The First Year Writing Seminar

Is always evolving. This fall’s iteration. Would you sign up?

The Art and Science of Human Connection—Ron Byrnes, Education

     In this seminar we work together to improve as readers, discussants, and writers while exploring the challenges and rewards of meaningful friendships. Our readings, discussions, and writing overlap with the University’s Wild Hope Project, which asks, “What will you do with your one wild and precious life?” We will be as introspective and transparent as possible as we get to know one another’s stories and draw on history and social sciences to explore what’s most important in life. Among the questions we’ll consider: What makes life most meaningful? How do we want to balance work and individual economic aspirations with recreation and close interpersonal relationships with others? What is easy about making friends and what is hard? How can we be better friends to ourselves and others? And does social media make it easier or harder to build strong interpersonal relationships?

I Can Do It Too

This guy, whose net worth is over $500m, has a huge following among young sports-minded men. He has won over $2m picking the winner of the last two professional golf events. You can take this to the bank—his recent, short-term luck will translate into hundreds of millions more lost by sports gambling addicts.

Health Fads and Fictions

Health Fads and Fictions: VO2 Max, Supplement Mania, Sunlight, and Immortality.

You know what “they” say, “Common sense is not common.” Well worth a listen. Two critiques. They don’t pay enough attention to how to help sedentary people begin moving and there’s no mention of the role genetics play in longevity.

Sentence To Ponder

From ESPN.com.

“The World Anti-Doping Agency on Saturday confirmed reports that 23 Chinese swimmers had tested positive for a banned drug before the Tokyo Olympics but that it accepted the country’s findings it was due to substance contamination.”

A name change may be in order. . . The Pro-China Doping Agency or The Who Are We To Judge Anti-Doping Agency.

The Washington State Republicans’ Deep Bench Strikes Again

On one of my running routes, right behind Squaxin Park, there are two next-door neighbors from opposing tribes. One house decked out in red, white, and blue MAGA signage; the other drenched in aging Tibetan flags, with a decidedly liberal-hippie vibe.

One day Mr. MAGA said “hi” to me from his driveway. Nice that he doesn’t read the humble blog.

I wonder what kind of relationship these neighbors have with one another? Do they talk to each other? Borrow sugar from one another? Watch each other’s homes when on vacation? Bring in one another’s trash cans? The mind whirls.

This morn, in Mr. MAGA’s yard, there was a “Semi Bird” for Governor sign. I immediately suspected Semi was for the birds. I did a (very) little sleuthing and was not at all surprised to learn Semi is not a conventional candidate. This article, “WA governor candidate says ‘no excuse’ for financial crime” was the first clue.

Bird appears to have learned nothing from the leader of his party.

“In an interview Tuesday, Bird, now 63, said he makes no excuses for the mistake decades ago. ‘Guilty as charged — 100%, he said. ‘It was wrong. He said he was estranged from his father at the time and was ‘bitter’ and ‘angry’ and ‘tried to justify’ his actions, but said ultimately ‘there was no excuse.'”

That is weirdly straightforward and honest.

There have been other legal problems and debts, both of which are much more in keeping with the leader of the Republican Party.

For example:

“In 1996, Bird was arrested and charged with felony theft for failing for many months to return a pistol he’d been issued as a Yakima County sheriff reserve officer after departing the role. The charge was later dismissed after the gun was found and returned. In 1999, he filed for bankruptcy.”

But who among us hasn’t used a parent’s name and social security number to supplement our income and/or forgotten to return a pistol we’ve been issued. I, for one, will not cast the first stone.

However, I’m not willing to give the Bird “campaign” a pass on one unforgivable sin committed against the English language. The offending phrase first appears in the opening sentence of Bird’s “Story” on the campaign’s unwieldy website.

“Semi Bird is a career American who has spent a lifetime in service to his country and community.” The offending phrase repeats throughout the site.

I don’t have Bird’s history of playing fast and loose with the law, but I am a career American too, so maybe I should run for office. I bet there aren’t many career Americans around. I bet the electorate is desperate to vote for a real, living breathing, career American.

For shit’s sake.

Why did I see that sign and how do I unsee the mindless phrase “career American”?

How To Turn A Bike Ride Into A Bike Workout

The title of an article in the morning’s New York Times. Anna Watts opines:

“You don’t need a flashy new bike or fancy gear to get a solid cycling workout. The most important thing is that your bike fits your body and you enjoy being on it.”

One wonders, does Watts regularly spout heretical things or is this a one-off?

Good Stuff

THIS is the example to use when teaching alliteration in fourth or fifth grade.

Verne Lundquist, 83 year old sportscaster extraordinaire, who just called his last Masters, exited at the top of his game. I forget which player it was that was getting chewed up by the Augusta, Georgia winds and glassy greens. Not holding back, Lundquist said, “The wheels aren’t just falling off, the rims are too.”

Postscript: More alliteration. This morning, as the trial gets underway, Trump is said to have scoffed, smirked, and slept.

Sentence To Ponder

“The ‘Golden Bachelor’ reality TV couple, who wed on national television after a romance that captivated viewers with the possibility of finding love late in life, announced on Friday they are divorcing just three months into their marriage.”

I was not among the viewers, let alone the “captivated” viewers, but this does make me wonder what else might not be real on t.v.

Being A Public Secondary School Principal Is Not For The Weak Of Heart

Or anyone lacking superhuman interpersonal skills.

Jessica Winters’s story in The NewYorker titled ” The Meltdown of a Middle School in a Liberal Town” (April 3, 2024) left me wondering how a school district starts over. It’s a case study of things completely falling apart in an Amherst, Massachusetts public middle school. It features angry parents, school personnel ignoring the separation of church and state, educators wholly unprepared to work with trans students, cultural conflicts of all sorts, and many other layers of public school dysfunction.

Today there’s a similarly harrowing story in The New York Times, titled, “A Principal Confronted a Teenage Girl. Now He’s Facing Prison Time.

The heart of the matter:

“For educators everywhere, the criminal prosecution of Mr. Sanchez for an action that schools typically handle using their own disciplinary codes opens up new levels of potential risk. Fights are part of high school life. If a school official can be not just disciplined but also jailed for intervening to break up or prevent a fight, what are teachers supposed to do?

In an interview, Mr. Sanchez mentioned a fight last year in which a teacher told the students to stop but did not physically separate them. ‘And the parent was just so upset when they saw the video, like, ‘Why isn’t this person stopping it?’’ he said. ‘And to be honest, I was a little upset, too. I didn’t say that to the parent, but I did say, ‘Well, because sometimes people are worried about liability.’”

Recently, I did a writing workshop with fifteen K-12 teachers who are seeking school principal certification. More specifically, they were applying for grants that provide them substitutes for their classrooms so they can get the required hours interning as administrators-to-be.

Impressive group, but after reflecting on these stories, I can’t help but wonder if they know what they’re committing to. The numerous simultaneous challenges they will soon face. The public’s anger and disregard for one another. The tenuousness of the public commons. The toll it will take on them and their families.

My guess is not entirely, because if they did, they’d probably choose professional paths where mere mortals stand much better odds of succeeding.