This month, I am taking a walk down the complex and intersection ridden Memory Lane of old family photos thanks to a push from my blogging friend, Kim Johnson, Common Threads.
Learning To Be Writers and Readers: In The 21st Century
Sharing thoughts, ideas, and research about teaching, writing, and LIVING in the 21st Century.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
June 4 Carpe Diem
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
June 3: Avis
My blogging friend, Kim Johnson, Common Threads, hit a nerve with a proposal to share family photos in June. I have been looking critically at the old photos, like these from an album my mom created during her teenage years.
My Grandmother, Maria Avis, grew up in upstate NY as the adored only child of a fairly successful, Italian translator and dry-goods shop owner. Her stepmother, from what we can deduce, was involved with the Suffragette movement in Seneca Falls.
Avis loved books and learning. She attended New Paltz Normal School, and became a teacher in the nearby Hudson Valley. She kept her college books, teaching magazines, and manuals in an attic trunk that was a special space for her granddaughter, who was also fascinated with books and learning.
Like most teachers of her time, Avis boarded with a local family with children in the school. That is where she met my Grandfather, Gerow, who although several years her junior, grew up right before her eyes. I think there might have been a bit of a hormones and lot of charm that festered in that old farm house over the years, and eventually they were married.
Monday, June 1, 2026
SOL26: June 2 Messy, Mismatched and Hidden
In the days long ago, before social media suggested we post images of picture-perfect homes rather than real, lived in ones, I for some unknown reason snapped an image of the corner of the kitchen where I wrote lesson plans, student reports and my dissertation in a flea-market-chair on same rickety kitchen table where my Grandmother "set up house-keeping." I filled my corner with a hand-me-down desk-top computer and the benches that once held my young children and used them to hold paper, books, and research papers.
Looking at that sparsely decorated corner from a 2026 perspective, I realize I was not even a little bit concerned about the mismatched decor or lack of creature comfort in that space! There were no need for a theme or color coded bookcases in the background in those times before zoom turned our home spaces into curated images. In fact, that purple image on the green chair was actually a pillow, covered with an old sweatshirt, used to "support" my back sometimes and prevent my "writing sores" at others!
I could almost hear the usual evening noise of the dishwasher, nearby, doing its thing and the television, in the other room, as I got to work on the task that needed to be done before bedtime, as I concluded this image had no family or historical significance leading to its destruction. Those were thegood old days when real life was messy, mismatched and hidden from the world!
June 1: Jeremiah
My blogging friend, Kim Johnson, who blogs at Common Threads, hit a nerve with a proposal to share family photos in June. I have been doing a bit of cleaning myself and have been looking critically at the old photos I want to keep. I like the idea of making a digital copy and sharing, if only for my own benefit.
This first photo is me, a few months old, with my parents. Based on other pictures from that day, I think it was at my Aunt's apartment in Manhattan. Most likely it was a weekend and a summer day in an apartment without air conditioning; yet, my dad wore a dress shirt and tie!
As a farmer who grew up and went to college and became an engineer, he wore a shirt and tie, most of the time. Growing up, his farming roots emerged at times as he planted a few tomatoes or roses; but the expected dress code for engineers, even if they were out in the field surveying, was what is now considered dress up!
He's on my mind as I write this, as last night, I went to a dinner to honor my daughter-in-law, Sue for directing the revival of the Rockland Community Farm Network, non-profit, organic, educational farms in the same town where my dad helped design and build the dam that provides their water! Honestly, I know he was smiling in the heavens to know that farmers, now, can dress up in suits and ties and attend fancy dinners.
I also suspect that he would be thrilled to name that new baby goat on the farm and might even suggest some derivative of Jeremiah, such as Jeremy, appropriate for that new little babe.

Friday, May 29, 2026
May 29: Poetry Friday
On this last Friday in May, the promise of long, sun-kissed days and lazy, summer breezes is evident; yet, there is a pervasive, underlying tension in the world that colors everything we see and do and makes my OLW elusive many days. My poem this morning is a sort of found poem from headlines in this mornings NY Times the bold words in each line.
Power-charged words, like bombs, bluster,
Where Do You Turn When You Need Advice? How About a Poem?

Thursday, May 28, 2026
May 29: Imagination Station
May 28 On the Shelf
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