An Ode to My Planner

It’s easy to look down at the calendar (or scroll through your phone) and realize how fast time is going by. For instance, I have been teaching for two months. I have been living abroad for twice that. I have been married for almost one year. We all mark our lives by days, weeks, years, and when we’re feeling more creative, by people, places, seasons, opening ceremonies, fortnights, notebooks filled and filed, books read or written, friends made, apartments lived in, countries visited, waxes and wanes of the moon.

One of many paper notebooks in my life.

I’m old-fashioned and I adore paper, so in addition to the various notebooks where I record thoughts, images, and snippets overheard, I maintain a nice, old-fashioned, paper planner. (My old-fashioned tendencies also emerge when I order “icy” white wine and say things like “the bee’s knees” in casual conversation). I rely on the planner to keep my head on straight between and amongst appointments, teaching lessons (the schedule changes daily), social engagements, birthdays, and the like. I’ll give you a quick peek into my crazy mind:

The satisfaction when the week is done.

Whenever a given task or meeting is complete, I tick a big, reinforced, check mark next to it, and I’ll promptly admit how much satisfaction I derive from this personal check system. I’m sure the smart phone of your choice offers a similar “check-off” system. The overall feeling must be the same as accomplishment is almost always gratifying. Ready to take a closer look at the (organized) chaos?

Ever in pursuit of check marks…

Sometimes even Dr. Frankenstein needs to refine his work, so I’ll occasionally superimpose a Post-it with additional notes to self (a list’s list, if you will). Sometimes those Post-its migrate onto the surface of the desk or my storyboard or a speaker or the mirror in the bathroom… you get the idea. All of this is an effort to stay organized, and I’m sure more than a few of you will tell me there is an easier, “smarter,” paper-free way. I know this lovely computer I’m lucky enough to be working on comes equipped with perfectly intuitive and logical calendar software, but I’ve yet to use it. Would it allow me to doodle a heart around my anniversary? Or underline my nephew’s birthday three times? Or flip through a year of life with my thumb, as I can with this?

Perfect for teachers:
The 2011-2012 August to August Calendar Organizer
I stand by the paper calendar much in the same way I stand by the paper notecard, the sentiments that I keep and box and look at from time to time. 

I stand by the paper calendar much in the same way I stand by the paper bookmark as a sign of progress rather than an escalating percentage at the bottom of a screen.

Thanks to Litquake, San Francisco’s Literary Festival.
Learn more at www.litquake.org.

I stand by the paper calendar much in the same way I stand by the paper book, even though I now know how easy it is to download an English-language book when you’re living in a Spanish-speaking/publishing country. I appreciate the convenience of an e-reader, but I still took paperback books with me to New York last week. I still read with a pen. I might even be the only person who still thinks a paperback is actually more portable than an e-reader. After all, I can take a paperback out on the metro without enticing a soul. I can drop one on the floor of a crowded bus without worrying that a screen has cracked. I can stuff another in the pocket of my bag and not mind if it brushes up against a condensation-heavy bottle of water.

The potential of a brand new seven.

Still, I know I couldn’t speak to all of you with paper alone. I would never have reached the majority of you without the Internet, this blogging service, SEO, built-in links to social networks, published bios, email forwards, and another old-fashioned service, word-of-mouth. I appreciate the paperless support and give credit where credit is do.

Stay tuned… (thanks for not judging my handwriting…
I never said anyone else had to be able to read it!)

But whenever an idea for a blog strikes, I know I’ll continue to make a note to myself in a paper planner as a reminder, yes, but also as a motivator. That is always the first step in reaching out to you.

Travels to Brooklyn, Where I Can Talk to the Cabbies

The Brooklyn Bridge, once upon a time…

I’m back in Santiago after a week Stateside. I didn’t go home to California, though I did travel to a place I used to live: New York. More specifically, I spent time in Brooklyn for the wedding of the girl without whom college would have been an entirely different and unfathomable experience, as would all the years that have followed since.

I lived in New York in my early-twenties when I worked in magazine publishing. I suppose I still do some of the time, but the landscape and the product looks completely different than it did then. Last week, I walked by my old apartment and I’m sure we all know that feeling of rounding the corner or pulling up a driveway and seeing “it” — that place where we passed however many nights, made whatever decision, and laughed with so-and-so about what-have-you. Seeing it brings both confirmation of a time in your life you remember a certain way and further self-inquiry. In my case, the building is brick and shorter than I recall and doesn’t have a blue door like I thought it did. Or maybe the landlord painted (it has been seven years). I can still remember his voice over the phone, calling from Staten Island. 
The view from Thistle Hill Tavern…
 right at the corner of 7th Ave and 15th Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
I spent time with the half a dozen cousins who have settled in Brooklyn over the last decade, eating at one cousin’s delish restaurant, Thistle Hill Tavern, walking through Prospect Park with another, meeting up with yet another immediately after he returned from two weeks Tokyo and with yet another for coffee. I got to catch up with friends I haven’t seen since my last trip to the boroughs over a year ago. Many of them now have their babies in tow so we headed to still-sunny parks to follow pigeons and chase open meadows, and my subsequent photos look more like the “babes of Brooklyn” than anything else. 
A boy on the lose in Prospect Park.
The highlight of highlights was walking my three-year-old “nephew” to pre-school (without siblings of my own, I’ve been generously allowed to call and love my cousin’s children as my nieces and nephews). He and I held hands, crossing the Brooklyn avenues, with his bestie “Dougie” in his other hand and a much-needed iced coffee in mine, and while it may have only lasted a few minutes, it has carved out a little place in my heart all its own because I learned what it feels like to watch someone you’re related to learn to talk and walk and run into a classroom where his finger paintings on the wall bear your same last name. 
Walking to “Skoooool!”
I also got to jet out to Asbury Park, NJ, where my “sister-cousin” lives and where Shepard Fairey recently added some flair in homage to the famed boardwalk’s musical roots. We dipped our whole bodies in the ocean and rode beach cruisers through three towns by just sticking to the boardwalk. I felt like I did when I was seven… that as long as I had my bike I could get almost anywhere.
Obey Records on the Asbury Park Boardwalk.
It was exhausting. But it was delicious to overextend, as you have to do when you have a stretch of days off work and close to two dozen people to see in multiple area codes. By the end of it, I fell asleep during mid-conversation (despite my introduction of “Piscola” to the Jersey Shore) and realized how much notions of “home” change as we move and shift around the planet. 
I recently taught one of my classes the meaning of “hometown” and the difference between one’s hometown and one’s home. Every single member of the class was from Santiago proper, born and raised. They still call their hometown of six million home. In a country where the third of the population lives in one city, this answer is common. I explained my own hometown: a small community south of San Francisco known for its hills and its horses and the fact that there isn’t one traffic light to speak of. 
We actually had a horse, Rodger, for a little while. 
A long way from Brooklyn, certainly, and a full 24 hours of travel away from Chile. It’s my “hometown” not because I was born there, but because it’s where I grew up during those formative years when we ride bikes and walk to school and when it’s normal to run into half a dozen people whenever your mom takes you grocery shopping. My nephew’s hometown will always be Brooklyn. My mom’s will always be out in the Avenues of San Francisco even though she still lives in my horsey, hilly hometown. I’ve since called Boston, London, New York, San Francisco, and now Santiago “home,” a concept that has to stay the same and continue to change, right? It has to be where we store memory and wherever we lay our proverbial hat. We have to have it and be looking for it all at the same time. 
More Shepard Fairey.
We keep moving to see and appreciate the differences and the familiarities. Throughout it all, I was playing the comparison game I’m used to playing here. How different this is. Or what’s the word for that again? Only in reverse. I was shocked when a cab driver wanted to carry on a full-ride conversation about hubcaps. I wasn’t shocked because he was talking to me; I was shocked that I could talk back. That I knew the word for hubcap! I was also surprised how much I paid attention to my phone in order to make and change plans and express glee and fondness after they came to pass. (Nowadays, all of five people have my number and 75 key commands are required in order to draft and send any one text message.) In a full week, the phone hardly ever rang per se, and I realized no one actually talks on the phone anymore. I knew that four months ago. It’s the remembering part that surprised me. 
And then there was the food. All the glorious food…
The eponymous “Porta Porta” in Asbury Park.

The hummus at Thistle Hill (you knew I’d hunt that down).
My sister-cousin was also thoughtful enough to stock her
fridge with not one, but three varieties. I ate so much I almost
couldn’t get through the Porta Porta above
(but obviously did 🙂
“Lunch,” Italian style, at Provini in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
The second course at Provini. I did say “Italian style.”
The table went gaga for the celery puree at Avenue
in Long Branch, NJ (the side of meat also looks pretty tasty).

And when a good trip has to come to an end, it’s nice to head, well, home… Safe travels to and from and between and amongst everywhere you call home.

Getting in Touch with My Craftier Side

Home-made notecards!

Thanks to advances in technology, we’ve all read about the end of print, the end of the book, the end of writing (and reading) as we know it. I’m not going to post about that, though I’ve read some interesting takes on it here and here.

What I am going to post about today is the notecard: the nice, and I suppose now old-fashioned, paper thank you, well wish, condolence, or birthday greeting. I’m talking about buying (or making) something that reminds you of a friend, cousin, spouse, or parent and taking a few minutes to write (with a pen!) a personal message.

The beauty of it is that it’s a reciprocal gift: there’s the satisfaction in finding the perfect sentiment as well as the joy of opening up an envelope and realizing someone knows you that well. I have boxes full of the cards I’ve kept over the years, and anyone who’s been over to my house knows I keep a rotation of them (along with post-its, quotes on writing, photos, ticket stubs, character names, etc.) affixed to the story board over my desk. It usually hangs horizontally, but everything’s gotten a little adjustment down here.

My storyboard, a gift from my mom that has inspired
writing in New York, San Francisco, and Santiago.

Well, there’s nothing like a few spare hours and sheer necessity to churn up creative energy (let’s not forget that greeting cards are in Spanish in this neck of the woods). So, over the weekend, yours truly “crafted” some thirty-two notecards.

Ironically, it’s not quite so easy to send a card from Chile. Sure, there are post offices, but there’s a longer delay and always that risk that a birthday card will arrive a few weeks too late. On the flip side, what’s more exciting than receiving international mail?! Stay tuned, friends and family.
Well, I’m about to take an international flight of my own to be in one of my dearest friend’s weddings. It will be my first time Stateside in nearly four months, and I imagine some of that reverse culture shock I’ve written about will kick in. But I’m also taking the opportunity to hand-deliver some of these hand-made notecards (how apropos). 
Poodles, teacups, bunnies, ornaments, a decadent shoe…
They’re all fair game.

My tricks for fun, flirty cards that don’t look like you went cuckoo with a glue stick:

• Save catalogs. Anthropologie is my personal fave. They clearly still have quite the hefty photo budget and it shows in their elegant, inspired, themed, and sometimes quirky take on the seasons. And they’re often shot on location! Whether you want to be holiday-specific (Easter bunnies, anyone?) or you just want to add a feminine touch to a blank notecard, keep turning the pages, and you’re bound to find it.

• Add borders. This is super easy. I was working with three colors of paperstock (I swear by Paper Source back in SF). Just cut a rectangle slightly larger than the image (I eyeball it) and you’re in business.

• Hold onto all those random envelopes than can accumulate. After all, when you make your own cards, you can customize size!

• Have fun with it. A yellow teacup against blue floral wallpaper may not speak to you, but whatever it is, if you craft it with love and include a personal sentiment, chances are it will speak to the person receiving it.

• It’s the easiest way to feel “crafty” without having to roll yourself in glitter or operate a sewing machine (though I’m sure you could if you wanted to). There are also excellent how-to books out there, especially from Chronicle Books.

Why not give those envelopes some extra flair, too.

So, if you’ve had a baby recently, have a birthday coming up, are putting yours truly up for the night, or are about to say “I Do,” look for one of these in a mailbox near you soon. And if the post-office still eludes me, you might find one affixed to a gift or handed across the coffee table. Trust me, the note will still have made quite the journey.

What do you make? Have any arts and crafts projects you want to share? Even if you’re like me and don’t identify as all that crafty, I bet you do.

Far, Far from Rome

Top shelf… to be read.

I’ve already shown you the three boxes of books I brought with me to Chile.

One was full of my all-time favorite novels and memoirs so that I can always dip back into them for inspiration. There’s also something reassuring about their mere proximity, as if they are physical evidence of the hard work, craft, and daunting revision required to publish a book.

Another was full of books on writing and teaching, as you never know what your writing or your students might need.

The third box was dedicated to books I had accumulated but hadn’t read yet for a number of reasons: two years of required reading in graduate school, a given mood, as well as the occasional judgment of a book by its cover. The boxes have now been emptied into corresponding sections of the bookshelf. I try to always carry one of the yet-to-reads around with me wherever I go in Santiago, as you also never know when your student will run late or your bus, too full, will pass right by you, or when you’ll need to stand in line for an hour and a half at the bank (yes, you read that right).

To be taught.

I also recently told you about my “next-book-to-read” selection process. Well, I finally plucked Four Seasons in Rome by Anthony Doerr from the top of the stack. Where I devoured The Corrections in hopeless bursts of hermit-ism, I savored Doerr’s memoir about the year he spent in Rome on a writing fellowship with his wife and baby twins in tow. I drew out each of its 202 pages like a meal.

The book, which has now traveled from Maryland to California to Chile, has a history of its own. My uncle gave it to me and many members of our family for Christmas ’07. It is indeed a book you want to give to the people you love (especially if they also happen to be Italian 🙂 Being an avid reader and eloquent writer in his own right and someone with whom I share a special bond over books, he also inscribed a personal sentiment to each member of us.

by Anthony Doerr.

Of me, he wrote: “To Jennifer, who knows and practices the maxim that good writers need to re-write, to throw away, and move ever forward to that perfect phrase, sentence, paragraph that leads the reader to discovery.”

Nearly four years passed between the time I read that note and the time I finally read Doerr’s prose. Meanwhile, I’ve earned my M.F.A. in English and Creative Writing, met and married my husband, and moved to the Southern Hemisphere.

That means that like Doerr, I’ve also been struggling to acquire a new language (“Barricades emerge: language, culture, time. To be a nonfluent speaker is to pass through one gate only to find yourself outside two more” 46);

I’ve also been getting lost (“You find your way through a place by getting lost in it” 87);

I’ve also been exploring a vast and populated city with my partner (“Rome is a broken mirror, the falling strap of a dress, a puzzle of astonishing complexity. It’s an iceberg floating below our terrace, all its ballast hidden beneath the surface” 89);

I’ve also been weathering the adventures and the adjustments that come with being a stranger in a strange land (“Leave home, leave the country, leave the familiar. Only then can routine experience–buying bread, eating vegetables, even saying hello–become new all over again” 54);

I’ve also been fighting the inadequacy you feel when you are yet another artist in Rome in Doerr’s case or yet another expat blogger in Chile in mine (“One minute I think, This here, this is a good sentence. The next I am on the brink of throwing the whole thing away. But I am used to this by now” 130).

Add to that that I’m also thirty-one, like Doerr was when he moved to Rome, and I’m realizing that the book gods always have a larger plan.

Doerr’s Rome.

This prose is stunning (“Dawn stretches across the gardens, pulling tiny shadows out of the blades of grass, draining through the needles of the umbrella pines” 27), so I don’t doubt I would have appreciated it four years ago. I would have gotten the beauty, but I’m not sure I would have seen myself on the page, because my life didn’t yet overlap with Doerr’s in such meaningful ways.

Certainly, Doerr and I don’t have everything in common. I only have 3.5 months in country, a time period that has spanned winter and spring. I haven’t yet lived here for a full summer and fall. Another key difference is that Doerr brought along six-month-old twin boys and suffered from insomnia (the two are more than a little connected). While I haven’t reached that stage of life yet (and can sleep ten hours in a row), I am still grateful to have read the book now, at this stage of life. By “this,” I mean… living abroad, newly married, and writing everyday.

Whether you read this book now or save it until it can overlap with your own life, I suppose this post is meant to “gift” Four Seasons in Rome to each of you, if only in name alongside a small sampling of its beauty and merit. I spent three days in Rome in 2001, three years before Doerr and his family would land there, but I don’t think its critical that you’ve been to appreciate Doerr’s perspective of it. He will paint the city for you and if you do make it there one day, you will see how close he got to it. Ironically, I don’t have photos of Rome to compare to Doerr’s prose. My camera battery died right after we toured the Coliseum, which was the very first thing we did. So I remember making a conscious effort after that to really look at the fountains and the Vatican and the domes and the gelato colors and the people. I stared so that I could impress Rome on my mind and re-visit it there. It worked for a time, thanks to Doerr (and my uncle), many of those impressions are re-surfacing ten years later in Santiago.

My Santiago take on it.

Part of Doerr’s style has him quoting the greats who have written from Rome before him. They include Pliny the Elder, Dante, and John Keats. I thought Doerr’s words deserved similar incorporation into my own here, and I don’t doubt I will continue to rely on this book as I make way in a city far, far from Rome. For now, the book has completed another reached another milestone in its journey–it now rests among my favorites on the bookshelf.

Of the books it’s keeping company with, Anthony Doerr might describes it best: “I blink, I breathe; the spines of the books around me seethe and rustle, each a chronicle of someone’s mind, a brain that has washed into this city like a wave and broken against itself” (70).

A Laughing Matter

Laughter is key, right? It can soothe, break the ice, clear away nerves, make you realize you’re hitting it off, remind you why you’re the best of friends, and if you really get going, it can even make you gasp and cry from the sheer exertion of it. There’s that saying that it requires fewer muscles to smile than to frown. I like that. We only have to take the path of least resistance to get there.

Cousin Laughter.

I wrote in my second guest post for ProfeConnect that in a TEFL classroom, laughter can also erupt when we try to convey meaning. Whether or not we do so successfully, the results can be equally entertaining. Because we, as teachers, will go to absurd lengths to make sure our students understand (and, as I write in the post, dance moves are not out of the question). I’m not sure if e.e. cummings ever taught, but he was onto something when he said “the most wasted of all days is one without laughter.” The same can easily be said of of all classes.

Friend Laughter.

One of the founders of ProfeConnect agreed about how important laughter is in the classroom, not only for breaking the ice with students, but also for motivating them to participate and for providing a lively, entertaining environment. It goes without saying that laughter-inducing teaching techniques shouldn’t dominate one’s teaching style, but it’s so nice when a chuckle or two bubble up, even on a stressed day when students may be running late, a test looms, and a certain grammar point is still clearly out of reach. Those are the days when perhaps it’s most important to reassure students that you’re still having a good time here, so they should be as well.

Married Laughter.
Courtesy of Brent Mullins Photography.

So you start class with a laugh. Or you make sure to end the day with one. But whenever it happens, take the break it gives you. Relish the chance to live in the moment and forget whatever it is you’re worried about or preoccupied with that day. As Milton Berle said, “laughter is an instant vacation.” He’s right. Because laughter is one of those things where it is nearly impossible to do anything else at the same time.

BFF-Just-Can’t-Control-It Laughter.
Courtesy of Katie Barnes Photography.

It contorts your face and sometimes it even takes over your body to the point that you have to grab a seat and “get ahold of yourself.” I’m all for waiting as long as possible to get that hold because little beats riding out a good laugh all the way back to shore, then heading out again. I mean, take a look at this photo and try to walk and chew gum at the same time:

Wedding/YMCA/Wig Laughter.
Courtesy of Craig Paulson Photography and
The Bucha/Baran wedding of ’10

Here’s to finding the laughter today. Cheers!