The ebb and flow of the 'school' year is all I've ever known. Since I began preschool, age 3, until today, age 44, my summers' starts have not been defined by the Summer Solstice but rather by some random date selected by adults as the 'Last Day of School!' To multitudes of students, the last day of school is cause for celebration. Vivid memories of several last days of school dance through my mind's eye from childhood and all were joyous occasions. Released from education's calendrical bonds to the freedom of lazy summer days, a young boychildman knew no other emotion but pure happiness!
I was, however, one of an odd group of children. I LOVED school - everything about it! My friends were there and I saw them five times a week. I was smart - admittedly without ever working very hard at being 'smart' - and could get good grades without much mental effort. I got to climb on
Summer was - by extension - a colossal after-school voyage of discovery. Sailing on our bicycles like Ferdinand Magellan or Vasco da Gama across the oceans previously unseen, the first weeks of June called us to explore every nook and cranny of our neighborhood. Gertrude Jekyll said, 'What is one to say about June, the time of perfect young summer, the fulfillment of promise of earlier months, and with as yet no sign to remind us that its fresh young beauty will ever fade.' And boy were those first few weeks of no school perfect and beautiful! Once we had extracted every precious secret from our asphalt-paved journeys, summers would fade into a familiar pattern of monotony which would quickly have me looking forward to school again. Shortly after the last ashes of July 4th fireworks had brightened the night sky and floated slowly down to earth, I was ready for school to begin anew.
Some pieces of my outlook have never changed - I still LOVE school! The 'Last Day of School' is joyous but not in the childlike version. I celebrate now with a sense of melancholy I find indescribable. A feeling that I could have done more - I could have taught better - I could have reached another student who was struggling - I could have helped another teacher in time of need ... but mostly a sense of time expired. As the sands slip away, the alchemy of time and memories veers toward the territory of escaped dreams and unrealized hopes. The 'Last Day' finish line is beckoning and inevitable, crushed against the desire to be and do more in the classroom. It is between this Scylla and Charybdis where my melancholy dwells as the first days of summer freedom appear.
Okay ... on to audience participation!
When we last spoke I asked your opinion about speed and driving in the left lane of multi-lane highways. I even got several texts and emails!! There was no definitive answer - two said I should slow down (thanks Mom!) and three said too many people cruise in the left lane instead of just using it as a passing lane. My two cents are that you should not DRIVE in the left lane. You are not the police, sheriff or highway patrol. You are not in charge of speed control. The left lane is for PASSING. If you are not passing, then you should move to the right and allow the person who wants to pass you to do so. So help a fellow American out if you are one of the estimated 40 million people driving long distance this Memorial Day weekend (and every other weekday and weekend!) and move right if there are faster drivers around you.
This weekend is a sportsman delight - at least until the games are played and races run. It's one of my favorite weekends of the year! Saturday sees my beloved Arsenal Gunners take on
Happy Memorial Day Weekend everyone!
