on the process, Feb 5 to Sept 16

well. this is a ridiculous amount of time to try and describe, let alone summarize. so I won’t. but I can recall some peaks and valleys for you:

  • lap swim in the deep winter months – the ones where spring seems like a legend or a dream – was renewing; the water reminded me of the need for regularity and rhythm, to sometimes float despite the denseness of the darkness
  • talks with friends keep me afloat; so many of my dearest people are far far far away, but that is only physical distance, and we can surmount the space with intentions to be together; they give me flashes of warmth and joy
  • the creation of a home – a physical space that feels like a light landing place after time away – is a creative endeavor, and one that I undertook this summer with some steady focus; it was a long time coming, and now walking through each room, admiring art and the placement of furniture, vases of flowers, small and precious objects, I feel this place and I have arrived somewhere new together
  • no matter how many strategies and safeguards I think I have in place for my health and well-being, I sometimes fall ill and need help; for me the challenge is in asking for support – I don’t want to burden others – but my loved ones love me back and want to help, and I can accept that aspect of love; more than anything mutual support deepens our relationship and does not burden it
  • newness is also creation – new experiences, new relationships, they are tender buds that require tending and care; newness is soft and precious and sometimes exceedingly rare and sometimes scarier than I anticipate but it is overall beautiful and vital and the biggest and best part of being alive
  • at times there is nothing to do but exist, to be present and in the presence of loved ones at a meal or on a walk or under the sun or in the open air, to be present while alone, to be present in a crowd, to be and just be
  • the fallow times for my writing – and for this book project about Annabelle – feel wrong, but all things need rest, I think; I am returning to it now, just in thoughts, and I think I may try some new and big changes, go back to poetic language, add lists and impressions and focus on emotion and beauty over plot and trust that the reader will let me lead them

so, yes. the process has been meandering but full. we’ll keep trying. everyday anew.

Read Aloud Series, Book 6: A Series of Unfortunate Events – The Bad Beginning

Ah, how I love to read this book aloud. So many fun voices, especially for the evil Count Olaf and kindly but mostly ineffectual Mr. Poe. There are lots of literary references that the kids don’t necessarily get (e.g., Mr. Poe, the Baudelaire children) but I like to know that whenever I pick up this book, those winks to the adult reader are lurking. Speaking of lurking, the book’s tone is so distinctly dry and gloomy it really pulls the kids who are listening into the world of the Baudelaire children – a world of danger and uncertainty.

But let me back up to the bad beginning. There are three children, Violet, Klauss, and Sunny. Their parents are killed suddenly and so they are left orphaned. Mr. Poe is the executor of their estate and, following their parents’ written will, they’ve been sent to live with their closest living relative, Count Olaf. As the story progresses things become more dire for the children and include a daring escape from a tower and outwitting the villains with an ingenious ploy.

As we read, students wonder about who will save the Baudelaire children and how no adults have noticed their distress. Throughout the novel, Violet, Klauss, and Sunny work together and live by their wits to maneuver through their difficult circumstances. Ideally the children listening feel the tiny seed planted that suggests that they too can save themselves if the going gets tough.

Time and again I return to The Bad Beginning for adventure, for excitement, and a chance to tap into the students’ imaginations – for their minds to imagine themselves as the heroes of their own stories – and for the pleasure of introducing them to the first in a long series of books about the Baudelaires.

The Bad Beginning at 57th Street Books

The Bad Beginning at Semicolon Books