went unheard.

The incident deeply affected him.  It think it kind of broke him in a way.  I don't know if dad ever fully got over the guilt of that feeling of "what if?"  What if he had read the note?  What if he hadn't confiscated it, and the intended recipient had read it?  What if someone had heard that last deperate plea for help?  What if?

His students may have thought of him as a hard-ass for reading any confiscated notes, but I think it was his way of trying to make things right.  He never wanted to relive that experience, so he did the only thing he could think of to make sure it never happened again.


Your Test Or Mine?

One year, dad suspected some of his students of cheating on their math tests.  In order to catch them he devised a cunning plan.  For the following math test he created two tests.  Each test had questions that were of equal difficulty, but different variables.

For example, one test might have question 1 as "2b + 4 = 14  solve for b"  while the corresponding question on the other test might have "3a + 5 = 23 solve for a."


Dad placed the tests face-down on the desks in a checkerboard pattern so that each person in front and behind as well as to either side had a different test.


The students came in, wrote the test and left.


When dad was marking the tests he found that one of his students had copied every answer (including the wrong ones) from the person in front of him... He hadn't even looked at the questions on his own page... or he would have realized that his neighbour was solving for "a" while he was solving for "b."


Needless to say, that student recieved a big fat zero on the test and a trip to the principal's office.


Dad decided that this method of weeding out the cheaters had worked so well that from that point on he always made two tests for every class, laying them out in a checkerboard pattern.

Singing Detentions

This is probably my favorite story about my dad's teaching experience.

Like most teachers, dad had some students who managed to earn themselves regular detentions.

Unlike most teachers, dad sometimes employed a rather unique method of encouraging his students to avoid being put in detention more than once.

Dad loved music.  He could remember the names of songs and artists that he had heard many years before.  Often he would remember the lyrics to songs that nobody else knew.  My parents were once excluded from a competition in a pub because the person running the "free drinks" bet knew they could sing every word of the obscure song "Propper Cuppa Coffee." They were members of the local Folk Song Society and used to have regular "folkie" parties at their home.

While dad loved music, when it came to singing himself... well lets just be polite and say he was a little on the tone-deaf side.  Added to that, his choice of music would not have fallen into the category of what his students would have concidered "cool."

During one noteable detention he decided to try an experiment.  He sang "The Red Corvette" by John McCutcheon. When he had finished he asked each of the students a question about the song.  If they answered correctly, he let them leave.  If they answered incorrectly, he sang it again.  Most of the students got out of there after the second performance, but one student could not answer a single question right.

"How much did the car cost?"
"I dunno."
(Sings song again.)
"What kind of car was it?"
"I dunno."
(Sings again.)
"Why was she selling the car?"
"I dunno."
(Sings again... and again... and again...finally throwing up his hands and asking:)
"What colour was the Corvette?"

The student still couldn't answer correctly, so they both had to suffer through the full detention.

Years later, former students still warned thier siblings and friends not to get detention with Mr. S, or they might be subjected to the torture of one of his infamous singing detentions.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Oh, Christmas Tree

This started out as an email to Little Willow, but I'm 99.999999999% sure she won't mind if I share it with the rest of the world too, so here ya go.

***********************************

Two years ago, right after Christmas my mom decided to get rid of excess "stuff" and chose to give away some garlands (green things made of similar materials to the fake Christmas trees).  She dragged several bags of the green stuff over to the donation bin on the corner behind her house.
Last year she went to get out the Christmas tree and found... garlands.

OOps!

She went out and bought herself a new tree, decorated it and all was well with the world.

Two months ago mom was getting ready to have the sundeck fixed so she was moving things out of the garage and storing them in the house.  One of her storage spaces is under the captains beds in the kids room.  When she lifted Julia's mattress to store something under there she found... the old Christmas tree!

To make a long story short, she decided I could have the new tree since she had found the old one, and Thursday I moved things around to make room for it. I put it up and decorated it yesterday and it is now making my room look gloriously holidayish.   I picked up some sparkly blue garlands and plastic icicles at the dollar store to supplement my meagre ornament supply and splurged on some pretty LED light strands at Canadian Tire.  Now I just need a star or angel or fairy for the top.

In the last 24 hours I have been given the following tree-top suggestions via Facebook:  a Stuffed Moose (Patrice), a Frog (Mrs. Doc Froggy), the Vampire Frog hat my mom wears on Halloween each year (Mom, emphatically seconded by Patrice).  While the Vampire Frog head would fulfill my family obsession with frogs, and nod to the Jossverse in its vampireness, I don't think it would quite go with the Christmasy feel I'm going for, nor would it go with the fairy and dragon motif throughout my living room.

An interesting sidenote: The tree is next to my fishtank, and it seems the fish are somewhat mesmerized by the lights... the guppies keep swimming over the the side of the tank closest to the tree and looking towards the tree.  I was afraid they might get freaked out by the lights, but they seem quite entranced instead.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

My Hero

I wrote the following in 1994 when I was 15.   As tomorrow is Remembrance Day, I thought it might be fitting to share here today.

My Hero


My grandfather fought in the war before my father was born, but he was lucky, he came home. When I was two months old, my grandfather was at our house on 12th, laying out cement in our garage, when he had a heart attack.

I never really got to know him, to hear his stories, or to feel his love, which I'm told he had a lot of. I never had a chance to tell him I loved him. Even though I can't remember him, I'm sure I did love him. And I never got to thank him for what he did for me fifty years ago.

He went to war, not because he wanted to, or agreed with it, but because he felt that he had to. Even though he doesn’t lie in Flanders Fields, nor did he die saving the world, he risked his life for me, and therefore Remembrance Day means a lot to me.

I look at his picture and I think, 'what kind of man was he?' I’ll never know for sure but I imagine him as being a hero, in a way, even though he never did anything particularly heroic. He merely did what he believed had to be done.

I just wish that he was here today so that I could call him up and thank him for giving me a better life.

~ JS 
November 10th 1994

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Adventures In House Sitting

I've been house sitting for M&L about twice a year for five or six years now.  When mom and I moved out of the house I grew up in, the day after we moved into her new house, I left to house sit for ten days.  When I got home, she had unpacked all of the common areas and to this day, there are certain things that for the life of me, I can't figure out what she did with.  Because of this we used to joke that I knew how to find things in M&L's kitchen that I couldn't find in my own.

In the past, there has always been at least one dog with me, if not three.  This is the first time I've house sat for them without any pets in the house and it is a little weird not to have any little buddies depending on me or keeping me company.

One of the great things about house sitting is that at home I have a shower but no tub, while M&L have two glorious tubs which I get all to myself.  Yeah, go ahead and laugh, but sometimes there is nothing quite like a good soak to soothe away your aches and pains and fatigue.  In the past, there have been several baths that got cut short because I could hear a dog whining to be let out.  Sara was pretty old, so you couldn't really ignore such a request for long.

The other day, I was having a relaxing soak, when what did I hear?  Something that sounded very much like a dog whining.  Problem was, there were no dogs in the house.  I listened for a while and heard the sound again.  It was not coming from outside, and some deductive reasoning told me that barring the presence of ghostly puppies, the sound was coming from inside the walls.  As it turns out, the pipes to that part of the house can sound eerily similar to a small dog whining.

Once I stopped laughing at myself, I realized the impact those whining pipes must have had on me: I weep at the thought of all of those glorius baths that got cut short due to false alarms!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Weather Report

A few years ago, I was at the Vancouver Folk Music Festival when I happened upon a television news crew filming a live weather report.

"Today, expect to see a 40% chance of rain in the city of Vancouver..."

This sentence alone was hardly unusual given that we were in Vancouver, part of the "Wet Coast" known for a high annual rainfall.  What I did take issue with though, was that it was already raining while they were making this live report.  There were big fat raindrops falling from the sky, one landing on the nose of the weather guy, yet he was announcing only a "40% chance of rain."

While many of the other festival patrons were pulling hoods over their heads, or pulling out umbrellas, I looked at the weather report crew, shook my head, held out my hand to catch a few raindrops and raised an eyebrow.  They blatantly ignored me and the rain that was now spotting the weather guy's formerly perfectly powdered face.

When does a 40% chance of rain become a 100% chance of rain?  Does it have to rain 100% of the day in 100% of the city for it to count?  If it only rains for 9 hours and 36 minutes - that's 40% of a day for those of you wondering where I pulled that number from - does that constitute a 40% chance of rain?   Or does it mean a 100% chance of rain, 40% of the time that day?

In my humble opinion, if it is currently raining while you are standing outdoors in the heart of the city, that is a 100% chance of rainfall that day in that city.

But then, I'm not a professionally trained weather reporter or meteorologist, so what do I know?  I think that from now on though, I'll just stick to looking out the window and holding a hand out to test the weather, rather than trust the weather reports from that particular news station to be accurate.

~ Jeanie

PS: Polgara posted a comment today on FB that made me think of this incident, so she's to blame for this post! *g*

Monday, September 13, 2010

Little people bring big smiles!

Yesterday morning I awoke at 6:15am as usual, got up and went to turn on the light to the main room.

Instead of the usual darkness and quiet, I was greeted by the unmistakeable sound of my niece and nephew coming down the stairs outside my door.

They announced that they had woken up when it was still night time (because it was still dark), and that Daddy was still asleep.

They had gotten up and dressed themselves, not unusual as they are now 4 and 6.  What was somewhat unsusual was the footwear my niece had on.  She's pretty small, even for a four year old, and it seems that she couldn't reach her sock drawer.  She was wearing a pair of red woolen Canada mittens as socks.

I must say, this sight, and the lovely early morning visit and story time as I got ready for work put a smile on my face, which is always a nice way to start the day.

~~
Updated To Add:  Jenny has assured me that J can reach her sock drawer... she just enjoys being silly and putting random things on her feet in lieu of socks. *g*