Last weekend I met up with a former student of mine. He graduated high school in 2007, so it had been a good 20 years since we'd seen each other. He was visiting a sister in Portland and looked me up. We met for coffee. David was always one of my most memorable students. He was in a Jr. Honors English class with me and then took my Intro Psychology class too. Aside from being highly motivated, and intellectually curious, David was a good athlete and quite a good looking young man. His father is Jewish and his mother is Japanese, so he has that striking quality that bi-racial kids often do. It occurred to me once that I had his mother as a student in my first year of teaching back in 1973. We spoke of many things, especially world affairs. David does geo-political analysis for a tech company, reflective of his educational background which includes degrees from UC Berkeley and Georgetown. The conversation was heady,...
Meet my friend Patty. She's striking because of 3 things. First, she always has a kind word and a smile. She often has thin, brightly colored ribbons streaming down her shoulder length hair. And then there is her posture, or lack of it. Patty is one of those folks who walks all bent over. It might have been scoliosis, but no body asks. On top of all this, Patty has been battling cancer for the last few years. I met Patty in the Tai Chi class I've been taking for the past couple of years. When she can, she shows up. Sometimes she goes through the motions while sitting down, but more often than not, Patty keeps up, doing the best she can despite her physical limitations. Patty is inspiration incarnate. When many of us older folks in the class are feeling tired, or sore, or just not our sharpest, Patty is there. She shows up. If she can, certainly we can too. Patty likes a good joke and is a faithfu...