Saturday, October 21, 2023
My morning walking buddy, Dean, talks a lot about Mexican tree spinach. It’s the mainstay of his diet. After he moved to Hawaii, he searched for information on food plants that grew at the same latitude as Hawaii. He bought the plant from a local nursery.
The plant is toxic six ways from Sunday. But so are lima beans.
The plant is loaded with strychnine. To make it edible, cook it or let it sit for at least four days.
The other day, he stuck a stalk with some roots into my yard. We’re all preparing for desperate times. A steady diet of breadfruit, Mexican tree spinach, and fruit may not please the palette, but it will suit the stomach just fine.
Today, Dean invited me in to see his chicken coop and spinach trees. A stray chicken settled on his property. He started feeding it and became enchanted. He and Nina went out and bought a dozen babies. Dean built a chicken coop. it is a technical and aesthetic marvel. He says he can sit and watch those chickens all day. Whatever works!
I also got to see his spinach trees. Wow! Most of his acre is covered with these trees. He will have enough to keep a good many of us alive. He harvests the trees by cutting them back to six feet. Most of the leaves go to the chickens. He cooks them and throws in some chicken food. They love the mix. He keeps the newest, tenderest leaves for his own food. Each time he cuts back a tree, he spares one branch with a few leaves and leaves it lying on the ground. Once it sprouts roots, he plants it. This is how he developed his spinach tree forest. It’s not pretty, but it is functional.
Rosemary, another of my walking buddies, dropped off the baking soda spreader to kill our coqui. The gadget is designed to spread powdery material in a garden. I had never heard of or seen such a gadget before. We had one coqui in our yard or next door in the empty lot. We haven’t heard a peep from the coqui since the spreader arrived on the property. Mind you, we never used it. Either the coqui intuited our plans and moved down the road, or one of our forty wild chickens got him. We are sure it was a him; all croaking coquis are male.
Paulette and Judy like the sound of the coquis. They find it soothing, as the people of Puerto Rico do. Unlike in Puerto Rico, they have no natural enemies in Hawaii and can get out of hand. They do well in wetter climates. Hilo, on the windward side of the island, gets much more rain. The coquis thrive there. At night, you can’t hear the TV over the noise. While a few are nice, so many you can’t hear yourself think are not. We had one; that’s just as annoying. He’s gone now. Yay!
I’ve been keeping up with my gardening schedule. To maintain the area in front of the house, the grassy strip needs to be mowed. I bought a manual lawnmower a while ago. Yvette would use it on the large grassy area by her entrance. It was too hard to push, and some of the blades of grass that grew to two feet were impossible to mow with it. You needed a motorized mower that’s blades work differently. With the manual mower, the tall blades of grass are bent down before the cutting edge can have its way with them. Yvette wanted nothing more to do with it. She brought it up to me. The blades didn’t turn at all. We had to pull it backward to roll it.
I asked B to help me with it. He asked for DW40, sprayed a few spots, and, voila, it rolled nicely after an initial heave-ho. I proposed he mow the strip with his automatic mower, and then I could maintain it with the hand mower. I would make it one of my once-a-week chores. Thursday is the day for the strip along the street. When I started this weekly project, it took a lot of work to get rid of the weeds. Each subsequent week, there is less to take care of. I can pull many weeds by hand and kill the rest with boiling water. Now, I will add mowing the grassy strip. I don’t really care how it looks; I just don’t have enough to do to keep me happy.
Adolescent D had a breakthrough. He was reading a passage and misread Amazon as American. He caught his error and corrected himself. He told me he remembered seeing the word in the previous sentence, checked it against the spelling of the word he just read, and corrected himself. I saw him finally using strategies I had taught him. I commented on it. He said he had been using them for a while. The difference is that now they were coming more easily. At the end of the session, I asked him to evaluate his feelings about working with me on reading. On a rate of 1-10, how much fun does he find figuring out the words? He said, “8.” That’s what I thought. This is a fantastic improvement. If he can find it fun, someday, he will read as well as any of his peers. When he sees learning to read as a fun game, he will always do it on his own and steadily improve. My reading improved once I started using this approach. I’m having fun working with him, too.
Friday, October 27, 2023
Mike would have turned eighty-three today. This is the fourth birthday he's missed. He has been gone for four and a half years. Oh, boy. I marvel at how good that union was for me. I only remember going to sleep once with coldness between us. I remember being calm with some of his serious behavioral errors and being more annoyed by some minor ones. I hated the way he scrunched up his face. It wasn't his best look. It was caused by stress. The serious offenses were financial boundary violations: when he offered to give someone my car without consulting me.
I knew by our second date that money would be an issue between us. Fortunately, we had enough, so it was not a daily problem. Mike's parents fought about money, constantly in Mike's mind. He remembers his mother hounding his father to ask for promotions and raises. Sidney worked for the government; I gather he wasn't comfortable being assertive. Mike's childhood wasn't the best. He felt alienated from his family. I had problems with my parents, but I never wished I had other parents or felt I wasn't part of the family. Mike did.
I believe the source of that deep alienation was an incident when he was in second or third grade in 1948 or 1949. He came home from school and proudly told his parents he told the class they were Communists. His parents were card-carrying Communists. The persecution of sympathizers had started already. His parents tore through the house, throwing out everything that would prove their association. From what I know of Mike's mom, she would have been hysterical. She was prone to extreme reactions. She would have indicted him for attempted patricide. It must have been terrifying for that young boy. He thought he was defending them. He thought he was saying Communists were good people who cared about others. He had no idea about the political climate at the time.
I remembered to light the yahrzeit candle last night at sunset. I know, you're supposed to light it on the anniversary of the death, not the birth. I do it on both occasions. Tonight, the five o'clock mass was in memory of Mike's birthday. I left the Ulu Wini Community Center early to make it there in time. I make sure that the Mass is said for Mike every year on both his birth and death date.
I volunteer as a tutor at Ulu Wini Community Center twice a week. I work with whoever wants it at the moment or whomever Kahana, the man in charge of the afterschool activity, can push in my direction. On Wednesday, he said I was doing a remarkable job. I was seeing differences in some students after a single session. I asked Kahuna how he knew I was good. Who told him? He said the kids told him. That's very satisfying. Unfortunately, this does not preclude my wish that my work would get wider recognition for my methods for teaching reading and cognition.
Two girls experienced big changes. Both had good word recognition skills. I worked on comprehension with a girl in ninth grade. The children living at this low-income site who come to the community center are mostly Marshallese. Many are still struggling to learn English. I worked with ninth-grade L on Under the Mesquite, a book written in blank verse.
I started with the Question exercise in which we analyzed every sentence. I only had to do this with L once before we moved on to examine large chunks. We analyzed the text paragraph by paragraph now instead of sentence by sentence. She was missing many vocabulary words, but she was getting better at tracing the referent of a pronoun, the anaphor. L told me her teachers have told her they are seeing a difference.
The other child, fifth-grade L, had an attention problem. I worked at an outdoor table while all the other children were playing board games or snacking. In our first session, she was constantly looking away. I asked her if she was having trouble with what I was teaching. No. she had trouble ignoring other stimuli. I showed the bull's eye exercise I developed forty years ago. The next time I saw her, the change was remarkable. At no point did her attention wander to the lively activity at the next table.
I have three YouTube videos on my teaching method. I repost them once every other day. The first day after I posted them, they got one or two hits, usually one per video. While Tommy assured me my viewings would not be counted by YouTube, the coincidence of one hit per video when I posted them on Facebook made me suspicious. I started believing those hits were mine. I always copied the YouTube address to post them. I checked online; it says YouTube prevents more than four hits from any site in one day from being counted. The hits I'd been joyfully counting were clearly mine. Today, I figured out I could share an old post on Facebook. I've been counting all my hits, and no one else has shown any interest. Sad.
There is no set schedule when I volunteer at the Ulu Wini Community Center. I teach whoever winds up sitting next to me for a lesson. Sometimes, the kids come up and ask for help; sometimes, Kahana, the one in charge of the afterschool program, grabs a kid and orders them to work with me. I may see a child only once. Fortunately, my diagnostic skills are good. I can quickly identify the student's needs. My methods allow me to make a difference in fifteen minutes. Do they resolve all the student's problems? No. Do any suddenly arrive at a grade level ability after twenty minutes? Of course not. But I can say each session makes a difference, especially in the beginning. As with all things, the rich get richer. Those with pretty good skills will improve more than the poorer students. However, all will see some difference. The better students return after one or two sessions to tell me their teachers see a difference.
I worked with two boys I hadn't seen before today. Kahana sent a sixth-grade boy to me first. I asked him if he was a good reader or a poor one. If he had said, good, I would have started with reading material at a high second-grade level. I have graded passages all in one document. It is easy to move ahead quickly if they read well. If they say they read poorly, I start at a preprimer level. Moving up is easy; moving to a lower level causes more pain.
I started the 6th-grade boy at a basic preprimer level when he told me he was a poor reader. He read the words accurately but at a word-by-word pace. I asked him if he wanted to sound like a good reader.
I showed him the rhythmic pattern of spoken American English versus his word-by-word reading. When I told him English has a jazz beat, which is probably why the USA was the birthplace of jazz, his eyes lit up. He latched on to the idea that I was talking about rapping. Not really. The rhythm of rap is quite different from the rhythm of jazz, but it inspired this boy to read differently. He called over a 7th N, saying, "He needs help with reading." When I showed N the trick of reading with the right rhythm, he asked, "Why didn't anyone show me this before?" Both boys gleefully did a choral reading of the preprimer passage for Kahana. I was thrilled with their response and a little nervous. How would their teachers respond? Would they put the kibosh on their enthusiasm? That would be devastating. Who cares if it doesn't sound quite right? They were reading and having a blast. This was something to build on. It made me feel like a million bucks.