Thursday, May 14, 2009
Yes, that's correct--that's my title line for this entry.
It's the subtitle for this article from the current issue of The Atlantic magazine:
Sponge Bob's Golden Dream
by James Parker
(click on the above to read the full article.)
Seriously, it's one of the more brilliant essays I've read in a while.
Even if you have just the slightest passing acquaintance with
the animated phenomenon, you should read this essay; I hope you like it...
Yesterday, I had a new experience--I had to go to the dentist...
...for a crown. Ay ay ay. I cracked a back tooth--an old filling from childhood...
Wow, the cost. (At least I still have insurance, which covers some of the cost.)
But hey--better than what happened to most people for most of history, eh? --you lose a tooth here and there in your 20's and 30's, and before you know it, you're a toothless, and thus malnourished, 40-year-old, at the end of the typical life expentancy.
Too bad SpongeBob's happifying inanity didn't exist in the Middle Ages.
I had a photo on TV the other night--the local news included one of my hummingbird photos on the weather segment (one of the photos from a couple of entries ago--on April 23rd.) I didn't see it, but a friend did and called me.
Another small thrill.
Seriously, hummingbird nests--so cute.
My wife and I continue on our descent down the slippery slope of
bird-owner-dorkiness.
Alas.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
May in Tucson: saguaros coming into bloom, schoolkids giddy--only ten class-days left...
And tomorrow is supposed to be our first 100-degree day.
(Click here if you want weather trivia,
such as the average first day of
100-degree-heat in Tucson, etc. etc...)
======================
An old friend sent me a link from NPR's daily feature "The Writer's Almanac," which features a daily poem:
MUSIC
Anne Porter
When I was a child
I once sat sobbing on the floor
Beside my mother's piano
As she played and sang
For there was in her singing
A shy yet solemn glory
My smallness could not hold
And when I was asked
Why I was crying
I had no words for it
I only shook my head
And went on crying
Why is it that music
At its most beautiful
Opens a wound in us
An ache a desolation
Deep as a homesickness
For some far-off
And half-forgotten country
I've never understood
Why this is so
But there's an ancient legend
From the other side of the world
That gives away the secret
Of this mysterious sorrow
For centuries on centuries
We have been wandering
But we were made for Paradise
As deer for the forest
And when music comes to us
With its heavenly beauty
It brings us desolation
For when we hear it
We half remember
That lost native country
We dimly remember the fields
Their fragrant windswept clover
The birdsongs in the orchards
The wild white violets in the moss
By the transparent streams
And shining at the heart of it
Is the longed-for beauty
Of the One who waits for us
Who will always wait for us
In those radiant meadows
Yet also came to live with us
And wanders where we wander.
"Music" by Anne Porter
from Living Things: Collected Poems.
© Steerforth Press, 2006
===========================
I've just recently taken the time to (finally) do some serious listening to some Mahler.
(Gotta love the public library's cd collection...)
I'm one of those loves-Brahms-hates-Wagner people.
But I'd never really become familiar with Mahler.
Huge--Brahms' 'successor' in late 19th-century music...
Why didn't someone insist earlier that I listen to his stuff?
Then again, maybe I'm just 'ready' for it now...
================================
...came across this photo from last summer in Québec:
(The Japanese garden in the Washington Park Arboretum)It's been almost two years now, that we've been living in Tucson.
Loving the nearby mountains and the Sonoran desert landscape...
but still missing the sunnier moments of the green green Northwest...
Thursday, April 23, 2009
blooms...spring in Paris

...and what a treat, this time, to see these little nests...
...funny, that roadrunners are in the cuckoo family...
...later in the afternoon, we saw this guy perched on a rock, not in an enclosure:
...and, of course, varieties of prickly-pear-cactus:
Et voilà--a little bit of April in Tucson. 
...and just for fun, an architectural face as a parting shot:
(a Renaissance-era balcony with a mini-gargoyle in the Marais district in Paris.)
Sunday, April 19, 2009
So, up this Sunday morning at 5:30, for my first 5k!
Perfect weather--slight breeze, in the 60's, eucalyptus and palms and Aleppo pines at Reid Park crisp against the mountains and sky... April in Tucson is truly perfect...
Here's the cause. (click)
Here's the course. (click)
And, here's the t-shirt:

Since this was my first 5k, I didn't sign up for the competitive portion...
...but, still! It was fun to have an official starting line, finish line, and a midway point with volunteers clapping and handing out cups of water to the thousands of passing runners; felt all official and sporty...
My goal was to finish under half-an-hour. And I did: just over 26 minutes! (Experienced Runners out there--don't laugh, eh? acorns before oaks, 5k's before marathons...)
I didn't realize the event would make me pensive, but it did. Seeing all the people running/walking in honor or tribute to loved ones who have either survived or died from cancer--made me think of relatives and friends...and knowing that 75 percent of the funds raised from this event go to Southern Arizona cancer research is heartening...
I also thought of the fact that, growing up in GA, I didn't know a single person who did things like run 5k races or do bike tours. Tucson is nice that way--'positive peer pressure' to get outside and move around...
Several of the staff from the school where I work did the run as well; nice to get our minds off the continuing uncertainty of our employment...
Maybe next year I'll sign up for the competitive run; you get to wear a computer chip that tracks your time officially...
Now--time to do a bit of housecleaning (my wife is dusting as I type), and then this afternoon, taking a couple of kids we know to the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum...
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Last Friday, a couple of friends and I hiked in the Santa Rita mountains south of Tucson. We climbed all the way to the top of Mt. Wrightson (9453').

...a few photos from the hike up from Madera Canyon ...
...beginning with a cell-phone-camera shot of a wild tom-turkey, in full strut down by some b&b cabins:

...we had just entered the Canyon preserve, and my camera was in my backpack, so all I could do was quickly open my cellphone...There must have been over a dozen wild turkeys all over the parking lot and crossing the road...
...a bit further up, right as we began hiking, we saw these deer:
...and already, a few wildflowers are beginning to bloom up over a mile in elevation. (The hiking trail begins at 5400'.) These are Indian paintbrush:
...after several hours of climbing and switchbacking (well past the point where I hiked back in early November), we were approaching the rocky summit, with a bit of snow still in the crevices on the northern side:
...The next day, this past Saturday, a storm rolled through and several inches of snow blanketed the mountains above 8000 feet...
...and finally, approaching the summit--this view looking south past a forest-fire-burned ridge, looking toward Mexico:
...looking back down over the entrance to Madera Canyon, to the desert floor seven thousand feet below, with some mines (and their leaching pits) off to the NW...the green line in front of them are the pecan orchards that stretch for miles along I-19 in the Santa Cruz valley:
...from the summit off to the Mustang Mountains to the east, over the grasslands of Sonoita and Elgin--incidentally, where parts of the film "Oklahoma" were filmed and where there are a few vineyards (!) in southern Arizona's 'wine country'...

...and a 'hiker's-eye-view' looking to the north, with Tucson and the Santa Catalina mountains in the distance:

Finally, driving away in the evening...camera already put away in the backpack, so this is from my cell-phone:
Mountains in all directions from Tucson; nice to be able to get 'above it all'...
The uncertainty in the education-job-world continues...
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
So, I wrote a letter to the editor, and it was published in this morning's Arizona Daily Star:
==========================
Private information made public
Monday night I noticed that the Star posted a searchable database on its Web site so that Tucson readers could find out who is being laid off at what school, those people's full names and what date they were hired by the Tucson Unified School District.
Yes, I know that technically this is all "public information" made available by the TUSD (Tucson Unified School District) board. But is it really necessary to post a searchable database? Maybe some of those teachers and administrators would rather not have everybody know that they will potentially be unemployed.
I'm one of those teachers. Don't I have the right to choose when and how I would like to inform whom? Isn't it an invasion of my privacy for your paper to have published my name, hire date and "layoff" status for anyone to find out?
Allow us to be uncertain in private, if we so choose. Thanks for adding to our stress.
Joseph Cyr
Teacher, Tucson
=================================
The day after I e-mailed the above to the paper, the editorial department called me to make sure that I wanted to have it published, since I did sound 'kind of angry.' Well, yeah, I'm annoyed; (insert 'duh' here) that's why I wrote...I did appreciate the call, though; very considerate.
On a less peevish-sounding note, the same paper has also featured several of my photos on its website recently:
--they were requesting 'wildflower' photos, so I submitted this one of wild desert heliotrope, a.k.a. scorpionweed, blooming now...
...and these were blooming along a mountain trail last November, but I haven't been able to identify them--anyone know what they are?
...and then 'moon over Tucson' was the topic:

So...I am perhaps looking at future unemployment, (and "RIF"s are not actually pink, by the way), but in the meantime, I'm getting my fifteen minutes of local newspaper 'fame,' eh? (cheap thrills...)
===========================
It's rainy and 50 degrees as I type this. Snow on the mountains. Occasional thunder-accompanied-sleet (!) here in town...
...a huge contrast from yesterday, sunny and around 80 degrees. I went with a couple of friends to climb Mt. Wrightson, just south of Tucson...a 13-mile round trip from the trailhead in Madera Canyon: 4000 feet up, and 4000 feet down--destination, the 9453-ft-summit of the highest peak in the Santa Rita mountains--a 360-degree view of a good chunk of southern Arizona and northern Mexico...pictures later.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Friday after work...
...from my work e-mail inbox to you, a press release from Tucson Schools, verbatim:
==================================================
Preliminary notices sent to Tucson Unified teachers, administrators regarding a potential reduction in force
Tucson Unified Schools is giving notice of a potential reduction in force to approximately 560 certified employees and 65 administrators in schools on Friday. The certified employees include teachers, counselors and librarians who have not been employed for the major portion of three consecutive years with Tucson Unified.
Certain special programs such as alternative education and hard-to-fill positions such as highly qualified math and science teachers and exceptional education teachers have been exempted from this potential reduction in force. Tucson Unified employs approximately 3,500 teachers.
Because of the uncertain budget situation and the statutory deadline of April 15 for providing notification to certified non-tenured teachers that they will not be offered a contract for the following year, it is necessary for us to over-notify individuals.” said interim Chief Human Resources Officer Nancy Woll.
“We anticipate being able to recall at least some teachers when we have more definitive budget information. I am hopeful that we will receive positive budget information soon and we will be able to begin the recall process.”
=============================================
So, 1 in 8 teachers in this city: looking for work...
...including me.
We've been getting stronger and stronger hints for a few weeks now...
Earlier this week we were told it very likely would happen.
And today it did: The Letter and 'the conversation in the office.'
The administrator who handed me my letter is himself also receiving the same kind of letter.
And then, mid-month, the 'real' 'official' RIF * letter will be delivered.
I wonder if it'll be on pink paper.
Fun times in Tucson, on a breezy spring day...
Hey, at least we're not as bad as Los Angeles, where six THOUSAND have been told that they won't have a teaching position come August...
* RIF=Reduction In Force
Another acronym for today:
"RIP" for the idea that
"careers in education and healthcare guarantee recession-proof jobs."
