Archimedes Meets Shakespeare

Archimedes is probably the coolest guy in all of history. I mean, the guy invented the cuckoo clock, the odometer, and a semi-modern irrigation system, ALL BEFORE 200 B.C.E.! He was a mathematician, a physicist, and an architect at the same time, and basically defended tiny little Syracuse, Sicily from the entire Roman navy using his own Grecian noggin. And Shakespeare, well, he's pretty cool too, and I'm an English teacher. Read Hamlet.

Name:
Location: Tucson, Arizona

20 October 2006

The Agony and the Ecstasy

Ugh... the Mets' season is over. I'd like to say that I don't care, and that life goes on, but it's just not the truth. To be fair, I have lost interest in most sports that I used to be obsessed with as a youngster. I no longer watch the NFL, or the NBA, and I rarely follow hockey. I realize that I have other interests, and I enjoy pursuing them and feeling like I'm finally the well-rounded person that all colleges are looking for in 17-year-olds.

But baseball... baseball is different. There's so much history and feeling behind it. Tim sent me this poem a few weeks ago, and I fell in love with it. It's by A. Bartlett Giamatti, a former commissioner of Major League Baseball.

"The Green Fields of the Mind "
It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops. Today, October 2, a Sunday of rain and broken branches and leaf-clogged drains and slick streets, it stopped, and summer was gone.

Beautiful.

And so begins the long, hard winter, without the comfort of baseball. Although admittedly, in Tucson, the winter isn't very long (in fact it doesn't exist), and 70 degrees and sunny can't be classified as hard, but oh! Weep for the rest of the country, and all of Garrison Keillor's favorite states. I feel for you, north. But I hope that the warmth of a Detroit Tigers World Series Championship can carry that sad city through its coldest times.

For love, for heart, for baseball.

11 October 2006

Comments?

Wow, people actually read this stuff? Maybe I should go back into journalism after all as an undercover blogging iconoclast ala Demosthenes from Ender's Game. It'd make me more famous than being a beat reporter for the Foothills Education Beat. Just ask Wonkette.

Anyway, all these anonymous posts! I finally figured out how to turn off that funky word verification thing. Maybe that will lead you faceless commentators to own up to your words. The journalist in me screams, "ON the record, dammit!"

10 October 2006

Let's Go Mets!

The Mets are in the NLCS for the first time in 6 years, and they have the best team I can remember in my lifetime. I'm really excited, but it's hard to share that excitement with anyone else, since everyone here is a Diamondbacks fan, or something else. No Mets fans here in Tucson. So I've decided that just being an open baseball fan is good enough. I've been putting the playoff games on the tv in the classroom on mute, and letting my students watch the game as long as they are quiet and do their work. If one student starts being disruptive, the game goes off. (They don't know that I REALLY don't want to do this.) And it works!

Anyway, I don't have a TV, so I'm gonna have to just chill in my classroom a lot after school to watch the games. Or I can steal Elie and Becca's TV. Or something else. This is seriously the one time of year I really wish I had TV. I could do without it for 11 months, no problem. But playoff baseball? I feel tortured.

You all can help my sharing my passion for the Mets, and hoping really hard that they win, so that I can get over my frustration of not having a TV by knowing that they will win. So, just think of my name: GM. It stands for Go Mets. Hahahaha.

01 October 2006

Lighthouse

Did the tendrils of despair ever clutch so tight?

Or the whispers of the wind carry their message so far?

What, for the love of one woman

Stir up the sand, stir up the sea

On one lonely night, let the fires of a cold truth tell their morbid secret

Masked by darkness, distance, dishonor

What, to show her face, but hide the face of a jackal

The lonely lighthouse shines its beam out to sea

And the ship dashes its debris on the rocks

Ignorant in the face of danger

Defiant

The driftwood slowly drowns

Sucked down by the caustic grinding of time

And the lighthouse stands there still

Beckoning